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Web, Social Networking

U.K. Furniture Company Uses Iran to Promote Self on Twitter


In what could only be described as a dumb (if not callous) move, the design-oriented, U.K.-based furniture seller Habitat decided to come to the Iran/Twitter party with hopes of peddling its wares. With hash-tags (also known as #tags) featuring 'iran' and 'mousavi' (increasingly popular as the world tries to stay abreast of the situation in Iran), Habitat did not protest brutality or election-rigging, but instead encouraged users to enter its daily sweepstakes.

Naturally, as they well should, Twitter users lambasted the company for so insensitively using the crisis in Iran for self-promotion.

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Web, Social Networking

Scammers Inserting Malicious Links in Popular Twitter Topics

What do Wimbledon, Iran, and Perez Hilton have in common? Not a whole lot other than the fact that all three are popular topics on Twitter right now. Mashable reports that Panda Security, an antivirus company, has found that scammers are posting fake tweets that include these popular topics and a link to a malware site.

Sean-Paul Correll, a researcher at Panda Labs, described the scam in a blog post, "Cyber criminals have been targeting Twitter users by creating thousands of messages (tweets) embedded with words involving trending topics and malicious URLs."

After clicking one of these links, you're taken to a page that tells you to upgrade your Flash player, or a similar application. If you download the 'player,' malware will be installed on your computer. Next, you receive a message that says your computer has a virus and tells you to download a fraudulent program called 'Fast Anti-Virus 2009,' which, of course, costs $89.

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Web

Iran Cracking Down on Digital Media


Since the first reports that Iranians had taken to Twitter to express their outrage over the dubious reelection of incumbent leader Mahmoud Ahmadinejad over Mir Hossein Mousavi on Monday, Iranian officials have reportedly cracked down on online media. Tuesday, the Iranian government banned international reporters from leaving their headquarters and filming the ongoing protests, claiming to have the journalists' safety at heart. Furthering their grip on the Internet, the country's Revolutionary Guard, responsible for maintaining and enforcing Islamic Law, has said it will ban or prosecute any sites that publish material that "creates tension." Tension, it appears, is an understatement, as CBS reports that the protests have already left seven people dead. The Washington Times has stated that key figures in the opposition movement have been detained.

Despite Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei's calls for a united Iran that supports the government, former candidate Mousavi continues to argue for a recount, encouraging protesters to raise their voices. Using proxy servers and amateur video, Iranians continue to pump YouTube, Facebook, and Twitter (which postponed scheduled maintenance this weekend at the U.S. State Department's behest) full of information about -- or at least images and first-person footage of -- what is happening within the country.

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Web, Social Networking

Iran Protests via Twitter, CNN Is Silent



Twitter, Facebook, live-blogging: they're no longer just social media networks. Instead, they're becoming legitimate sources of news information where ordinary people can not only participate in the reportage of news stories, but make headlines as well.

On June 13th, incumbent Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad defeated Mir Hossein Mousavi in a landslide victory characterized voting irregularities and claims of fraud. The controversial reelection of the controversial Ahmadinejad has allegedly, and unsurprisingly, sparked nationwide protests and large-scale reports of cellular and Internet service failures.

Iranians have taken to Twitter to chronicle the situation from inside the country, but any sort of consistent, large-scale news report has been difficult to come by. ReadWriteWeb wrote, "Hours after Iranian police began clashing with tens of thousands of people in the street, the top story on CNN.com remains peoples' confusion about the switch from analog TV signals." Slashdot notes that, "Twitter is providing better coverage than CNN at the moment." With hash tags rapidly being coined (from "#CNNFail" to "#IranElection"), videos being posted to YouTube, and Iranians flooding Reddit, the news is surfacing, however spottily. The Iranian government blocked both Facebook and text-messaging on Saturday, forcing Iranians to use hard-to-trace Web services like GoogleTalk and Twitter.

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Computers

Release Iranian "Blogfather," Says Nobel Peace Prize Winner

Nobel Peace Prize Winner Calls for the Release of Iranian Last month, the so called "blogfather" of Iran, Hossein Derakhshan was arrested during a visit to Tehran and accused of spying for Israel. Nobel Peace Prize winner and Iranian human rights activist Shirin Ebadi is now calling for his release. She told a news conference in London, "I very much hope that he will be released soon, because prison is not the place for journalists and for bloggers."

Derakhshan made a name for himself after moving to Canada in 2000 where he started up a blog, in Persian, that taught Iranians how to set up their own blogs and was critical of the government.

Sadly, arrests like this are far from uncommon. Oppressive regimes like those in Iran, Egypt, Malaysia, and China have arrested journalists and bloggers in higher numbers with each passing year. There isn't much that we can do except repeat Ebadi's call for his release and add our voice to the cascade of those opposing censorship and the suppression of dissidents. [From: Reuters]

Cameras, Computers

Iran 'Modifies' Pictures of Missile Test

Iran Photoshops Pictures of Missile Test
The Iranian government just grows more desperate to prove that it's tough and more afraid of failure with every day that passes. Need proof? Just look at the photo above. Anything seem a little off? Now look at the picture below. See the difference?

Initial photos of the Iranian missile test showed only three of the four missile launching. The fourth was still on its launch vehicle, and apparently a dud. But images circulated later by the government and the official state run news paper showed all four missiles in flight. The new image also has the tell tale signs of a bad Photoshop job. The new missile is clearly copy-and-pasted from its neighbor to the left and the bottom of the plume of smoke is just off some how. But the biggest give away is the new slightly bluer sky that surrounds the once failed missile, cutting through the haze in the sky.
Iran Photoshops Pictures of Missile Test
Look for yourselves, but we think this one is pretty obvious. [Source: The Telegraph]

Computers, Google

Iran Blocks Access to Google and Gmail

Iran Blocking Access to Google and Gmail

We've known for quite some time that China has been mandating filtered Internet access for its citizens, recently going so far as to claim massive hacking attacks in order to rationalize even more strict controls. Now Iran is starting to do the same, blocking access to Google and Gmail from major ISPs.

Not long after news of the mass filtering hit the wire, Iran reversed the block, saying it was "Due to an error," but left the door open for arbitrary filters in the future to prevent its citizens from "accessing decadent material posted abroad." Google has already worked with China to help filter some of its content. Will it do the same with Iran?

From boingboing and AdelaideNow

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Computers, Video Games

Video Game From Iran Pits Players Against U.S. Soldiers



So what do you do if you're an oil rich country that lives under the constant threat of sanctions, invasion, or mass nuggie? Why, you make a first person shooter about your prime rival in the world, of course.

'Rescue the Nuke Scientist' puts you in the shoes of the Iranian security forces as they try to rescue a husband and wife team of nuclear engineers who were kidnapped on a pilgrimage to Karbala, a holy site in Iraq. Oh, an important detail: They were kidnapped by the U.S.

The game is the brainchild of the Union of Students Islamic Association, the same organization responsible for organizing the 'World Without Zionism' conference in which Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad famously called for Israel to be "wiped off the map."

'Rescue the Nuke Scientist' is a direct response to an American created game called 'Assault on Iran.' Mohammad Taqi Fakhrian, leader with the Association said, "this is our defense against the enemy's cultural onslaught ... We tried to promote the idea of defense, sacrifice and martyrdom in this game."

From USA Today

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