{"id":3127,"date":"2025-06-25T23:52:22","date_gmt":"2025-06-25T23:52:22","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/iranians.global\/news\/?p=3127"},"modified":"2025-06-25T23:53:43","modified_gmt":"2025-06-25T23:53:43","slug":"irans-internet-blackout-left-people-in-the-dark-how-does-a-country-shut-down-the-internet","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/iranians.global\/news\/irans-internet-blackout-left-people-in-the-dark-how-does-a-country-shut-down-the-internet\/","title":{"rendered":"Iran\u2019s internet blackout left people in the dark. How does a country shut down the internet?"},"content":{"rendered":"

By Mohiuddin Ahmed, Senior Lecturer of Computing and Security, Edith Cowan University<\/strong><\/a><\/p>\n

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Shutting off the internet within an entire country is a serious action. It severely limits<\/a> people\u2019s ability to freely communicate and to find reliable information during times of conflict.<\/p>\n

In countries that have privatised mobile and internet providers, control is often exercised through legislation or through government directives \u2013 such as age restrictions on adult content. By contrast, Iran has spent years developing the capacity to directly control its telecommunications infrastructure<\/a>.<\/p>\n

So how can a country have broad control over internet access, and could this happen anywhere in the world?<\/p>\n

How does \u2018blocking the internet\u2019 work?<\/h2>\n

The \u201cinternet\u201d is a broad term. It covers many types of applications, services and, of course, the websites we\u2019re familiar with.<\/p>\n

There\u2019s a range of ways to control access to internet services<\/a>, but broadly speaking, there are two \u201csimple\u201d methods a nation could use to block citizens\u2019 internet access.<\/p>\n

Hardware<\/strong><\/p>\n

A nation may opt to physically disconnect the incoming internet connectivity at the point of entry to the country (imagine pulling the plug on a telephone exchange).<\/p>\n

This allows for easy recovery of service when the government is ready, but the impact will be far-reaching. Nobody in the country, including the government itself, will be able to connect to the internet \u2013 unless the government has its own additional, covert connectivity to the rest of the world.<\/p>\n

In recent days, Iranians experienced a near-complete internet blackout<\/a>, with local service providers \u2013 including mobile services \u2013 repeatedly going offline. Iran\u2019s government has cited cyber security concerns<\/a> for ordering the shutdown.<\/p>\n

Software and configuration<\/strong><\/p>\n

This is where it gets more technical. Every internet-connected endpoint \u2013 laptop, computer, mobile phone \u2013 has an IP (internet protocol) address. They\u2019re strings of numbers; for example, 77.237.87.95 is an address assigned to one of the internet service providers in Iran.<\/p>\n

IP addresses identify the device on the public internet. However, since strings of numbers are not easy to remember, humans use domain names to connect to services \u2013 theconversation.com is an example of a domain name.<\/p>\n

That connection between the IP address and the domain is controlled by the domain name system<\/a> or DNS. It\u2019s possible for a government to control access to key internet services by modifying the DNS \u2013 this manipulates the connection between domain names and their underlying numeric addresses.<\/p>\n

An additional way to control the internet involves manipulating the traffic flow. IP addresses allow devices to send and receive data across networks controlled by internet service providers. In turn, they rely on the border gateway protocol<\/a> (BGP) \u2013 think of it like a series of traffic signs which direct internet traffic flow, allowing data to move around the world.<\/p>\n

Governments could force local internet service providers to remove their BGP routes from the internet. As a result, the devices they service wouldn\u2019t be able to connect to the internet. In the same manner, the rest of the world would no longer be able to \u201csee\u201d into the country.<\/p>\n

How common is this?<\/h2>\n

In dozens of countries around the world<\/a>, the internet is either routinely controlled or has been shut down in response to major incidents.<\/p>\n

A recent example is a wide-scale internet blackout in Bangladesh<\/a> in July 2024 during student-led protests against government job quotas.<\/p>\n