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Thursday, 6 September 2012

Blizzard: Battle.net being blocked in Iran is due to US sanctions, not government censorship



It was recently reported that Battle.net users with Iranian IP addresses were being locked out of Blizzard’s Battle.net service, and thus, all of their flagship games: Diablo 3, Starcraft 2, and World of Warcraft. It was speculated that this was due to content the Iranian government found inappropriate, but as it turns out, the line was cut from the outside. As a Blizzard employee has revealed on their official forums, the outage is the result of sanctions imposed by the United States government.
“Blizzard Entertainment cannot speak to any reports surrounding the Iranian government restricting games from its citizens,” the post reads. “What we can tell you is that United States trade restrictions and economic sanction laws prohibit Blizzard from doing business with residents of certain nations, including Iran. Several of you have seen and cited the text in the Terms of Use which relates to these government-imposed sanctions. This week, Blizzard tightened up its procedures to ensure compliance with these laws, and players connecting from the affected nations are restricted from access to Blizzard games and services.”
VG24/7 reports that Battle.net isn’t legally available in Iran anyway, but that virtual networks have until now allowed citizens to access these games. Presumably these new procedures Blizzard has implemented have cut off this Terms of Service-breaking means of access. Strangely, the VG24/7 article also reports that Blizzard would “happily lift these restrictions as soon as US law allows.” This seems to suggest that Blizzard does not take issue with Iranian gamers accessing their servers through virtual networks to bypass government restrictions.

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