World | Iran Iran Censors, Slows Internet to Quash Protests Text messaging and mobile service also slowed, blocked By John Johnson Posted Feb 15, 2011 5:39 PM CST Copied Protesters make the victory sign, as they demonstrate in front of the Iranian embassy to show solidarity to the people of Iran and others fighting for freedom, in Brussels, Monday, Feb. 14, 2011. (AP Photo/Yves Logghe) With the Iranian opposition staging a fresh wave of protests in the wake of the Egyptian and Tunisian uprisings, authorities have stepped up a campaign to slow and censor the Internet to sabotage protesters' communication, according to Reporters Without Borders. Broadband service has slowed in major cities, a phenomenon noticed before major rallies in the last wave of demonstrations. Iranians report having trouble making cell phone calls or sending text messages, and the specific keyword "Bahman"—the Persian calendar month that corresponds roughly to February—has been blocked from SMS traffic. In addition, two news sites, www.fararu.com and sahamnews.org—the latter has explicit opposition ties—have been blocked. Read These Next Kate McKinnon shares her weird medical condition. Baltimore QB 'forgot where I was' and shoved an opposing fan. She walked out on her gig due to JD Vance, doesn't regret it. Trump's reception at US Open isn't warm. Report an error