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June 15, 2009 9:58 AM PDT

Iran protesters using tech to skirt curbs

by CBS Interactive staff
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The Iranian government is trying to control the flow of information among protesters of the supposed results of that nation's presidential election, and to and from news organizations.

But, reports CBS News Science and Technology Correspondent Daniel Sieberg, Tehran is having difficulty stopping citizens from using technology to report what's happening, express outrage and get people out to opposition rallies.

Results from a Twitter search Monday morning.

Results from a Twitter search Monday morning.

(Credit: Twitter)

There are reports citizens in Tehran have no access to text messaging via cell phones, and opposition candidate Mir Hossein Mousavi's Web site has been down.

But Sieberg combed Twitter, Facebook, YouTube and photo-sharing site Flickr, and found that those opposing President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad refusing to be silenced.

"Against all odds," says Sieberg, "they're taking their voices to the Internet and seem to be announcing, 'The revolution will be blogged." '

"Shame on them that they think they can fool us," said one post. "Where's my vote? Really, where's my vote?" asked another.

Moments after Ahmadinejad declared victory in Iran, protestors flooded the streets of the capital.

They'd mobilized using the latest digital technology on Twitter and Facebook, Sieberg points out, while adding that there is still "no definitive way to verify the authenticity or accuracy of these reports."

"On the street level," says Trita Parsi, president of the National Iranian American Council, "people are asking themselves, 'What's going on. What does the candidate want us to do?' Well, you go to Facebook and you check what is the latest status line of your candidate, and from there they could find out what was actually taking place."

Twitter lit up with posts like this at 8:32 a.m. local time Saturday: "Reports of gun shots in Fatemi Square."

Even with many Web sites down, says Sieberg, supporters of Mousavi found a way to send this tweet at 3:44 p.m. Saturday: "All Internet and mobile networks are cut. We ask everyone in Tehran to go onto their rooftops and shout 'Alaho Akbar' in protest."

"It's a tremendously skillful, talented, and Internet-savvy population in Iran," Parsi observed.

Protest videos and photos appeared on YouTube and Flickr.

Mousavi backers implored followers to declare, 'Death to dictator," on Facebook at 11:38 a.m. Sunday.

The latest tweet from Mousavi supporters called for street protests today at 4 p.m. local time, roughly 20 minutes from when Sieberg's piece aired on "The Early Show."

A tweet from Monday morning, claiming to be from an Iranian student, says of Monday's planned protest, "It's worth taking the risk. We're going. I won't be able to update until I'm back. Again, thanks for your support and wish us luck."

These pages have the most up-to-date information:

Twitter: http://twitter.com/mousavi1388

YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/user/Mousavi1388

Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/mousavi1388

Daniel Sieberg reports on technology for CBS News.

July 17, 2008 12:09 PM PDT

Thousands of liberal bloggers meeting face-to-face

by Natalie Weinstein
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Between 2,000 and 3,000 liberal-leaning bloggers are getting some face time this week, in hopes of gathering strength before the fall election.

The four-day Netroots Nation 2008 conference, which started Thursday in Austin, Texas, will feature more than 150 speakers and 125 panel discussions and events.

With the presidential election less than four months away, the conference is attracting the attention of a number of Democratic heavyweights--with the major exception of presidential candidate Barack Obama himself. According to the Austin American-Statesman, Obama apparently bowed out due to a planned trip to Europe and the Middle East.

Keynote speakers include House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and two former presidential hopefuls: Howard Dean, who now leads the Democratic National Committee, and retired Gen. Wesley Clark. Lawrence Lessig, a Stanford law professor and founder of Change Congress, will also speak.

Panels include "Pundit Project: How To Outtalk The Talking Heads," "Sunshine Laws For Bloggers," and "Measuring and Managing Your Online Paid Advertising Campaigns." There are also caucus meetings such as ones for Native Americans, Latinos, African Americans, "geeks," "moms," "street prophets," and Mother Jones readers.

This is the third annual such conference, which was previously known as YearlyKos, and the first one that could help influence the outcome of a presidential election. Netroots Nation, a site where liberal bloggers converge, was originally part of the Daily Kos blog--thus the previous name of the gathering.

"Bloggers want to be involved in the election of the next president," Matt Glazer, editor of the Austin-based blog Burnt Orange Report, told the Austin American-Statesman. "Networks of bloggers aren't just talking to one another; they are making very strategic decisions about the issues they want to discuss."

At the same time the liberal bloggers are meeting, their conservative counterparts are gathering in Austin as well. The Texas Defending the American Dream state summit will be markedly smaller than the Netroots Nation gathering, with about 300 expected, according to the Statesman. But its speakers include Libertarian presidential candidate Bob Barr.

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