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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsIran crippled Starlink and why the rest of the world should worry
https://restofworld.org/2026/iran-starlink-internet-shutdown/?utm_source=firefox-newtab-en-us:
The nationwide internet shutdown, which started on January 8, has disconnected 85 million Iranians from the outside world. Cloudflare, a major internet infrastructure company, recorded a 98.5% collapse in Iranian internet traffic within 30 minutes of the shutdown starting. NetBlocks, an internet monitoring group, confirmed non-satellite connectivity dropped below 2% of normal levels.
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Tehran has introduced a white list system that allows government-aligned media selective access while ordinary citizens remain cut off. Ayatollah Ali Khameneis X account continued posting even as the rest of Iran went dark.
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Iran crippled Starlink and why the rest of the world should worry (Original Post)
Intractable
12 hrs ago
OP
I have read it backfired on them, people were so bored (and pissed) that they went out and joined the protests nt
EX500rider
11 hrs ago
#2
The OP clips don't explain the main point of the article - they jammed GPS, which ruined Starlink
muriel_volestrangler
11 hrs ago
#3
Lovie777
(21,833 posts)1. They can also monitor and spy on......
other countries too. And they are not alone. Technology is universal, because humans have the knowledge, since they Initially created it.
EX500rider
(12,205 posts)2. I have read it backfired on them, people were so bored (and pissed) that they went out and joined the protests nt
muriel_volestrangler
(105,604 posts)3. The OP clips don't explain the main point of the article - they jammed GPS, which ruined Starlink
Starlink users aren't the average person, so participation in the protests isn't the point. It's that they stop news and footage of the killings getting out - or of organizing inside the country, since Starlink is the "back-up" for those with more resources than average (eg the BBC received some casualty reports from doctors, at first).
Military-grade GPS jammers deployed since January 8 have cut satellite internet performance by as much as 80% in parts of the country, according to Amir Rashidi, director of digital rights at the Miaan Group, a U.S.-based nonprofit focused on Iranian internet censorship and digital rights.
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Starlink terminals rely on GPS signals to locate themselves and connect to satellites. By disrupting these signals, Iranian authorities can render the devices unreliable without touching the satellites themselves.
When Russia tried similar jamming in Ukraine, SpaceX responded within hours with software updates that restored service. So far, no such fix has arrived for Iran. SpaceX has not commented on the disruption.
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Starlink terminals rely on GPS signals to locate themselves and connect to satellites. By disrupting these signals, Iranian authorities can render the devices unreliable without touching the satellites themselves.
When Russia tried similar jamming in Ukraine, SpaceX responded within hours with software updates that restored service. So far, no such fix has arrived for Iran. SpaceX has not commented on the disruption.
Igel
(37,395 posts)4. Starlink wasn't ruined. Starlink *access* was ruined.
The difference is important. Stop the jamming or find a way through it and the comms system is perfect find, behind the EM roar.