Just a notice, it appears that the rules blocking SSL to the IPs in Google/Gmail's DNS round robin have been removed for the two international gateways, outages are still occurring because a few of the local ISPs decided to get clever and filter it themselves.
On Mon, Sep 24, 2012 at 6:29 AM, Mansour Moufid <[email protected]>wrote: > On 2012-09-24, at 2:10 AM, Runa A. Sandvik wrote: > > > On Sun, Sep 23, 2012 at 11:36 PM, SiNA Rabbani <[email protected]> wrote: > >> Next phase is to do the same with the entire population of Iran. It is > >> hard for me to imagine the Internet getting completely shutdown. I > >> suspect they will make SSL traffic very slow to a point that users would > >> give up and look for other alternatives.... > > > > Isn't this something they have been doing for a while? > > Apparently VPNs were made illegal, but I don't think that was enforced. > > Personally, I wish I had to go to the other side of the planet to find > this kind of thing. Bell, a Canadian ISP, does it too. Not SSL but VPN > and other traffic their DPI can't identify, is steadily throttled down > to zero. OTOH, Rogers, the only other ISP, has always messed with DNS. > > Iran must be doing this with Canadian tech -- it sounds so familiar. > > _______________________________________________ > tor-talk mailing list > [email protected] > https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-talk > -- *Collin David Anderson* averysmallbird.com | @cda | Washington, D.C. _______________________________________________ tor-talk mailing list [email protected] https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-talk
