First of all, I trust Dr. Ottolenghi to have fairly good intelligence on this. I believe he said that they do have some access to media, but not everyone necessarily gets plugged in. Certainly in terms of the country's own media, it's very, very heavily censored.
What is interesting to me is that when Iranians have been interviewed, they are not blaming the west in general for their hardship. They are blaming the government. This is despite the fact that often a few feet away there is somebody watching them, because that is actually one of the roles the IRGC plays—to make sure that no one gets away with internally opposing the revolutionary regime there.
I do find that very interesting. In my mind, in terms of what's happening in Syria, even geographically I think it's probably too close for them to not have some sense of what is happening. I obviously do not support at all Iran's propping up of Assad's regime there in Syria, but what I do think is interesting is how, as a result, it's impacting other Muslims' perceptions of the legitimacy of the Iranian regime. I point, for example, to the tension that has now been created between Hamas and Iran as a result of Iran's support for Assad.