The paper documents the compounding effect of U.S. sanctions and Iranian
state censorship on app distribution: sanctions block Iranian users from
Apple's App Store via IP/payment geolocation, while Iranian censorship
simultaneously blocks Apple's CDN endpoints for app downloads. The
combined effect forces 100% of iOS app distribution in Iran through
unofficial channels, making the sanctions-censorship interaction a
structural condition rather than an edge case.
From 2026-khanlari-iranian-ios-stores — Taking a Bite Out of the Forbidden Fruit: Characterizing Third-Party Iranian iOS App Stores
· §1, §2
· 2026
· arXiv preprint
Implications
Sanctions-based access restrictions (Apple, Google Play) are a permanent structural barrier in IR that circumvention cannot fix at the network layer alone; distribution strategy must treat app delivery as a first-class circumvention problem alongside protocol evasion.
The sanctions + censorship combination creating mandatory sideloading in IR applies equally to Lantern; publish .ipa files with direct-download instructions as a first-class distribution channel, not an afterthought.