5-6 minutes
An official admitted that the company had restored the domain to Fars by
using DNS spoofing, a type of hacking that redirects users to the wrong
website when they try to access a certain URL.
The Iranian Fars News Agency used DNS spoofing, a type of computer
hacking, to restore its '.com' domain after it was blocked by the US
Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control's order on Saturday,
according to Radio Farda.
One official from a company owned by Iran's Ministry of
Telecommunications admitted that the company had restored the domain to
Fars by using DNS spoofing, a type of hacking that redirects users to
the wrong website when they try to access a certain URL.
Sajad Bonabi, a member of the Board of Directors of Telecommunications
Infrastructures Company, admitted to the DNS spoofing, also known as DNS
cache poisoning, in a tweet on Saturday.
Bonabi added that websites and companies "that suspect they would be
targeted by the cowardly sanctions of the United States" could contact
the company he works for in order to learn precautionary measures.
"For the first time in Iran's Internet history, the Iranian regime has
confirmed that the DNS Spoofing was done. DNS Spoofing is a method used
by hackers to redirect the traffic of a particular website to another
destination," said London-based digital security expert Amin Sabeti to
Radio Farda.
At the time of writing, Fars' websites in English and Farsi were not
accessible from Israel. The news site was available from an Iranian
'.ir' domain and continued to publish tweets. Fars called the blocking
of the '.com' domain an "uncivilized move" and a "flagrant violation of
the freedom of expression."
Fars reported that it received a letter from the international service
provider saying "the US Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets
Control (OFAC) has included the news agency in its SDN list and ordered
it to stop domain services to Fars News Agency.”
Former Shin Bet officials told the Jerusalem Post earlier this month
that Iran may use advanced cybertools from China against Israel or the
US in the wake of the assassination of former IRGC Quds Force commander
Qasem Soleimani.
In March, Iranian intelligence hacked into the phone of Blue and White
leader Benny Gantz, according to the Shin Bet (Israel Security Agency),
and took all its contents – including sensitive information, according
to Channel 12.
In April, Google blocked access to the YouTube and Gmail accounts of
Iranian state broadcasters Press TV and Hispan TV, according to Forbes.
Press TV claimed that Google blocked access "without prior notice" and
that they had received a message telling them that their "Google Account
was disabled and can't be restored because it was used in a way that
violates Google's policies."
Iranian state TV and media companies have been earning advertising
revenue from YouTube content and have garnered a following
internationally.
It is unclear how US sanctions could affect this source of revenue for Iranian state TV.
The Shahrvand newspaper in Tehran reported that managers of the
state-run Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting (IRIB) located outside
of Iran can still claim the advertising money, even though YouTube and
Google are under US law. The Iranian state TV's YouTube channels are
officially based outside of Iran.
State TV channels have also been able to garner a following
internationally through social media and live broadcasts, as a Press TV
director explained in an interview with the Iranian Fars News Agency.
Radio Farda estimated that the IRIB can earn up to a hundred thousand dollars a year, and that number could continue to rise.
Press TV and Hispan TV's YouTube channels are still open, but no new content can be uploaded.
Facebook also shut down multiple Iran-sponsored groups and accounts in
April, saying that "the pages routinely amplified Iranian state
narratives, targeting Israel, the United States, and Saudi Arabia,
especially for their roles in the Middle East, and focusing on the Yemen
and Palestine conflicts. The pages often shared articles from websites
which reproduced, verbatim, content from Iranian state or state-allied
outlets, such as Press TV."
Habib Abdul Hussein, director of Press TV's website and social networks,
told Fars that the agency's budget is a small fraction of the budget of
international media, and that it is still able to combat other
narratives from external media.
Gil Hoffman and Yonah Jeremy Bob contributed to this report.
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