An article in the June 23, 2009 Wall Street Journal indicates that it's not just the repression of democracy on Tienanmen Square that's being recapitulated in the current election protests in Iran, but also the antiseptic, fully monitored experience of last summer's Olympic Games in Beijing, where an autocratic regime relied on technologies of surveillance supplied by complaint Western corporations to control the ability of their people to express dissent.
Iran's Web Spying Aided By Western Technology
European Gear Used in Vast Effort to Monitor Communications
By CHRISTOPHER RHOADS and LORETTA CHAO
The Iranian regime has developed, with the assistance of European telecommunications companies, one of the world's most sophisticated mechanisms for controlling and censoring the Internet, allowing it to examine the content of individual online communications on a massive scale.
Interviews with technology experts in Iran and outside the country say Iranian efforts at monitoring Internet information go well beyond blocking access to Web sites or severing Internet connections.
Instead, in confronting the political turmoil that has consumed the country this past week, the Iranian government appears to be engaging in a practice often called deep packet inspection, which enables authorities to not only block communication but to monitor it to gather information about individuals, as well as alter it for disinformation purposes, according to these experts.