News

Days after Israel began striking Iran’s nuclear and military sites earlier this month, a US non-profit that has provided Starlink internet service to Iranian citizens asked the State Department to ...
The government cited the recent hacks on Bank Sepah and cryptocurrency exchange Nobitex as reasons to shut down internet access to virtually all Iranians.
Iran's leaders cut internet access to outside world Since Wednesday, June 18, Iranians have only been able to access the domestic network and can no longer keep up with developments in the ...
David Belson, the head of data insight at internet infrastructure company Cloudflare, told TechCrunch that internet traffic ...
In recent days, Iranians experienced a near-complete internet blackout, with local service providers – including mobile services – repeatedly going offline. Iran’s government has cited cyber security ...
While Iran's spokesperson said that the government is blocking and slowing down the country's internet connection as a way to prevent Israeli cyberattacks, it's also making it harder for people to ...
Iran is limiting internet connectivity for citizens amid Israeli airstrikes—pushing people towards domestic apps, which may not be secure, and limiting their ability to access vital information.
Iran is going offline to prevent purported Israeli cyberattacks The government has throttled its own bandwidth, asked citizens to delete WhatsApp, and plans to shut off global internet access tonight.
According to Top10VPN, VPN demand in Iran increased by 707% between June 13-16. Most users are turning to VPNs to bypass geo-restrictions and access global news, communication platforms, and ...
Iranians have spent nearly half of the Israel-Iran conflict in a near-communication blackout, unable to connect with the outside world and their neighbors.
People in Iran have been having difficulties accessing internet services, including foreign websites and messaging apps like WhatsApp.