Internet blackout in Iran tops 1,008 hours, NetBlocks says

Outage milestone
It has been reported that NetBlocks, the internet observatory, posted on Mastodon that an internet disruption in Iran has reached 1,008 hours. The claim — flagged in online tech discussions, including a Hacker News thread — marks roughly six weeks of severely degraded or cut-off connectivity, according to the monitoring group. Short, sharp, and hard to ignore: that's a long time to be unplugged.
Impact and context
It has been reported that the blackout has knocked out familiar online lifelines — messaging, banking apps, news feeds — for everyday users and businesses. Iran has a history of large-scale connectivity restrictions during periods of unrest, and prolonged outages leave more than tweets and memes stranded; they hit commerce, emergency services, and the basic ability to stay in touch. NetBlocks uses network measurements and public routing data to track these events, which is why its updates are watched closely by journalists and digital-rights groups.
The bigger picture
How long can a modern country function under a digital blackout? The longer an outage drags on, the louder the questions about censorship, economic damage, and international response become. It has been reported that activists and rights organizations will continue to press for transparency and independent verification as the situation evolves. For now, the figure — 1,008 hours — is both a metric and a moment: a blunt reminder that connectivity, once taken for granted, can be switched off.
Sources: mastodon.social, Hacker News
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