Iran's digital surveillance infrastructure reveals a chilling global trend in government control technologies. The regime's "Digital Nation Plan" consolidates messaging, biometric tracking, and app control into a unified system designed to identify and suppress citizen behavior. This isn't just an Iranian phenomenon - similar surveillance models are emerging in Beijing, being discussed in Brussels, and quietly adopted by governments worldwide. The infrastructure developed under crisis pretexts like pandemic tracking or national security creates permanent monitoring capabilities. What begins as a tool for public safety can quickly transform into a mechanism for suppressing political dissent. The technological capacity to track citizens' every digital interaction represents a fundamental shift in state-citizen power dynamics, where governments can preemptively categorize and potentially pu
