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Censorship Government Network The Internet

Russia Adopts Bill That Would Expand Government Control Over the Internet (go.com) 96

An anonymous reader quotes a report from ABC News: Russia's lower chamber of parliament has adopted a bill that would expand government control over the internet, raising fears of widespread censorship. The State Duma on Tuesday overwhelmingly voted to support the bill, which still has to be approved by the upper chamber of Russian Parliament and signed into the law by the president.

The bill requires internet providers to install equipment to route Russian internet traffic through servers in the country. That would increase the power of state agencies to control information while users would find it harder to circumvent government restrictions, and the quality of the connection may suffer. Proponents of the bill say it is a defense measure in case the United States or other hostile powers cut off the internet for Russia.

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Russia Adopts Bill That Would Expand Government Control Over the Internet

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  • Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Tuesday April 16, 2019 @04:39PM (#58446282)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • I don't want to depend on a "benevolent" government to do the right thing.

      We've interpreted this degradation as damage; now, how do we route around it? How do we set up an alternative channel for at least text communications

      * Point to point directed WiFi with mesh networks?

      * Uber for hard disks, so we can drive data around, slowly but surely?

      How do we get something going that allows us to thumb our digital noses at these authoritarians?

      • by Anonymous Coward

        Dude have you been living under a rock these last 20 years ? The US government has never been benevolent or respectful of privacy (pre or post 9/11). The only thing that changed is that the curtains were swept away and you can see all the rot and the "lets pretend " as the fuck you it really is.
        Russia is quite late to the internet control party actually.

    • It would be naive not to expect the US to break the internet on purpose

      And it'd be even more naive not to expect the US to keep it working... after all, it's only the most useful propaganda and intel-collection tool ever made.

      • Yeah, they can't break the "internet," but they're welcome to install firewalls on their side and screw up their intranet as bad as they want.

        I don't really care if they use routers for firewalls, or if they just throw their people in a gulag for PEBKAC. My packets route the same.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Though the reasons you cite for more supervision of the Internet are legit, this is probably about something else. Putin has been using his intelligence services to attack numerous other countries through the Internet in various ways, including the USA, and since he is widely recognized as a "smart guy" it seems likely that he knows retaliation is coming. There was a first taste of this in the 2018 mid-term elections when Russia's access to the rest of the Internet was largely blocked for several days by US

    • regardless of what you believe the USA will or will not do, may or may not do, what putin's regime is doing is making it possible to remove and block content that putin and anyone in power in that regime finds dangerous for their power, that is all it is.

      For example hundreds or thousands of pieces of content and sites have been blocked simply because they report this story - Andrey Kostin and his much yonger lover Naili Asker-Zade, they have a daughter out of wedlock obviously because he is married to a wom

      • utter rubbish.

        Putin doesnt need to mess with the internet to maintain power.

        All he has to do is keep rebuilding Russia and making more and more russians mega rich, while at the same time not allow amerifags to stop him.

        This is about sovereignty. why should a Russian citizens packets visiting Russian social media need to be routed through virginia?

        Russian websites english and russian are orders of magnitude less censored than western site.

        • by Anonymous Coward
          The usual apologists that you'll get around here. Followed by whataboutism that isn't even true.

          When Russian websites don't censor themselves as far as Kremlin criticism goes worse things happen.
          For example I liked to read RBC.ru because there you get a way better perspective than with that RT.com bullshit that all the idiots here in the West gobble up like it's fried bacon. That was until 2016 when the Kremlin forced a change in leadership there because they investigated things that were too inconvenien
    • by Etcetera ( 14711 )

      Having grown up with the internet and watching it degrade from a place of uncensored anonymous sharing of information where the reputation means nothing and the idea is what holds value, To the e-commerce slums , carefully curated and censored propaganda machine, it has become,. It would be naive not to expect the US to break the internet on purpose, for governmental interests.

      What you're overlooking is that it was grown out of US governmental interests to begin with, and exploded under American tutelage. Russian, Chinese, and other bad-state actions in the last 5-7 years really highlights how horrible a decision it really was for the Obama Administration to allow ICANN to be moved out from the under the ultimate authority of the Department of Commerce.

      The Internet has been a battleground for years, and the history of the last century points to Americans being better Guarantors o

  • Not that either approach is 'good' or anything less than sheer evil; but if a government is going to actively snoop on its citizens, is it better to do what the rooskies are doing, or what the NSA did (15 odd years ago I might add.)

    case in point:
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

    • by quenda ( 644621 )

      And it is good that the Russians feel the need to legislate this. At least they are giving lip service to rule of law.
      The US is heading the other direction, and increasingly ruling by presidential executive order, and misused "emergency" powers, in place of laws passed by congress.

      And no, this did not start with Trump. It has been getting worse over recent administrations.

    • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

      How about Amerikanski news as bullshit, how about a bit more information, https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/... [www.cbc.ca], specifically, "Twitter and Facebook have nine months to comply with the law by moving Russian user data onto servers in Russia". The Canadians still heavily tied into anti-Russia propaganda but still more bound to the truth than blatant US propaganda.

      So this is a somewhat old story, written in a blatantly propagandistic way. So the Russian government is demanding that social media sites they allow R

  • ``Proponents of the bill say it is a defense measure in case the United States or other hostile powers cut off the internet for Russia.

    Uh, huh. Whatever you say. It might help in sucking up to Vlad, though.

  • Just cut them off completely. We don't need a global internet. It's just not worth the trouble. US should cut off every other country from their free and open internet. If backward countries without proper free speech laws on their books don't wanna play nice. If greedy countries wanna tax links and pictures.. go for it.. on your intranet.

    Get off our network.

  • "To protect Russians from being cut off from the US.", what a laugh.

    And the Berlin Wall was there to prevent West Berlin from fleeing into the East.

    Just watch and see. Eventually Russia will decide it's time they "need to protect the sensibilities of their citizens" blah blah blah.

  • In Russia or in the US?

Every nonzero finite dimensional inner product space has an orthonormal basis. It makes sense, when you don't think about it.

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