What do regulations in the developing world tell us about the internet economy? In this paper, we argue that the ways in which developing nation states adjust to and legislate the internet depends upon whether they possess a national planning strategy for international data traffic. Focusing our attention on the global trade of intangible goods in Iran, we aim to demonstrate that digital protectionism causes, to varying degrees, suppression, censorship, and the violation of freedom of speech and other civil rights on the internet. The fact that development of cyberspace technology in Iran was contingent upon the necessities of the cyber and propaganda war with Western countries, as the pioneers of globalised economy, caused Iranian domestic cyberspace to be shaped in odd with the world order. The significant role played by the social media during violent uprising in 2009, 2017–2018, and 2019 gave upper hand to the hardliners who support the National Information Network (NIN) and domestic social media. Our results show that digital protectionism generated an emergence of domestic start-ups operating in the Iranian market in the absence of global rivals. Yet, digital protectionism and sanction-induced barriers have triggered social problems, besides the emergence of parastatals, securing the economy to an inefficient social and economic path towards digital development.
1. Digital protectionism in perspective
As a commodity, data travel the globe following routes resembling the roads built for the international trade of tangible goods. Web 2.0 platforms such as Google, Facebook, Twitter, Amazon, and Instagram build the highways and the gates, alongside the traffic protocols users are required to observe while using the internet. Web 2.0 platforms do not provide the content; instead, they offer an infrastructure for users to produce, share, and consume contents under intellectual property protection. For nearly two decades, individuals around the globe have used Web 2.0 platforms so frequently that they have now transformed into digital monopolies, able to monitor every single movement by its users on the internet (Zuboff, Reference Zuboff2019).
As Laura DeNardis (Reference DeNardis2014: 1) argues, ‘the diffuse nature of internet governance technologies is shifting historic control over these public interest areas from traditional nation-state bureaucracy to private ordering and new global institutions’. In the face of such developments, many of states turn into digital monopolies to empower their sovereignty (Bulut, Reference Bulut2016; Everard, Reference Everard2000; Kohl, Reference Kohl2017; Lu and Liu, Reference Lu and Liu2018; Sunstein, Reference Sunstein2017). Today, developing nations such as China, Russia, Iran, and Turkey have adopted policy measures to track the internet economy and advance sophisticated tools, for example, through installing malicious software on the devices of individuals without their consent, organising cyber-attacks, and interfering in the democratic processes of other nations, such as general elections and referenda (Marczak et al., Reference Marczak, Dalek, McKune, Senft, Scott-Railton and Deibert2018).Footnote 1
Subsequently, the importance of the internet economy for the nation state has necessitated the introduction of digital protectionism or policies aimed at localising data by preventing its transference internationally. According to Aaranson (Reference Aaranson2018), ‘digital protectionism is a broad term that refers to a wide range of barriers both to e-commerce and to cross-border data flows’ (see also Aaranson, Reference Aaronson2016a, Reference Aaronson2016b). Governments adopt protectionist policies in order to decrease the dependency of nations on digital media corporations collecting, storing, and commodifying user data.
What is it that makes data special? An internet economy creates added value when tangible goods are bought and sold on online retail shopping sites such as Amazon and Walmart, but then additionally, through digital media corporations commodifying the data produced by online users. These data include emails and messages posted on digital media websites, coupled with the metadata of each item traded on the internet, such as clicks, page views, and user profiles containing age, gender, and country of origin. Known as cookies, files are stored on the hard drives of individual users allowing corporations to monitor:
(a) the location where websites were accessed,
(b) which pages users visited,
(c) when they visited these sites, and
(d) how much time and money were spent on each webpage (Turow, Reference Turow2011).
Since the advent of the Internet of Things, physical devices connected to each other have similarly enabled corporations to collect, store, and exchange data about the types of equipment an individual owns, how frequently they are used, and where they are located.
Nation states not only desire to control the global trade of hardware, computers, and mobile phones but likewise the global processes of data commodification, offering protectionist policies encouraging ‘local’ digital media corporations to store their user data within their specific national borders. Furthermore, nation states block digital media websites and impose taxes on their transactions allowing for ‘local’ corporations to advance their own technologies. In many high-income economies, nation states either employ geo-blocking techniques or block websites violating its laws of anti-trust and intellectual property.
Governors and ‘local’ media companies may see protectionist policies as the best measure to diminish a national economy's dependence on foreign corporations. However, the lessons economists learnt from the implementation of protectionist policies in the developing world suggest that protectionism may not always prove the best way for a nation to achieve growth rates in certain industries. One of the consequences of protectionism on the internet is that it engenders a large-scale emergent phenomenon termed import substitution digitalisation. As a reworked form of the policy of import substitution industrialisation that dominated the Global South from the 1950s until the 1980s (Ahmad, Reference Ahmad1978; Baer, Reference Baer1972; Cockcroft et al., Reference Cockcroft, Frank and Johnson1972), import substitution digitalisation is a strategy for regulating the internet whereby nation states implement protectionist policies. This often involves encouraging ‘local’ digital media corporations to store, analyse, and commodify their data within their national borders, despite such data being collaboratively produced by digital media users across various countries. It is frequently argued that the policies of import substitution promote labour productivity by creating incentives for ‘infant industries’ (Chang, Reference Chang2002) to invest in research and development. In the case of digitalisation, however, import substitution does not always cause freedom of speech other civil rights on the internet although it can lead to a number of ‘local’ companies to operate in the internet economy in the absence of global rivals.
Nation states are not uniform, adopting various policies to safeguard the political interests of those in power. Nevertheless, many, if not all, nation states across the globe implement protectionist policies. Historically, nation states have regulated not only their sectors of oil and gas production, electricity, and financial services (Guerriero, Reference Guerriero2019) but moreover, their television, radio, film, and recorded music industries (Lourenço and Turner, Reference Lourenço and Turner2019; Mazzucato, Reference Mazzucato2011). If the politics of a nation have historically favoured government intervention, it is expected that a government may implement protectionist policies on the internet for regulating the international trade of digital commodities, such as with the ‘Great Firewall of China’, Russia's ‘Sovereign Internet’, Turkey's ‘local and national Internet’, and the ‘National Information Network’ in Iran. Consequently, when states are motivated for economic or security reasons, it is initially unrealistic to expect they may develop non-protectionist policies.
When nation states implement digital protectionism, one of the most common practices is the blocking or restricting of access, temporarily or partially, to the websites of large internet corporations mostly registered in the USA, such as Google, Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, WhatsApp, YouTube, Uber, and PayPal. China, Russia, Iran, and Turkey, among others, frequently claim that these corporations either evade their respective laws of taxation and confidentiality or break the rules of fair competition (Calder, Reference Calder2017). As demonstrated in Table 1, the left column identifies which large digital corporations are blocked by several nation states to ensure that their citizens use ‘local’ alternatives. The right column displays some of the ‘local’ websites that nation states allow or encourage their citizens to use.
Table 1. Digital protectionism in China, Russia, Iran, and Turkey
![](https://static.cambridge.org/binary/version/id/urn:cambridge.org:id:binary:20200705142702420-0270:S1744137420000077:S1744137420000077_tab1.png?pub-status=live)
Iran imposes large scale controls on data and information mobility. Taking the country as a case study, we aim to examine the nature and consequences of digital protectionism and state-led planning. Specifically, we want to resolve the following question: What can regulations in Iran tell us about the internet economy in the developing world?
Despite the advantages of cross-country studies for understanding global trends in the internet economy, such studies often neglect the role and significance of country-specific factors shaped by the evolution of institutional conditions and economic outcomes at the national level. We argue these factors are rooted in global developments in the internet economy, together with each specific country's geopolitical challenges, economic structures, and historical contingencies. For instance, in Iran, access to considerable oil incomes and rents (Mohaddes and Pesaran, Reference Mohaddes, Pesaran, Alizadeh and Hakimian2013) combined with the regime's factional nature (Alamdari, Reference Alamdari2005) generated numerous opportunities for extensive state interventions in the economy. Factors such as rapid oil price changes, social unrest, and media wars have compelled the government to regulate the markets. Eventually developing into a player in the internet economy worth 40,000 billion Tomans as of 2017 (about 12 billion USD),Footnote 2 the Iranian government facilitated the regime by structuring the in- and out-flow of data produced by its citizen users.
As Elinor Ostrom (Reference Ostrom1990: 202) argues, ‘past institutional choices open up some paths and foreclose others for future institutional development’. Accordingly, our findings reveal how the history of the Iranian nation state, intertwined with nationalist and Islamist discourses, has birthed numerous institutions providing the regime with the opportunities to use the internet as a strategic tool for pacifying the opposition. Particularly, we examine the role of events triggering internet censorship in the 1990s, presenting how they shaped the mentality of policymakers and quality institutions prior to the advent of the digital era in the 2000s. We conclude that the 1990s witnessed a rise in satellite jamming and internet censorship embodied within legal frameworks, creating the prioritisation of security issues over economic objectives.
As cyberspace technology in Iran developed in response to its cyber and propaganda war with Western countries, the Iranian domestic cyberspace came to be shaped at odds with the outside world order. Moreover, internet censorship in Iran suggests that the government maintains concern over both the outflow as well as the inflow of internet data. Our results indicate that nation states such as Iran that maintain strict control of the public and private spheres are inclined to regulate data mobility, defining data to be another public good and therefore to be monitored accordingly. As a consequence, the internet has become a sphere where nation states have invented new methods of collecting, storing, and processing data gathered from the networks of individual users.
Our analysis of the nature and consequences of the regulations in Iran suggests that in parts of the developing world, the planning of the internet economy by nation states plays a significant role in structuring data traffic. This resembles Karl Polanyi's conception of the formation of a laissez-faire economy as described in The Great Transformation, wherein he argues that it ‘was the product of deliberate state action, subsequent restrictions on laissez-faire started in a spontaneous way’ (Polanyi, Reference Polanyi1944 [Reference Polanyi2001]: 147). Deliberate state movement into the internet economy can operate in multiple ways. For instance, a nation can crowd out the use of global apps through requiring its population to use domestic alternatives (e.g. Yandex or Alipay) on their mobile phones, thereby providing the means for monitoring its citizens.Footnote 3 As we show below, digital protectionism creates a particular internet ecosystem whereby governments not only apply restrictions, bans, and fines, but likewise employ mandates, subsidies, and encouragements. Therefore, we conclude that digital protectionism can function as a form of internet censorship. However, we also think the following clarification should be made:
(1) digital protectionism is an economic policy of nation states to incentivise domestic companies to operate (more) independently in the internet economy, whereas;
(2) internet censorship is an undemocratic governmental practice whereby nation states violate the individual's right to obtain information and freely express their thoughts.
There are various studies that address the link between social media penetration and mass mobilisation in democratic and autocratic countries. Using the Egyptian upheaval of 2011 as a case study, Saleh (Reference Saleh2012) shows that internet failed to bring freedom to the oppressed society of Egypt and facilitated the consolidation of a military regime. Ananyev et al. (Reference Ananyev, Xefteris, Zudenkova and Petrova2019) examine the role of new information and communication technologies (ICT) in protest coordination and governments' response in the form of content censorship and restricting access to ICTs used for coordination. Qin et al. (Reference Qin, Strömberg and Wu2017) using China as a case study argue that social media is not only an important tool for content share and social mobilisation; it also provide governments with new opportunities for monitoring activists and local officials. Enikolopov et al. (Reference Enikolopov, Makarin and Petrova2019a, Reference Enikolopov, Petrova and Zhuravskaya2019b) show that the penetration of VK, the largest social networking platform in Russia, increased the probability of the occurrence of social protests while promoting pro-governmental supports.
Other studies focus on the relationship between social media and the quality of democratic institutions. Enikolopov et al. (Reference Enikolopov, Petrova and Sonin2018) show that ‘social media can discipline corruption even in a country with low political competition and heavily censored traditional media’. Acemoglu et al. (Reference Acemoglu, Tarek and Tahoun2018) discuss the role of social media in the Arab Spring. They state that the uprisings in Egypt raised the rents seized by the firms that are politically connected to the government; however, the events did not have significant impact on the firms connected to rival groups. Jha and Kodila-Tedika (Reference Jha and Kodila-Tedika2019) argue that there is a positive correlation between democracy and social media penetration especially in low-income countries (see also Kodila-Tedika, Reference Kodila-Tedika2018.) Reinsberg (Reference Reinsberg2019) argues that ‘blockchain technology can enhance the effectiveness and efficiency of foreign aid governance, thereby moving beyond completely anonymous contexts’ (see also Davidson et al., Reference Davidson, De Filippi and Potts2018). Guriev et al. (Reference Guriev, Melnikov and Zhuravskaya2019) show that internet penetration does not only cause corruption incidents in the government to expose, it also increases the vote share of populist parties.
Through blocking online transactions and purging global rivals, this study demonstrates how sanctions in Iran contributed to the emergence of domestic start-ups and brands in the internet economy. Brands operate as a kind of capital (Harper and Endres, Reference Harper and Endres2018), and therefore, sanctions and protectionist policies facilitate a sort of capital formation whereby domestic brands function as imitations of their global alternatives. As a result, the Iranian case reveals that an unintended consequence of sanctions on data mobility bear similarities with the intended goals of import substitution digitalisation, in the sense that both favour some sectors of the economy to the detriment of others.
Finally, our study indicates that as a subset of the country's more complex economic and political systems, the digital sector in Iran was incapable of developing either independently of or contradictory to the country's institutional ecosystem. Pagano's notion of interlocking complementarities, borrowed from biology, helps to articulate this last point: various forces within the Iranian nation state taxed or subsidised institutional development in the digital sector, forcing its accordance with the country's founding ideology and economic realities (Pagano, Reference Pagano2011).
2. Censorship in Iran: when motivations define tools
The political order in Iran is based on Islamic-nationalistic narratives exercising severe control over the public and private spheres. Its high oil incomes serve as a crucial resource for facilitating the state's intervention into the economy, culture, and society (Alamdari, Reference Alamdari2005: 1285– 1287). The socio-economic structure of Iran laid the foundations for the establishment of a semi-totalitarian regime, monitoring both data generation and mobility in defence of ‘insiders’ from ‘domestic outsiders’ and foreign rivals (Atwood, Reference Atwood2012). To a significant extent, the 1979 Islamic Revolution was a response to the broadening secular and extravagant lifestyle of an emergent social segment during the 1925–1979 Pahlavi monarchy (Ansari, Reference Ansari1998: 140–146). Institutionally embodying its Islamic ideology, the regime provided a new definition for ‘Iranianness’ founded on a peculiar representation of Shia Islam and its Fars ethnic inner circle. Consequently, the government established an official monopoly on the media and launched the 1980–83 cultural revolution, closing all universities and purging ideological ‘outsider’ students and lecturers, while rewriting books in the humanities and social sciences to replicate the principles of the new ideology (Golkar, Reference Golkar2012: 1–3). While content surveillance in Iran began during the Pahlavi monarchy, it intensified throughout the first decade following the 1979 Islamic Revolution. An exception to this came with the limited liberal reforms for print-publications implemented by the 1997–2005 Khatami government, later reversed to reflect the 2005–2013 Ahmadinejad administration's Islamic-nationalistic ideology.
During the 2000s, the continuous increase in the number of internet users in Iran was accompanied by pervasive filtering efforts by the government (Aryan et al., Reference Aryan, Aryan and Halderman2013a, Reference Aryan, Aryan and Halderman2013b). In the 1990s, the strict crackdown on satellite dishes and the filtration of opposition websites resulted in the establishment of domestic channels supplying identical content (Alikhah, Reference Alikhah2018). In this period, protectionism was limited to widespread censorship: filtering out the voice of the opposition, defusing the propaganda of rival countries, and according to the official ideology combatting whatever the regime considered detrimental to the ethics and mentality of the people. Internet Service Providers (ISPs) required approval by the government which demanded software implementation to control the contents. Reporters Without Borders reported that prior to 2004, at least 12 ISPs were shut down for not implementing any filtering software.Footnote 4 During this period, the contestation between Iran and the USA surged on the internet, triggering an anti-filter war and cyber-attacks. In 2003, the US government began providing Iranian citizens with free proxies,Footnote 5 followed in 2006 by a $75 million fund ‘to reach out Iranian people’Footnote 6 alongside $50 million in 2009 to counter the Iranian government's efforts to ‘jam radio, satellite, and Internet-based transmissions’ and ‘block, censor, or monitor the internet in Iran’.Footnote 7
Despite the strict filtering policy of the 2000s, blogging became so popular that some service providers ranked among the 10 most popular websites in Iran. People from all levels of society including politicians, activists, and celebrities launched their own blogs (Kelly and Etling, Reference Kelly and Etling2008). Following the 2005 blocking of OrkutFootnote 8 some domestic social networks provided services, of which the first and the most important example CloobFootnote 9 reflected the positive effect of censorship on domestic start-ups in Iran (Hamidi et al., Reference Hamidi, Hamidi and Mehrbabak2011). The manager of Cloob noted that prior to Orkut's blocking, its number of visitors stood at merely 15,000 members, but following the 2007 filtration its numbers reached 0.4 million. During activation, Cloob developed new services, including Coroob, an inter-user transferable virtual currency enabling members to buy services such as the ability to conduct advanced searches in contents, bookkeeping, or see a list of profile visitors.Footnote 10
Ahmadinejad's controversial declaration of victory in the 2009 presidential election triggered a series of mass uprisings (Karagiannopoulos, Reference Karagiannopoulos2012: 153–157). Users shared censored news of unrest and videos of violent oppression via Facebook and Twitter, while Farsi satellite TV channels widely covered the events. In response, the regime filtered social networks and restricted internet bandwidth, in addition to using terrestrial jamming methods to interrupt the connection between private dishes and the satellite TV channels now officially determined illegal (Baldino and Goold, Reference Baldino and Goold2014; Rahimi, Reference Rahimi2011). A survey conducted by the Iranian Student Polling Agency (ISPA) indicates that censorship not only led to a decrease in satellite channel viewers but likewise decreased general trust in official media, a phenomenon replicated by falling numbers in official radio and TV viewers.Footnote 11 The regime's reaction to the 2009 presidential unrest provides evidence demonstrating that restrictions in data traffic are frequently contingent upon unpredictable events. Consequently, such interventionist policies generated the environment for the emergence of domestic alternatives.
The aftermath of the 2009 presidential elections culminated in the peak of censorship, filtering, satellite jamming, and the VPN war. Documents subsequently released by WikiLeaks detailed further acts of digital espionage conducted against Iran (Farwell and Rohozinski, Reference Farwell and Rohozinski2011; Pieterse, Reference Pieterse2012). An Israeli-American made malicious computer worm named Stuxnet attacked the Programmable Logic Controller (PLC) and the Supervisory Control and Data Acquisition (SCADA) operating Iran's uranium enrichment systems, resulting in substantial damages to the country's nuclear programme (Farwell and Rohozinski, Reference Farwell and Rohozinski2011; Lindsay, Reference Lindsay2013). In the autumn of 2009, Twitter suffered global disruption. In 2011, a number of American banks and the computer system of a reservoir dam suffered attacks by hackers; in the same year, a virus called Shamoon hit the Qatari and Saudi state-run gas and oil companies. And in 2012, the International Atomic Energy Agency's servers were hacked. Although Iran never accepted responsibility for these cyber-attacks, they were attributed to the Iranian Cyber Army (Bronk, and Tikk-Ringas, Reference Bronk and Tikk-Ringas2013; Farwell and Arakelian, Reference Farwell and Arakelian2013; Guitton and Korzak, Reference Guitton and Korzak2013; Kenney, Reference Kenney2015; Rid and Buchanan, Reference Rid and Buchanan2015). These cyber-attacks are indicative of the Iranian nation state developing new capacities for intervention into the communicative transactions of the internet (Al-Rawi, Reference Al-Rawi2014; Berman, Reference Berman2013; Craig and Valeriano, Reference Craig and Valeriano2016).
The formation of the Iranian Cyber Army and the development of required technologies reveal a causal relationship between the non-economic rules of the game and the evolution of institutions and organisations. Some sources rank the Iranian Cyber Army among the top five in the world,Footnote 12 on account of the country's capacity to meet its large domestic demand for required software.Footnote 13 However, there are general doubts as to its ability to compete internationally. Israeli sources claim that in terms of cyber-warfare capabilities, Iran is considered to be on a par with the most advanced countries, stressing its ability to launch cyber-attacks in the case of war against Western nations' energy infrastructures, transportation systems, and financial institutions.Footnote 14 Although several sources concede the country's ability to supply advanced software, their illegal application combined with the reaction of their target countries hinders Iran's potential to benefit economically from its technology's market advantages.
3. National Information Network
The Stuxnet experience alerted the Iranian regime as to the potential for the disastrous effects of a future widespread cyber-attack. Such an event might target its principal political and economic centres, including its nuclear plants, ministries, infrastructures, official media, and banks. As a result, the original concept of establishing a ‘halal internet’ providing content according to the regime's Islamic narratives evolved into a national security project. Started during Ahmadinejad's presidency, this was supposed to operate as an intranet network for contacting vital centres. It was initially branded the National Internet, but after some amendments, the Supreme Council of Cyberspace (SCC) retitled it as National Information Network (NIN) (Rahimi, Reference Rahimi2015). The definition and requirements of the NIN were approved in 2013, with the Ministry of Information and Communications Technology determined its project executive. The SCC hailed the NIN one of its most important national cyberspace projects and the communicational framework of the country's cyberspace.Footnote 15 The subsequent law enacted as of 2016 specified that the realisation of this project demanded compliance with such national requirements as providing advanced infrastructural services matching the country's necessities, the utilisation of the economic advantages of national cyberspace industry, the protection and development of Irani-Islamic culture in cyberspace, and security regarding Iranian users' private information against external threats. The NIN was defined as a network based on the internet protocol, comprising switches, routers, and data centres, allowing or denying internal access requests to receive information maintained in its domestic data centres. Additionally, the NIN hinders the potential for tracing from abroad and provides a secure and private intranet network.Footnote 16
Initially, the focus of the NIN project fell on non-economic security issues on the internet. Breaking tradition with Iran's tendency towards reactionary responses, collaborating units within the regime designed a strategic project intended for long-term usage. Crucially, the project clearly defined its institutions and legal frameworks, and so we can characterise the NIN's targets into two main alignments. Firstly, to minimise security concerns by providing a network independent of the internet, facilitating controlled cooperation with other networks, and solidifying safe and sustainable communication between the country's different core organisations. Secondly, to meet the criteria demanded by the domestic market by supplying diverse content, country-wide services, wide bandwidth, a data centre, and internal hosting at a competitive price.Footnote 17 Statements by Saidreza Ameli, the Secretary of the Supreme Council of the Cultural Revolution, clarify the scope of the project and funding; in May 2019, he declared 80% progress in the NIN project, maintaining that 12,000 billion Tomans from the public budget and 7,000 billion Tomans in private funds had been allocated for developing the NIN's infrastructure.Footnote 18
Despite various attempts to emphasise the prerequisites for creating a highly competitive network, the NIN's complementary 2017 decision required lower prices for data trafficking compared to the global internet. This discount was suggested to amount to 50% for all consumers and 90% for ‘qualified’ units and users.Footnote 19 Initially, this may appear a short-term policy supporting the NIN by encouraging users and institutions to choose the domestic alternative, but this practice resembles similar traps that have previously ensnared state-run parastatals, such as factories and banks. For instance, complete nationalisation of the financial system due to similar ideological concerns relating to the dominance of non-Islamic-Irani rules in banking system resulted in its subsequent lack of profitability. Accordingly, a phenomenon called ‘banking dilemma’ emerged out of the long-term non-profitability, despite no significant report of bankruptcy in the system. The ‘banking dilemma’ demonstrates the existence of widespread rent-seeking within the financial system, and the reality of public resources being used for the benefit of the banks (Karamelikli and Alizadeh, Reference Karamelikli and Alizadeh2017: 56).Footnote 20
Doubts as to the NIN's competitive capability have increased as no deadline established for internet subsidisation. More importantly, the government have deliberately restricted internet speed and filtered millions of sites. Currently, it is evident that the domestic digital networks and the available manufactured content therein have assumed the features of the artificial state-made environment, and therefore, do not possess the qualities necessary for surviving competitive conditions. Hence, in the same line with Pagano's ‘interlocking complementarities’ notion, when a significant share of cyber activities transfers to the NIN, its entrance into the global market may prove much harder because of friction with its established institutions. In other words, the beneficiaries of rent and employment opportunities provided by the state-led development in the NIN can be resistant to the market-oriented reforms.
4. Sanctions: restriction or opportunity?
The Iranian economy is well known for its high dependence on oil incomes; however, ongoing economic crises and temporary stabilities have been another feature of the economy. The 8-year Iran–Iraq war, political turmoil, fluctuations in oil incomes and exchange rates, alongside high inflation rates, and several international sanctions have remained the reality of Iran for over four decades. During the Ahmadinejad era (2005–2013), sanctions escalated in relation to the country's nuclear programme, hitting the roof in 2010 after the introduction of comprehensive sanctions led by the USA, the UN, and the EU. Sanctions blocked the links of Iranian banks to international networks, alongside hindering the online transactions of the Iranian people (Arnold, Reference Arnold2016: 85). Consequently, while for many countries, digital protectionism may serve as one among many possible economic choices, in Iran it became an inescapable inevitably as sanctions imposed barriers on data transfer.
Sanctions set the foundation for the emergence and development of new domestic digital service providers in Iran. One of the founders of Digikala, the Iranian equivalent of Amazon, confirms that sanctions created an opportunity for many start-ups to begin their own businesses and be prepared for the time when large international companies entered the market (Salamzadeh and Kesim, Reference Salamzadeh and Kesim2017: 465). In the summer of 2019, Alexa ranked Digikala as the third most visited site in Iran and the most visited online store in the Middle East. By comparison, another Iranian e-commerce marketplace start-up named Bamilo had a less fortunate lifecycle. As one of the largest ventures of the Iran Internet Group (IIG) and backed by South African multinational corporation MTN, Bamilo hoped to usher in a new era of international investment in the Iranian market but instead wound up defunct as of March 2019.
However, not all domestic start-ups fared as poorly as Bamilo. Ranked by Alexa as the 9th, 39th, and 47th most visited websites of 2019, Divar, Sheypoor, and Emalls are online marketplaces with Android applications for new and second-hand goods, renting, advertising, and services. Esam, an Iranian equivalent of eBay, is an auction and shopping website facilitating business–consumer and consumer–consumer online sales. Takhfifan, the domestic version of Groupon, is an e-commerce platform providing discounts for group purchases. The Megagroup and Iranecar portals provide services in the automotive sector for selling and buying domestic and imported cars, accessories, and spare parts, alongside services such as leasing and insurance. Raja and Cinematicket are examples of websites that sell train and cinema tickets, respectively. Cafe Bazar and Myket are two Iranian versions of the Google Play app store. With about 400 million USD assets and 40 million users, Cafe Bazar is an Android marketplace providing different domestic and international applications.Footnote 21 There are reports indicating that because of language similarities, this app and its online services extend as far as Afghanistan.Footnote 22
Despite the strict controls on fashion-related businesses to curtail the potential to imitate Western lifestyles, websites such as Modiseh and Shexon managed to develop services focusing on stylish products. Likewise, there are apps such as Boghche offering different traditional Iranian bakery products, Reyhoon for the online ordering of food, and MamanPaz for delivering home-made food cooked by housewives in an app user's vicinity. Shafajoo, the Iranian equivalent of Doctena, is a healthcare platform providing services such as doctor appointments and online counselling courses. Likewise, Alexa ranked the website of Shaparak, the Central Bank of Iran's electronic card payment system founded for the centralisation and reorganisation of the points of sale (POSs), as the sixth most visited website in Iran in the summer of 2019. Snapp, supported by the Iran Internet Group and MTN Group, alongside Tap30, are Iranian versions of Uber, and rank the two most popular ride-hailing platforms providing services via Android and the web. Additionally, there are domestic hotel, ticket, and tourist trip booking websites ranked among the 200–500 most visited Iranian websites of 2019.
A number of sites, including SID, Magiran, and Noormag, host articles published in Iranian academic journals, while the Ensani website provides articles from Iranian journals of the humanities and social science. Alongside a lack of legal mechanisms necessary to control copyright, the sanction-induced international payment barriers affected the printing sector in two ways: firstly, the institution's condition contributed to the development of the illegal translation and publication of unavailable books. Secondly, it gave momentum to the emergence of several free download websites; Fardabook, Fidibo, Ketabnak, Takbook, TXT, and Ketabesabz among others provide a vast number of books for free download, while various websites sell student's homework, presentation files, and even theses, alongside illegally downloaded books in a multitude of languages.
As a result of the filtering of YouTube for the purpose of censoring ‘immoral’ and anti-regime content (Golkar, Reference Golkar2011: 58–60), in the summer of 2019, Iranian video sharing services such as Aparat, Didestan, and Dalfak respectively ranked the 2nd, 33rd, and 41st most visited domestic websites. Similarly taking advantage of this and the crackdown on satellite dishes, Telewebion, Film2Movie, Mydiba, and Filmo entered the list of the 50 websites most visited by Iranians by providing services for downloading films and live streaming officially-sanctioned television programmes. Hamijoo, an Iranian version of Indiegogo, is an online crowdfunder launched to raise money for projects including art and film. Additionally, the Iranian Central Bank began supporting fintech projects to make Iran the financial hub of the Middle East.Footnote 23 ZarinPal, YekPay, PayPing, and Bahamta are Iranian alternatives to PayPal, developed to solve online payment problems primarily induced by sanctions. Mehrabane is another crowdfunding platform aimed at raising funds for deprived people, patients, education, and health issues.
Despite these opportunities, sanctions created difficulties for finding foreign investors and transferring money (Safshekan, Reference Safshekan2017). Although many start-ups may owe their successes to governmental support, finding proper investors has become a significant problem for business owners setting up new companies in the digital market (Salamzadeh and Kesim, Reference Salamzadeh and Kesim2017: 469–470). These financing problems present new opportunities for start-up accelerators. For instance, Iran Fara Bourse has founded an over-the-counter initiative to address the initial public offering problem. Moreover, start-up accelerators such as Avatech, Dmond, TrigUp, MAPS, Setak, and Finnova, along with venture capital firms such as Sarava, Shenasa, and the IRATEL venture, emerged to fill the gap in the domestic start-up ecosystem (Ismail et al., Reference Ismail, Schøtt, Bazargan, Salaytah., Al Kubaisi, Hassen, de la Vega, Chabrak, Annan, Herrington, Faghih and Zali2018; Kanani and Goodarzi, Reference Kanani, Goodarzi, Soofi and Goodarzi2017; Lalmohammadi, Reference Lalmohammadi2016; Sammaknejad, Reference Sammaknejad2017). Finally, professional start-up media including Techrasa, Shanbemag, Dr.startup, and Khoshfekri, among others, aim to share and develop a network of Iranian entrepreneurs via magazines, tutorial products, and news.
5. New frontiers in cyber-war: social networks and Android messenger apps
In 2013, President Rouhani's electoral platform focused on solving nuclear problems and opening the Iranian economy to the world market. To attract younger voters, he also talked about the necessity of freedom in society, but the following course of events revealed that regime hardliners and unpredictable events were able to overpower any sincerity in these sentiments. As mentioned previously, social networks such as YouTube had been censored prior to the 2009 presidential election, with Facebook and Twitter suffering a similar fate after the resulting election unrest later that year. An increase in mobile phone internet connectivity and the popularity of Android apps generated a number of recent changes (Alimardani and Milan, Reference Alimardani, Milan, Peeren, Celikates, Kloet and Poell2018; Kazanin, Reference Kazanin2017). Viber was among the first apps to be popular among Iranians, and in 2015, accounting for 18% of all users, Iranians were the leading group of Viber users in the world (Khiabany, Reference Khiabany and Zayani2018: 228). Since 2015, Telegram users have rapidly surged, with the app in turn growing into the most popular social network app among the Iranian public (Alimardani and Milan, Reference Alimardani, Milan, Peeren, Celikates, Kloet and Poell2018). Statistics of a survey conducted by the ISPA indicate that in 2015, 38% of its respondents were using Telegram and 17% were using WhatsApp.Footnote 24 Firouzabadi, the Secretary of the Supreme Council in Cyberspace, admitted that in 2016, Telegram and WhatsApp users totalled 24 and 12–14 million, respectively.Footnote 25 ISPA's 2017 survey revealed that 55% of its respondents were using the Telegram app, while 23% of the sample used Instagram, alongside WhatsApp (14%), Facebook (4%), Viber (2%), Google+ (2%), and Twitter (1%). The study depicted 5% of its respondents using the internet to watch pornography, whereas 69.3% used VPNs and other anti-filter programs for visiting censored websites.Footnote 26 A survey conducted by two online research websites in the same year presents less than 5% of respondents using domestic social networks such as Cloob and Soroush.Footnote 27
Iran's nuclear deal – known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPA) – initially appeared promising for the economy; however, having experienced a 1-year boom in the oil sector, 2017 saw the economy entering another period of stagnation. In the United States, the presidency of Donald Trump and his promise for withdrawal from the JCPA caused strict instabilities in the Iranian economy, to the extent that in 2018, inflation and foreign exchange rates increased over two and three times. January 2018 witnessed harsh unrest in small cities, with Telegram utilised for mobilising protestors and sharing news. In the USA, these events encouraged President Trump, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, and National Security Advisor John Bolton to support protestors with the intention of pressuring the regime. Likewise, they requested Google, Facebook, and other social networks provide protestors with extra communication facilities.Footnote 28 Owing to security reasons, in May 2018 the regime blocked Telegram; however, despite heated debates about the effectiveness of internet filtering, Instagram and WhatsApp are currently tolerated. While hardliners supported the policy, President Rouhani and Jahromi, the Minister of Information and Communication Technology, termed it futile. Recalling the ineffective bans on radio during the first decade of the Islamic Revolution, Rouhani declared the censorship policy to be pointless. He also invited hardliners to propose a cultural solution for securing cyberspace.Footnote 29 Once again security concerns, such as the mobilisation of protestors and the transfer of user data across the borders, proved the catalyst for internet filtering rather than economic motivations. However, this time the regime offered domestic alternatives, such as the Soroush app.
Numerous surveys demonstrate that the first 6 months after Telegram's blocking instigated an increase in the market share of its domestic alternatives; however, these intervention-induced trends were to reversed 6 months later. ISPA's survey depicts 60% of its respondents using Telegram in March 2018, but by June the number of users dropped to 50%, and fell further in October to 47%, before rising again in March 2019 to reach 56%. During the period between March 2018 and March 2019, Instagram and WhatsApp users doubled, reaching 30 and 25%, respectively. The statistics for the Soroush domestic app appeared initially promising, before declining in the following months. The same survey presents Soroush's visitors increasing from 2 to 14% in less than 3 months after the internet filtration, before declining to 4% in October 2018 and 2% in March 2019. Statistics for other domestic social networks such as Baleh, ITA, Gap, and IGap conform to this trend.Footnote 30 Furthermore, Facenema, an Iranian alternative for Facebook, proved unsuccessful in attracting users.Footnote 31 Considering its 5 billion Tomans creditFootnote 32 and half-price internet facilities, it appears Rouhani and Jahromi were at least correct in the short-term in describing internet filtering as a futile policy.
A consequence of the ban on Telegram became the widespread use of anti-filters, unofficial versions of Telegram, and an increase in the users of unfiltered social networks such as Instagram and WhatsApp, presently labouring under a similar threat of blocking. In June 2018, Khorramabadi and Javadnia, the former and new Vice Attorney General in Cyberspace Affairs maintained that 30–35 million Iranians were using 127 imitation versions of Telegram, including Hotgram and Talagram, to contact the main server.Footnote 33 Khorramabadi termed these client versions anti-filter, but debates about these apps became heated after they subsequently blocked channels such as BBC Persian.Footnote 34 By comparison, some of the deputies and intelligence service officials proclaimed the Talagram client to be legal, belonging to the Islamic Republic of Iran and possessing 25 million users. Firouzabadi, the Head of National Cyberspace, also admitted Hotgram and Talagram were domestic imitations of Telegram. The regime would tolerate these versions until the future launch of a 100% domestic app. Nazemi, the Head of Information Technologies Institutes, claimed that for 2 years the FAVA research institute, a state-run firm for the development of communication and information, had been designing a new domestic operating system to strengthen the capacity for Iranian resilience in the face of the US's economic terrorism. Additionally, BBC Persian reported claims regarding the import of 2,000 servers for Hotgram and Talagram, alongside subsidised exchange rates.Footnote 35
Filtering and the access of the Iranian government to the ‘identity verification codes’ of Iranian users prompted the Human Rights Commission of Iran to caution as to the security of fake versions of Telegram.Footnote 36 Consequently, in April 2019, Google removed Talagram and Hotgram from the Google Play store for reasons of espionage and the theft of its users' personal data.Footnote 37 In 2019, YouTube, Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram blocked the accounts of some of the top-ranking officials of Iran, heralding a new phase in cyber warfare.Footnote 38 As internet restriction turns into a worldwide phenomenon, blocking is now the recourse of even former advocates of freedom of information.
Rising gasoline prices in November 2019 triggered one of the most violent demonstrations of the last 40 years, with hundredsFootnote 39 of lives lost and serious damage to 731 banks, 70 gasoline stations, and about 2,000 motor vehicles. Instead of restricting internet bandwidth or adopting censorship in retaliation, the government took an unprecedented decision to unplug the internet connection in order to control social networks and block the information leak to the media. Although the internet blackout caused 2,950 billion Toman damages in the first 10 days owing to the considerable decline in online marketing, banking, start-ups' payment transactions, and the services of telephone operators,Footnote 40 those websites on the NIN and domestic messaging apps were permitted to continue their services.Footnote 41 The event inevitably animated the debate among proponents and opponents of the NIN. Jahromi, the Minister of Information and Communication Technology, maintained that thanks to the NIN, 2.5 million people employed by online mobility service providers avoided joining the protesters in the streets.Footnote 42 President Rouhani maintained that the Supreme Leader asked the government to develop the NIN to sever the Iranian peoples' dependence on foreign corporations.Footnote 43
Although censorship has evolved to address the security-ideological concerns of the regime and its ‘insiders’, it has similarly adversely affected the social capital of Iranian society through the formation of state-induced ‘filter bubbles’. Different studies suggest that in the wake of official propaganda, those maintaining an ideological affinity to the regime alongside the more apolitical but pious segments of Iranian society perceive officially unadmitted internet channels as a tool of anti-regime or anti-Islam propaganda.Footnote 44 As a result, these parts of the society voluntarily abstain from or avoid access to any censored social media or internet, instead consuming content produced by the official media. By comparison, opponents of the regime have lost trust in the officially sanctioned media and consume censored television content. Therefore, like-minded segments have clustered around the opposite ends of the spectrum, with each developing their own ‘echo chamber’ and ‘confirmation bias’. The repetition of specific ideas inside a closed system invariably foreshadows the formation of cultural tribalism, with a lack of alternatives producing a ‘tunnel vision’ phenomenon. The result is the formation of faction-based conflicts, creating social damage and destroying social capital within society.
6. Conclusion
The fears and motivations of political authorities determine the tools and methods adopted for monitoring and protecting international data transfers. For Iran, the ideological structure of the regime, the economic structure of the country, and the historical contingencies of the nation have significantly affected the scope and quality of protectionist policies. Prior to 2010, events posing risk to the security of the regime were among the key factors influencing the implementation of protectionist policies in the form of censorship. The regime's beliefs regarding the significance of nationalistic-Islamic ideology in maintaining national security resulted in the widespread surveillance of data and information transfer in both the public and private spheres. Since 2010, three factors have changed the regime's perspective on digital protectionism. Firstly, the increased penetration of the internet into Iranian society and the popularity of social media amplified the role of digital media in generating social mobilisation. Secondly, cyber-attacks executed by rival countries developed into a tangible threat, with the regime likewise coming to understand its potential for use in retaliation. Thirdly, continuous increases in the ratio of ICT added-value to GDP as a global trend (Moshiri et al., Reference Moshiri, Parsa and Darugar2018; Nasab and Aghaei, Reference Nasab and Aghaei2009) proved the importance of government intervention into the internet economy,Footnote 45 signalling new rent-seeking opportunities for its ‘insiders’.
The case of Iran indicates that digital protectionist policies are unable to substantially accomplish pre-determined goals in the presence of methods for circumventing the barriers. However, digital protectionism causes the costs of transactions to rise when accessing blocked websites. In the targeted countries, sanctions are powerful tools for restricting a citizen's access to the digitised world market. The barriers imposed by protectionist policies and sanctions hinder competition, and consequently, provide domestic start-ups with an empty playing field. However, the example of Iran suggests digital protectionism may cause additional difficulties in terms of funding and technology transfer.
We can define start-ups as new-born companies or ventures attempting to practice original ideas in the marketplace. By comparison, Iran's domestic alternatives are merely copies of larger corporations such as YouTube, Amazon, and WhatsApp. The lifecycle of these domestic alternatives proves that they have managed to receive some of the added value produced by the domestic digital market. By accounting for the effects of sanctions alongside that of protectionist policies, these emerging domestic start-ups have partially succeeded to substitute import services by their duplicated counterparts.
It is evident that some ‘insiders’ happen to be the beneficiaries of Iran's digital protectionist policies. But the remainder of society has to make decisions regarding the transaction costs of accessing the higher quality goods and services available on the internet compared to their lower quality domestic alternatives. Furthermore, with or without protectionist policies, citizens hold little control over their own personal data, as rather than preventing its monitoring, the sole function of Iran's policies is to permit the regime's domestic or international firms to control massive amounts of user data. As a result, even by accepting the propositions of data colonialism, digital protectionism facilitates a form of internal data colonialism supplanting the external one.
In most cases, the policies of digital protectionism lack a coherent strategy because the government appears to neglect any form of macro plan. Its policies can lack long-term perspective and often disregard the role of all the players in the game. Except for the NIN project and the cyberspace topics in Iran's Sixth Development Plan (2016–2021), protectionist policies lacked support underscored by proper funding strategies. Its policies of digital protectionism have mostly remained contingent on unexpected events and evolved according to these circumstances, with related institutions formed for handling these anomalies. In many cases, protectionist policies failed to produce their predicted results due to shortcomings in providing high quality alternatives and the existence of different circumvention methods such as VPNs.
In Iran, such policy centres as the Supreme Council of Cyberspace and the Ministry of Information and Communications Technology hold responsibility for censorship and cyberspace surveillance. These centres have developed sophisticated technologies, recruited experienced staff, and established one of the best cyber armies in the world to protect domestic networks. In the future, these skills and technologies may come to positively influence other sectors of the Iranian economy; however, the illegal character of the government's intervention on the web is a significant barrier to their domestic and international commercialisation. Experiences from state-run factories and banks show that interventionist policies can initially cause tremendous changes in the conditions of the economy, clustering different economic and political activities around the subsidised sector, but eventually suffer through locking the economy, polity, and society on an unproductive future path.
Acknowledgement
An earlier version of this paper was presented at the International Conference of TED University Trade Center (TRC), Ankara, 13-14 June 2019 and the 16th Italian Association for the History of Political Economy (STOREP) Annual Conference, Siena, 27–29 June 2019. We would like to thank Stefano Lucarelli, Christian Fuchs, Geoffrey Hodgson, Katie Blythe, and the anonymous referees of this journal for their helpful remarks. Remaining errors are ours.