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Twitter Reschedules Maintenance Around #IranElection Controversy

40 points| foppr | 17 years ago |mashable.com | reply

14 comments

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[+] DocSavage|17 years ago|reply
Twitter's impact is mind boggling, although post-Google I should be used to how much and how quickly software can make an impact. You think the developers realized 3 years ago they were creating something that would affect the political situation in Iran? :)
[+] quizbiz|17 years ago|reply
#IranElection brings up a few interesting things in my mind and is an example of how no matter how legitimate an election may be (I have no documentation of election fraud), if there is no trust in the system, people will demand change. Plus, it's interesting that Obama is staying away, as are other arab nations when everyone has been isolated by the current President's regime. Also, I heard comparisons to the beginnings of the Velvet Revolution. On top of this, Iran is supposed to be one of the more democratically liberal nations of the Middle East and the outrage is there. (versus Saudi Arabia, Dubai, etc.)

Ignoring the politics, I'm trying to understand historical significance.

[+] sfphotoarts|17 years ago|reply
how many times have SF companies planned their maintenance windows around Iran's day... That's got to be a first.
[+] Sam_Odio|17 years ago|reply
Funny that twitter hasn't been blocked by Iran's government. I wonder if the popularity of twitter's API had any impact on that decision. Because of the API, it'd be almost impossible to completely block the service. There's no shortage of 3rd party URLs that display twitter feeds.
[+] far33d|17 years ago|reply
It has been blocked, but the users are using proxies..
[+] siavosh|17 years ago|reply
Interesting to note that in the '79 revolution, people were already finding creative ways to secretly copy and distribute revolutionary literature throughout Iran through spreading the leaders' speeches through letters, phone, cassette tapes etc. Every generation finds some way...
[+] vaksel|17 years ago|reply
not really surprising, stuff like this is pretty much the only way Twitter can appeal to mainstream.

I even see people calling it the twitter revolution.

[+] jfornear|17 years ago|reply
I think technology is getting too much credit for this uprising
[+] chanux|17 years ago|reply
This shows that Twitter is gaining too much power, isn't it?