| Iranian    authorities have    blocked the use of most "virtual private networks", a tool that    many Iranians use to get around an extensive government    Internet filter, Iranian media quoted an    official as saying on Sunday. A widespread government    Internet filter prevents Iranians from accessing many sites on the official    grounds they are offensive or criminal. Many Iranians evade the    filter through use of VPN software, which    provides encrypted links directly to private networks based abroad, and can    allow a computer to behave as if it is based in another country. But authorities have now    blocked "illegal" VPN access, an    Iranian legislator told the Mehr news agency on Sunday. Iranian web users    confirmed that VPNs were blocked. "Within the last few    days illegal VPN ports in the country have been blocked," said    Ramezanali Sobhani-Fard, the head of parliament's information and    communications technology committee, according to Mehr. "Only legal and    registered VPNs can from now on be used." Iran is holding a presidential    election in June, its first since 2009, when a disputed result led to the    worst unrest since the 1979 Islamic revolution. Protesters used services    like Facebook to communicate during those "Green Movement"    demonstrations, and the government has taken steps to curb access to the    Internet in the last few months, apparently determined to prevent a repeat    this time. An internet user named    Mohamad from the Iranian city of Isfahan confirmed that VPNs had been    blocked. "VPNs are cut off. They've    shut all the ports," he said in a Facebook message, adding that he was    using another form of software to access the service without a VPN. He said    Skype and Viber, internet services used to make telephone calls, had also    been blocked. In January, Mehdi Akhavan    Behabadi, secretary of Iran's Supreme Cyberspace Council, told Mehr that    Internet users would soon be able to purchase registered VPN connections and    that other VPNs were illegal. Financial institutions and other organizations    might need to use VPNs for security reasons, which would be a legal use,    Behabadi said. The government's move to    block VPN access may also have inadvertently cut off access to widely used    sites such as Yahoo and Google, Sobhani-Fard told Mehr on Sunday, adding that    parliament would study the issue more this week. Amin Sabeti, a UK-based    researcher on Iranian media and the web, said foreign companies such as    airlines and banks had had problems using VPNs in Iran. Through    government-registered VPNs, Sabeti said, authorities could be able to monitor    traffic more easily. DETERIORATE Millions of Iranians    experienced disruption to email and Internet access ahead of parliamentary    elections last year. "As the June    election approaches ... Iran's Internet connectivity, and the accessibility    of uncensored information, continues to deteriorate," said a report on    Iran's Internet infrastructure published in March by the UK-based group Small    Media, which researches Internet use in Iran. "Prominent    Persian-language websites and other online services have been filtered one by    one, and communications with external platforms is becoming progressively    more difficult." Iranian authorities    banned Google's email service for a week last year but reopened access after    complaints from officials. They have also announced plans to switch citizens    onto a domestic Internet network which would be largely isolated from the    World Wide Web. | 
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