alt.hn

4/2/2026 at 9:30:28 PM

Iran Says It Hit Oracle Facilities in UAE

https://gizmodo.com/iran-says-it-hit-oracle-facilities-in-uae-2000741785

by Betelbuddy

4/2/2026 at 10:02:08 PM

I believe this is fake. Iran repeatedly claims to have struck targets, without evidence to back it up.

The Dubai government denies this strike happened https://gulfnews.com/uae/dubai-denies-reports-of-an-irgc-att...

And the Oracle live status report webpage says everything is online, and there are no active incidents in Dubai. The history page reports no incidents in Dubai since the start of the conflict.

https://ocistatus.oraclecloud.com/#/

As an example of fake claims, Iran claimed to have struck the aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln with hypersonic missiles three times already. But the ship is still sailing and launching sorties. They then post AI generated pictures and videos as 'evidence' that the strikes were successful.

by tristanj

4/2/2026 at 10:58:44 PM

> The Dubai government denies this strike happened

In the UAE it's illegal to talk about the strikes, or post videos of them online. $55,000+ fine and 2+ years in prison. Over 100 people have already been arrested.

When the two different governments said contradictory things, in other situations a journalist would arrange for a local correspondent to head over to the Oracle building and see if it's visibly damaged, maybe get some photos.

by michaelt

4/2/2026 at 11:25:34 PM

It's interesting, because I initially thought these restrictions in UAE were strictly because of operational security. That is why Israel and Ukraine, for example, also forbid posting images of missile impacts: it provides valuable targeting information to the enemy. In Israel the legal framework is military censorship; in Ukraine it's martial law. Enforcement against individuals is strong in Ukraine, and more selective in Israel - presumably because Ukraine has a bigger internal infiltration problem, or perhaps because Israelis are more disciplined or have more effective social pressure?

In any case, in turns out I was mistaken: apparently in UAE the wave of arrests are not framed as operational security, but a wider ban on information that could "spread misinformation", "cause panic", "affect national security", or "damage reputation". So it's a wider legal framework with more complicated implications - less of a no-brainer than I initially thought!

by shykes

4/3/2026 at 5:43:31 AM

UAE has always been one of the more repressive government on the planet.

by jacquesm

4/2/2026 at 10:18:16 PM

So it's down to a contest of whether to trust the government of Iran, or a cloud vendor status page?

Maybe we can check something hosted in Oracle Cloud as the tiebreaker?

by abought

4/2/2026 at 10:23:23 PM

No, most likely Iran actually launched missiles targeted at the Oracle datacenter, but they were intercepted. The UAE successfully intercepts about 90% of incoming Iranian drones and missiles.

Then Iran then claims the attack was successful for domestic propaganda purposes, and since there is no internet in Iran, nobody can verify if it was actually successful.

by tristanj

4/2/2026 at 10:06:40 PM

[dead]

by risc_taker

4/2/2026 at 10:12:28 PM

It's also a warcrime, of course. I wonder if, if they lied, is it still a warcrime? I would expect it is.

I guess we'll see what the consequences are to warcrimes. Massive worldwide demonstrations in favor of the people committing warcrimes, like usually?

by spwa4

4/2/2026 at 10:18:51 PM

What motivation would Iran have to not commit war crimes?

It's not as if the US and Israel are restraining themselves from committing war crimes. Certainly the UN isn't going to step in and do anything.

This war started with the US committing a war crime (blowing up a girl's school).

by cogman10

4/2/2026 at 10:45:42 PM

...what? What does the UN have to do with war crimes lol. And why would the US care about war crimes we literally aren't signatory to the Rome statute. how could your comment get so many things wrong in so little text.

by reddozen

4/2/2026 at 11:12:02 PM

war crimes don't have anything to do with Rome, Rome is only about prosecution by ICC

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_war_crimes

by yread

4/3/2026 at 8:20:13 AM

And while the US is a member of the UN and therefore subject to the jurisdiction of the International Court of Justice (not the ICC), as a permanent member of the UN Security Council, it also has the power to unilaterally veto any enforcement action (as do China, France, Russia, and the UK).

by jasomill

4/3/2026 at 6:54:31 PM

Ok? The ICC prosecutes war crimes in complementarity. The ICJ does not. Not sure what UN Security Council has to do with anything? I can't tell if this is AI. Add to your slop context you're probably thinking of IHL.

by reddozen

4/3/2026 at 7:04:25 PM

What you are leaving out is that governments can choose whether the ICC definition of warcrime applies to their territory. Iran has chosen that the Rome treaty, and the ICC, does not apply to Iran. It has even used this fact to request the ICC drop cases against them.

We all know why: 99.99% of warcrimes on Iranian territory were committed by Iran's islamist regime.

So Rome statute warcrimes are a legal impossibility in Iran. The Rome statute, that law and that definition of warcrime does not apply to anything happening in Iran.

by spwa4

4/3/2026 at 6:57:53 PM

You do recognize the contradiction saying Rome Statute has nothing to do with war crimes, then saying Rome Statute is how you prosecute war crimes right?

by reddozen

4/2/2026 at 10:20:46 PM

Datacenters aren't categorized for warcrimes. Desalination plants, water treatment plants, power plants, etc. would be highly significant for millions of the population.

by sthkr

4/2/2026 at 11:24:52 PM

Are there any military personnel working at the Oracle Facility? Big Tech is very much used in this War so not a stretch to imagine military personnel working there.

Apparently the hotels that were struck in Dubai etc were attacked because US military personnel were working remotely there due to US bases being damaged.

by tharmas

4/2/2026 at 10:20:51 PM

Outside of the countries involved, Is it really a war crime though?

If Oracle's providing services to your enemy's army aren't they a "legitimate" target just like a tank factory?

by whynotmaybe

4/2/2026 at 11:14:48 PM

“Israel and the powerful American lobby” don't sign the guestbook when they speak behind closed doors planning the Occupied Territories Cancer in the U.S. Congress and Senate, Gaza.

by __patchbit__

4/2/2026 at 10:18:26 PM

[dead]

by sthkr

4/2/2026 at 10:19:55 PM

[dead]

by aaron695