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Breaking the Blackout: CENO and the P2P Fight for Truth
Season 2 · Episode 256

Breaking the Blackout: CENO and the P2P Fight for Truth

When governments cut the internet, CENO turns users into a library. Explore how peer-to-peer tech is bypassing state censorship in Iran.

My Weird Prompts · Daniel Rosehill

January 20, 202624m 24s

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Show Notes

In this episode of My Weird Prompts, Herman and Corn dive into the high-stakes world of digital circumvention, focusing on the CENO browser and its impact in Iran. As the Iranian government develops its "National Information Network" to isolate its citizens, tools like CENO use the Ouinet protocol to turn the internet into a decentralized, peer-to-peer library that is nearly impossible to kill. The hosts discuss how cryptographic signatures ensure data integrity in a world of misinformation, why "slow news is better than no news," and how the battle for information sovereignty is shaping the future of the global web. Join the conversation as they explore the technology making the "sneakernet" digital and the regime's cynical attempts to drown out the truth with synthetic noise.