‐‐‐‐‐‐‐ Original Message ‐‐‐‐‐‐‐
On Wednesday, July 7th, 2021 at 2:23 PM, Punk-BatSoup-Stasi 2.0
punks@tfwno.gf wrote:
On Wed, 07 Jul 2021 21:18:20 +0000
coderman coderman@protonmail.com wrote:
look to china for the future:
Did I ever mention that 'coderman' and 'grarpamp' are sockpuppets of the same turd?
russia is in second place, but they could overtake china as authoritarian avant garde.
(why focus on internet? because controlling internet access is how you control access to information in this modern future...)
April 1, 2021 11:57 AM EDT
On March 10, photos
and videos on Twitter were loading more slowly than usual for users in
Russia. It was not a network fault or server error but a deliberate move
by Russia’s state internet regulator Roskomnadzor to limit traffic to
the social media site, in what experts say was the first public use of
controversial new technology that the Russian authorities introduced
after 2019. The regulator throttled the U.S. platform in retaliation for
what it described as a failure to remove thousands of posts that
“encourage underage suicide and contain child pornography as well as
information about drug use.” The action came after Russian authorities
had accused Twitter and other social networks in January of failing to
delete posts urging children to take part in anti-government protests.
In January and February, Russia’s Anti-Corruption
Foundation organized protests in dozens of cities on Facebook and
Russian social network VKontakte against the arrest of its head, Alexei
Navalny. Tens of thousands of people protested in more than 100 cities across the country demanding the release of the opposition figure whose YouTube investigation into alleged corruption by President Vladimir Putin received tens of
millions of views upon its release. Navalny was sentenced on Feb. 2 to
two years and eight months in prison for violating parole from an
embezzlement case dating back to 2014 that he says was fabricated.
In
response to the slowdown, Twitter said it did not support any “unlawful
behaviour” and was “deeply concerned” by the regulator’s attempts to
block online public conversation. But on March 16 Roskomnadzor gave a
fresh warning that if Twitter refused to comply with
its removal requests within a month, the regulator will consider
blocking access to the social network in Russia outright. Roskomnadzor, a
federal executive body founded in 2008, is responsible for ensuring the
media and communications follow Russian laws, and issuing warnings to
media sources that violate these laws.
Twitter has only 700,000 monthly active users in Russia, a fraction of the 68.7 million in the U.S.
Despite its use by opposition politicians and journalists the Kremlin
doesn’t consider it “the most dangerous” platform, says Andrei Soldatov,
a Russian cyber expert. Experts say that the authorities used the
Twitter slowdown to test technology that could be used to disrupt other,
more popular social networks like Facebook, which has an estimated 23 million active monthly users in Russia.
The
manner in which Twitter was throttled opens up a new front in the war
between the government of Russian President Vladimir Putin and the open
internet. For a decade now, the Kremlin has sought to control online
information by censoring or removing content and blocking mobile
Internet access completely. Now, authorities are aggressively taking the
fight to social media platforms, which are dominated by American-owned
companies. The government passed a law in December to increase fines on online platforms and Internet providers for failing to remove
material calling for extremist activity, information about recreational
drugs and child sex abuse; companies can now be fined between 10% to 20%
of their yearly turnover in Russia for repeatedly failing to remove
content. A law passed the same month gave Roskomnadzor the power to
restrict or fully block websites that, according to officials,
discriminate against Russian state media.
The widespread anti-government rallies earlier this
year seem to have crossed a line for Putin. In recent months, the
President has said tech companies are “competing with states” and that “society will collapse from the inside” if the Internet does not obey legal
rules and society’s moral laws. As the government has ramped up its
efforts to control what citizens can access online it also has several
projects in the pipeline that experts say is part of a strategy to push
foreign tech companies out of the Russian market completely. From April
1, Roskomnadzor requires tech companies selling smartphones in Russia to prompt users to
download government-approved apps, including search engines, maps and
payment systems.
The state “likely wants to see,
and allow dissemination of, information that only reflects the official
government point of view,” says Mike Tretyak, a partner with the
Digital Rights Center law firm and expert with Roskomsvoboda, an NGO
dedicated to digital rights. Could it be getting closer to succeeding?
Ten years of attempting to take control
For
activists, this year looks like history repeating itself. Since mass
demonstrations against electoral fraud began a decade ago—also organized
by opposition figures using Facebook and VKontakte—the state has been
developing a legal and technological toolkit to regulate online
information, introducing content filters, block lists and fining or even
jailing people for what they post online.
In 2012, Russia began blacklisting and forcing offline websites with the purported goal of protecting minors from harmful sites,
including those that give details about how to commit suicide. In 2014 a
law allowed Roskomnadzor to block access to media that calls for mass
riots, extremist activities, or participation in unsanctioned mass
public events. Government critics have been targeted; Navalny’s Live
Journal blog, which published investigations about corruption in Russian
politics, and other political opposition sites were blocked. (Roskomnadzor said they were banned for calling on people to illegally participate in mass events).
More recently, Russia has initiated regional network blackouts. In October 2018, the Russian government cut mobile data service in the Ingushetia region in southwestern Russia during political
protests—the first such Internet outage in the country. In August 2019,
the government blocked mobile Internet during protests in Moscow in what
the Internet Protection Society, a digital rights group, said was the first state-mandated shutdown of this kind in the capital.
Then, in November 2019, the Kremlin made its most
controversial move yet toward controlling the country’s Internet
infrastructure with the so-called “sovereign Internet” law. A series of
amendments to existing laws theoretically enabled the Russian
authorities to isolate “RuNet”—the unofficial name for websites hosted
in Russia and sites on Russian domain names— from the global web in
vaguely defined times of crisis, giving the Russian authorities control
over flows of data coming in and out of the country.
In an explanatory note about the new law, the Russian legislature said that it was created in
light of the “aggressive nature of the U.S. National Cyber Security Strategy”,
in which the U.S. threatened to punish countries including Russia,
China, Iran and North Korea if they used cyber tools to “undermine” its
economy and democracy, and steal its intellectual property. The Russia
legislature claimed that Russia needs to take “protective measures to
ensure the long term and stable operation of the Internet in Russia, and
to increase the reliability of Russian internet resources.”
The
“sovereign Internet” law required Internet Service Providers (ISPs) to
install Deep Packet Inspection (DPI) equipment, which has been used by
some countries, like China, for censorship. DPI equipment enables Russia
to circumvent providers, automatically block content the government has
banned and reroute internet traffic.
Russia’s
major ISPs have now installed DPI equipment, according to Alena
Epifanova, a researcher at the German Council on Foreign Relations. But
no one knows if or when Russia will be able to cut off its Internet from
the global web. “The information about its implementation process and
its scope is kept under wraps,” says Treyak. What’s certain is that
Russia does not yet have the technological capacity to create a
Chinese-style Great Firewall. Unlike China, which brought ISPs under
state control early on, Russia is deeply integrated in the global web
having enjoyed a largely free Internet for decades.
As
the government has attempted to control information emerging from
Russia, so has it tried to limit what is accessible in Russia from
abroad. It has required search engines, including Google, to delete some
results and social networks to store their user data on servers within
Russia. Roskomnadzor hit Google with a fine of three million rubles ($41,000) for not removing content banned by the authorities in 2020. Roskomnadzor blocked LinkedIn in 2016 and fined Twitter and Facebook 4 million rubles ($53,000) in 2020 for failing to store user data in Russia.
Although these fines are pocket change to these
huge corporations, some have buckled under Roskomnadzor’s threats to
block them if they don’t comply with censorship orders. In 2018,
Facebook-owned Instagram, which has 54 million users in Russia, complied
with the regulator’s requests to remove posts connected to corruption
allegations by Navalny. In a tweet Navalny accused Instagram of submitting to “illegal censorship orders”. “Shame on you Instagram!” he wrote.
YouTube,
where Navalny and his group post most of their investigative videos,
refused to comply. But now, Russia has upped the stakes. After
Roskomnadzor threatened to prosecute social media sites for encouraging minors to join the January protests, the regulator said TikTok deleted 38% of its related content, while YouTube and Russian social media site VKontakte removed half.
This was not enough for the authorities. Earlier this month, Russia filed a lawsuit against Twitter and four other tech companies for allegedly failing to
delete enough of such posts. Twitter, Google, Facebook each have three
cases against them and for each violation they face a fine of up to 4
million roubles ($54,000). Cases have also been filed against TikTok and
Telegram.
Russian apps for Russian Internet users
The
authorities are now moving not just to reduce the influence of foreign
tech companies but also to force them to promote Russian services — as
with the new regulation mandating government-approved apps on all new
smartphones. Apple has agreed to this, the first time the company will
offer users the ability to install outside software on its devices at
setup.
Tretyak, of the Roskomsvoboda digital
rights group, says Apple’s compliance is understandable, a “mild” policy
to protect Russian apps that are already used by the majority of
Russians. But Soldatov says the idea is to discourage Russians from
using foreign social networks such as TikTok, which many Russians were
nudged into using during the Navalny protests. “It’s all about numbers.
If you have 200,000 politically active people sharing videos about
Navalny, that’s nothing. But if you have millions of ordinary Russians
joining it, that’s a threat,” he says.
That
helps to explains why Russian companies are building alternatives to
foreign services, he says. Gazprom Media Holding, a subsidiary of
state-energy giant Gazprom, is building an app similar to TikTok. A Russian Wikipedia is expected to launch in 2023 to ensure Russians have access to more “detailed and reliable” information about their country.
There is “a fine line between compliance with mild
protectionist policies,” such as Apple listing Russian apps, and
“compliance with removal of sensitive materials such as corruption
allegations,” says Tretyak. “My belief is that each company should
select its own behavioral strategy upon being approached by any
government — not only the Russian one – possibly, according to its own
internal moral code,” he says.
The government is
also working on a bill that aims to give Russian security services
total access to communications over encrypted connections and the
ability to see what sites people visit. Epifanova says that it’s very
likely the law will be passed, but it’s unlikely that tech companies
will comply with the measure. They have rejected calls from law enforcement agencies around the world to provide access to
encrypted information to assist in certain criminal investigations. The
move is part of a “strategy to push out foreign tech companies while
promoting Russian companies,” says Epifanova.
How digital rights activists are fighting back
Ordinary
citizens in Russia are increasingly looking for ways to shrug off state
Internet controls. The Moscow-based Roskomsvoboda and the Internet
Protection Center are among the digital rights groups and activists
dedicating resources to helping Russians get around new restrictions.
Roskomsvoboda’s website features a list of all the online resources blocked in Russia,
instructions on how to get around online bans, and news about the
country’s Internet regulation.
The group also keeps a public list of
reliable Virtual Private Networks (VPNs), which allow users to gain
access to blocked websites. However, the government has also required
some popular providers to block access to blacklisted websites. Individual activists offer advice too;
Vladislav Zdolnikov, an IT specialist, runs a Telegram channel that
explains the latest developments in Russia’s internet regulation and
recommends circumvention tools.
Free Internet
activists also continue exploring new ways to democratize technology. On
March 21 and 22, Roskomsvoboda ran a “hackathon,” Demhack 2, for 15
teams of developers across Russia. Their aim was “to find technical
solutions aimed at protecting the rights and realizing the interests of
citizens in the digital environment,” says Natalia Malysheva, the
hackathon’s producer and Roskomsvoboda’s press secretary. There is no
shortage of ideas. Roskomsvoboba says it receives about 100 proposals
for each hackathon.
The judging panel of digital experts chose two
winners on March 22 for prizes that included the chance to put their
projects in front of investors. The first winner was Security Addon, an
app that can prevent information on a device from being accessed if it
is hacked or stolen. The second, the Deep Silent app, helps users
download information to their phones even if the signal is limited,
making it a useful resource if the internet is restricted.
As
well as helping developers to build their technical solutions,
Roskomsvoboda are building their own tools. Last year, they launched
Censor Tracker, an extension for Google Chrome, that can help users to
detect and bypass internet restrictions. In launching the extension
tool, the group made it clear how high they believe the stakes now are.
“We’re getting ready to confront the approaching sovereign Runet,” they
wrote.