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Mizehgerd - Le forum iranien « Français « Sciences et Multimédia « Facebook l'ami de la R.I.
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Florinda
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« le: 13 Juillet 2009 à 17:34:35 »

Foreign Policy: Iran's Terrifying Facebook Police

by Evgeny Morozov, NPR.org, July 13, 2009

A scary anecdote from Iran. A trusted colleague - who is married to an Iranian-American and would thus prefer to stay anonymous - has told me of a very disturbing episode that happened to her friend, another Iranian-American, as she was flying to Iran last week. On passing through the immigration control at the airport in Tehran, she was asked by the officers if she has a Facebook account. When she said "no", the officers pulled up a laptop and searched for her name on Facebook. They found her account and noted down the names of her Facebook friends.

This is very disturbing. For once, it means that the Iranian authorities are paying very close attention to what's going on Facebook and Twitter (which, in my opinion, also explains why they decided not to take those web-sites down entirely - they are useful tools of intelligence gathering).

Second, it means, as far as authorities are concerned, our online and offline identities are closely tied and we have to be fully prepared to be quizzed about any online trace that we have left (I can easily see us being asked our Facebook and Twitter handles in immigration forms; one of the forms I regularly fill flying back to the US has recently added a field for email address).

Third, this reveals that some of the spontaneous online activism we witnessed in the last few weeks - with Americans re-tweeting the posts published by those in Tehran - may eventually have very dire consequences, as Iranians would need to explain how exactly they are connected to foreigners that follow them on Twitter (believe me, I've observed enough bureaucratic stupidity in Eastern Europe to know that even some of the officials who follow Twitter activity on a daily basis may not know how it works).

I am curious if there have been other reports of foreigners being asked about their social media activity on traveling to authoritarian states. Any ideas?

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=106535773
Azadeh
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« Répondre #1 le: 14 Juillet 2009 à 09:12:48 »

Camouflez-vous les amis, c'est trop con de les aider comme ça.

A ce propos, je vois souvent les gens qui changent de nom et mettent irani ou sabz ou chais pas quoi à la place.
« Dernière édition: 14 Juillet 2009 à 09:15:24 par Azadeh »
Florinda
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« Répondre #2 le: 14 Juillet 2009 à 17:56:32 »

Un truc qui m'a choqué sur Facebook dans la rubrique choix d'une "religion"

Y'a toutes les croyances possibles, mais rien pour les zoroastriens, ni mazdéens 

C'est incroyable que les adeptes de cette religion n'aient pas réussi leur lobbying dans ce sens, je pense ne serait-ce, qu'aux parsis d'Inde !
Florinda
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« Répondre #3 le: 15 Juillet 2009 à 22:07:30 »

Trop drôle et tellement vrai  

http://www.theatlantic.com/a/facebookhumor.mhtml

http://www.rferl.org/content/The_Week_In_Facebook/1769362.html
« Dernière édition: 15 Juillet 2009 à 22:10:25 par Florinda »
lalellouia
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« Répondre #4 le: 16 Juillet 2009 à 08:54:00 »

mahmoud dans le mm groupe que moi "people who have always to spell their name for other people" 
« Dernière édition: 16 Juillet 2009 à 12:09:58 par lalellouia »
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