January 9, 2026

When Wi‑Fi vanishes, hot takes explode

Iran's complete Internet shutdown reaches 24 hours

Fear, anger, and satellite leaks as commenters split on hope vs history

TLDR: Iran’s internet has been largely shut off for 24 hours, shrinking access to about 1% and raising fears of hidden crackdowns. Commenters mourned and argued—flagging Starlink videos, calling out possible sockpuppets, and warning that past “liberations” rarely end neatly—underscoring how high the stakes are.

Iran has been pushed into digital darkness for a full day—connectivity reportedly gutted to about 1%—and the commentariat is in full meltdown. The vibe? Grief meets whiplash. One top voice sighed that humanity keeps “moving backwards,” then added a world-weary “reading the US news everyday I’m like wtf,” turning the thread into a global doomscroll support group. Others zoomed into the nerdy details, pointing to a related thread about an IPv6 blackout (translation: even the internet’s address system got choked), while calling the shutdown what it is: a rights violation that hides what’s happening on the ground.

Drama alert: suspicion flared when a user asked, “Why create a new account just to make this comment?” Cue the sockpuppet sirens. Meanwhile, a spark of hope: “A few videos coming out via Starlink,” one commenter noted—SpaceX’s satellite internet became the covert courier of clips, a lifeline cutting through the blackout. But not everyone is cheering. A sobering voice warned, “very few countries that were ‘liberated’ are thriving,” reminding everyone that Iran’s last revolution toppled a king and birthed a theocracy—history doesn’t guarantee happy endings. The thread swings between outrage, caution, and gallows humor, stitched together by one big question: What do we do when the lights go out, and the only news is whispers?

Key Points

  • Iran has implemented a nationwide internet shutdown.
  • The shutdown has lasted 24 hours as of the update.
  • Internet connectivity is at roughly 1% of normal levels.
  • The report describes the situation as a digital blackout.
  • The update claims the blackout violates rights and masks regime violence.

Hottest takes

"reading the US news everyday I'm like wtf" — ge96
"Why create a new account just to make this comment?" — gordonhart
"very few countries that were 'liberated' are thriving" — agentifysh
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