In terms of specific cases leading up to the election in two weeks, yes. We've seen, as I mentioned, IRGC officials publicly talk about the repression, talk about how these elections should be engineered. We've seen the IRGC's cyber-defence command and its specific special department, the Centre for Inspecting Organised Crimes. This is its electronic repression squad, which goes out and closely monitors Iranian cyber-activities. It monitors websites, e-mails, Twitter, and Facebook, using western technology to actually identify Iranian dissidents and then using western technology to identify, target, find, and imprison them, and worse.
We're seeing a cyber-offensive on the one hand, and on the other hand we see the Basij and the IRGC gearing up for what they expect might be worse than what happened in 2009. Their fears are that this is not going to be a green movement that emerges out of the suburbs of north Tehran but may indeed involve protests that actually come out of the smaller cities and villages in Iran where you have a green movement combining with what I would call a blue movement. Those are blue-collar workers who are frustrated by the state of Iran's economy, the harmful economic policies of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, and the unemployment and inflation.
Their big fear is that these two movements, a green movement and a blue movement, are going to coalesce and lead to significant protests. To head that off they are already cracking down both physically and in the cyber-world to ensure that doesn't happen again.