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CYBER WARS
US eases Iran tech sales ban to support free speech
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) May 30, 2013


Online Muslims more open to Western culture: poll analysis
Washington (AFP) May 31, 2013 - Muslims outside the United States who use the Internet are more likely to have a favorable opinion of Western popular culture than those who don't go online, the Pew Research Center said Friday.

Crunching the numbers of its recent wide-ranging survey of Muslims in 39 countries, the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life found a median of 18 percent of respondents use the Internet at home, work or school.

Internet use varied widely, however, between the African, Asian, European and Middle Eastern nations surveyed -- from two percent in Afghanistan to 59 percent in Kosovo.

Focusing on 25 countries with enough Muslims using the Internet to allow a detailed analysis, Pew found that Muslims who go online are more inclined to like Western movies, music and television.

"They are (also) somewhat less inclined to say that Western entertainment is harming morality in their country," said Pew, which posted its analysis on its www.pewforum.org website.

That remained the case even when such factors as age, education and gender were taken into account, the pollsters said.

The difference was especially marked in countries like Kyrgyzstan, Senegal, Russia and Indonesia, where Internet users were at least 30 percentage points more like to have a positive view of Western entertainment.

Muslims online tended to be younger and better educated than those who don't use the Internet, and men slightly outnumbered women.

Internet use did not appear to make much difference in Muslims' interpretations of their faith, although those who are online were "somewhat more likely" to see things in common between Islam and Christianity, Pew said.

The United States on Thursday lifted a ban on sales of communications equipment to Iranians and opened access to Internet services and social media, aiming to help the Iranian people circumvent tough government controls.

The decision immediately allowed US companies to begin selling computers, tablets, mobile phones, software, satellite receivers and other equipment for personal use to Iranians, after such sales had been tightly restricted under sweeping sanctions on the country.

Also allowed were the sale and free provision of Internet communications like instant messaging, chat, email, social networking, sharing of photos and movies, web browsing and blogging.

The move came just two weeks before Iran's national elections, with the ballot lists dominated by conservatives loyal to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khameini while many challengers were blocked from running.

State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said the action would allow Iranians to skirt the government's "attempts to silence its people" and exercise "the right to freedom of expression."

Iranians will be able to obtain "safer, more sophisticated personal communications equipment" to communicate with each other and the outside world, she said in a statement.

"We will use all the tools at our disposal, including licenses that facilitate communication and designations to target those responsible for human rights abuses, to help the Iranian people exercise these basic rights," said Treasury Department Under Secretary for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence David Cohen.

The move sought to ease some of the negative impact of sweeping, blunt sanctions by the US and its allies aimed at forcing Iran to rein in its alleged program to develop nuclear weapons capability.

And it aims at helping Iranians protect themselves from cyberattacks by people working for the Tehran regime to stifle dissent.

"Our hope is... this will help make some hardware and software, including things like antivirus software or software that helps protect from malware, more available to them and make them more able to protect themselves against government hackers," a senior US administration official said.

The move was not timed to the June 14 elections, the official said.

"This is a response to their efforts to deprive their citizens of their rights... The timing is really driven by the continued crackdown within Iran."

The US Treasury issued a general license allowing the sale of personal communications equipment and services by Americans. But a ban remained in place on selling to the Iranian government or any entity or individual specifically designated for US sanctions.

Trita Parsi, president of the National Iranian American Council, cheered the lifting of the ban as a move toward intelligent sanctions.

"We finally put an end to one of the worst examples of sanctions that hurt ordinary Iranians, undermine civil society and human rights, and empower the regime," Parsi said in an email to supporters.

"We now have an opening to address the other broad sanctions that are causing medicine shortages."

"We welcome this smart move," said Delphine Hagland, US director of Reporters Without Borders.

"But we have to be careful that this general license will not open the door for US companies to sell filtering technology to the Iranian authorities."

That was a reference to the Tehran authorities' ability in earlier years to buy US technology that allowed them to censor the Internet and spy on their citizens' online activities.

The Treasury also put sanctions on Asghar Mir-Hejazi, the deputy chief of staff for the supreme leader, and on the government censor, the Committee to Determine Instances of Criminal Content, for "contributing to serious human rights abuses... including through the use of communications technology to silence and intimidate the Iranian people."

In addition, the State Department announced it had placed visa restrictions on nearly 60 Iranians, mainly from the government, for their "role in the ongoing repression of students, human rights defenders, lawyers, artists" and others.

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