June 16, 2009 11:57 AM
- Text
Foreign Media Banned in Iran so Twitter and YouTube Rock On
(MoneyWatch) News coverage of the situation in Tehran and other Iranian cities today has reverted back to the early stages of the rebellion last Saturday, i.e., once again we have to get most of our news from social media. The reason is that the Iranian government has today banned foreign media from covering the demonstrations.
The outpouring of coverage via social media continues unabated. Today, for example, hundreds of more videos from inside Iran have been uploaded to YouTube. Twitter is also awash with reports, also, but some of them seem based only on unsubstantiated rumors, such as a series of frantic RTs indicating that the Iranian Army may be moving in on demonstrators.
Other Tweets seem more grounded in the kind of eyewitness reports that have largely characterized the stream of reports that have been coming out of Iran since this rebellion began:
Meanwhile, the anchors at CNN over the past 24 hours seem to be going out of their way to pat themselves on the back for what they claim has been 24-7 coverage of events in Iran since the election. This is not true, however. On Saturday, as protests were erupting, CNN was focused stateside on the transition to DTV.
Now the foreign networks are in place and ready to film, the regime is preventing them from doing so. So at present it's up to social media services to get the news out to the outside world. One complicating factor: Twitter plans a one-hour shutdown for maintenance at 2 p.m. PDT today.
The outpouring of coverage via social media continues unabated. Today, for example, hundreds of more videos from inside Iran have been uploaded to YouTube. Twitter is also awash with reports, also, but some of them seem based only on unsubstantiated rumors, such as a series of frantic RTs indicating that the Iranian Army may be moving in on demonstrators.
Other Tweets seem more grounded in the kind of eyewitness reports that have largely characterized the stream of reports that have been coming out of Iran since this rebellion began:
- TwitPersia in tehran anti election fraud rally in Naft St and Jahan Koodak! Join them! #iranelection iranians mousavi karoubi
- RT IRAN student (Mazandaran Uni): "We R abt 1200 uni student locked in uni by ahmadi's Militia. We need help." #IranElection #gr88
- RT @persiankiwi: we have info that tehran uni will be attacked tonight - have contact inside - says uni blocked #Iranelection Hope Not :(
Meanwhile, the anchors at CNN over the past 24 hours seem to be going out of their way to pat themselves on the back for what they claim has been 24-7 coverage of events in Iran since the election. This is not true, however. On Saturday, as protests were erupting, CNN was focused stateside on the transition to DTV.
Now the foreign networks are in place and ready to film, the regime is preventing them from doing so. So at present it's up to social media services to get the news out to the outside world. One complicating factor: Twitter plans a one-hour shutdown for maintenance at 2 p.m. PDT today.
Latest Now in MoneyWatch
- Home heating costs on the rise
- Which Super Bowl car ads really worked?
- Romania's government collapses after protests
- Greece debt talks drag on
- States, banks near $25B foreclosure pact
- Citigroup hopes to flood China with credit cards
- Are small business credit cards worth it?
- Jason Wu collection makes a splash at Target
- Is the "jobless recovery" over?
- Super Bowl ads: Best, worst, and weirdest
- "Hidden" mortgage fee paying for payroll tax cut
- The secret to becoming an idea machine
- Should HR dictate bathroom behavior?
- How Angelo Dundee got boxers to be their best
- 6 embarrassing office stories that will make you cringe
- Facebook: Strong growth, but not compelling
- Help coming for the 401(k)-challenged
Latest CBS News Headlines
on Facebook Most Discussed Stories
on CBS News
- Gov. Perry ventures back into Texas public eye
- Lawmakers' properties can benefit from earmarks
- Tim Tebow won't rule out a future in politics
- Earnings Preview: Use of cash in focus for News 2Q
on Facebook Most Discussed Stories
on CBS News






