I'm not sure how specific I can get in this, simply because I don't know the specific answer, but we do know that particularly among young people who are arrested for exercising their right to freedom of speech, typically that communication is done on the Internet. Typically it's done in blogs. I mentioned in my presentation that a number of these people end up leaving Iran rather than facing long jail terms. In fact, there's sort of a wink and a nod to them getting out of Iran, too. It seems a sort of safety valve, on the part of the government, to have these people leave, thinking they actually represent “less of a threat” outside the country than inside.
But in any case, certainly a very large number of those who do get arrested and get into trouble are in fact exercising that right on the Internet. And we're talking about a society that's relatively very sophisticated on both sides of the line, so to speak--that is, those who use the Internet to spread information and to share information about human rights violations, political analysis and so forth, but also on the part of the government.
Also, frankly, as I understand it, it's a very computer-literate, Internet-literate society, but most of that Internet traffic has nothing to do with politics, has nothing to do with human rights; it's just people using it for very mundane reasons or, indeed, even religious education.