Russia to censor internet access and block Russian surfers 11/1/2017

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  • Bladewire
    StraightBro
    • Aug 2003
    • 56228

    #1

    Russia to censor internet access and block Russian surfers 11/1/2017

    No freedom of speech in Russia. Sad. The Russian censoring agency is a joke, at one point they blocked themselves from the Russian censored internet.

    Russia with be stifling freedom of speech, internet access and access to VPN's even more starting November 1st, 2017. Tens of thousands of sites around the world already blocked in Russia by the FSB.

    "The authorities started actively regulating the Internet back in 2012. After the mass protest rallies on Bolotnaya square and Sakharova avenue in Moscow, the law introducing black lists of web sites has been approved upon the following pretext: ?the children must be protected from information that harms their health and development?."

    "The recently approved law banning anonymizers and virtual private networks (VPNs) is not only a measure to ensure compliance with an earlier law blocking blacklisted web sites, but also another step towards Internet censoring."

    https://en.crimerussia.com/gromkie-d...-shutdown/#top

    However, the commencement of the law has immediately revealed its flaws. Wikipedia, the largest online encyclopedia and its comic counterpart Lurkmore have been blacklisted by Roskomnadzor for drug abuse propaganda, while the Federal Drug Control Service of the Russian Federation has banned the web site of EVE-online for the term ?drug? frequently used on the game forum as a slang word. The watchdog authority has found instigation to suicide on the web site of the Vvedensky (Entrance of the Theotokos into the Temple) Parish of the Rostov-on-Don Diocese of the Russian Orthodox Church and in the psychological report ?Suicide. How to prevent self-killing? posted on a student web site. Access to Google and YouTube had been closed for a short time as well.

    If required, this law could be used to ban some Soviet cartoons, classic paintings and sculptures, etc.

    The poor equipment capability of Internet providers responsible for the blocking and lack of technical knowledge among Roskomnadzor officers have resulted in further problems. For example, web sites banned in Russia became unavailable in adjacent CIS countries serviced by major Russian providers, including Beeline and Rostelecom. Instead of one web site, dozens of innocent Internet resources having the same IP address were often blocked. Or instead of one page, the entire web portals were banned. This is exactly what has happened with The CrimeRussia: our web site was blacklisted after a complaint brought by Abdula Dzhamalkhanov, ex-Investigator of the Main Investigations Directorate for the City of Moscow of the Investigative Committee of the Russian Federation (ICR), against an article stating that he had gunned down a person in a Moscow restaurant. Interestingly, this news is still available on Life.ru, Zona.media, and Moskovsky Komsomolets (it can be found using the on-site search, although the article has been removed).

    The poor performance of Roskomnadzor is not surprising ? once the agency has blocked itself (the Moscow City Court ruled to block domain karaoke-besplatno.ru, and officers of the watchdog authority mistakenly entered their own IP address into the register). Too bad, it was not blocked forever...


    Skype: CallTomNow

  • Bladewire
    StraightBro
    • Aug 2003
    • 56228

    #2
    This is big

    Russia follows China in tightening internet restrictions, raising fresh censorship concerns


    Skype: CallTomNow

    Comment

    • Barry-xlovecam
      It's 42
      • Jun 2010
      • 18083

      #3
      Interesting -- they are blocking information websites that have information that Putin does not like ... The thought police are busy in the Russian Federation.

      Comment

      • sirkonstantine
        Confirmed User
        • Jan 2012
        • 281

        #4
        Ughh if it wasn't for stuff like this (and the weather and corruption), I'd move to Russia. They have a very nice 13% corporate tax rate!

        Eh, E-Estonia it is.

        Comment

        • Bladewire
          StraightBro
          • Aug 2003
          • 56228

          #5
          Originally posted by sirkonstantine
          Ughh if it wasn't for stuff like this (and the weather and corruption), I'd move to Russia. They have a very nice 13% corporate tax rate!

          Eh, E-Estonia it is.
          In America most corporations don't pay taxes and often get paid subsidies by the American government and state governments


          Skype: CallTomNow

          Comment

          • Bladewire
            StraightBro
            • Aug 2003
            • 56228

            #6


            There is hope! Russian citizen fighting against Putin's regime







            Skype: CallTomNow

            Comment

            • BaldBastard
              Too lazy to set a custom title
              • Jan 2001
              • 16806

              #7
              Given the forum replies here and on other boards I'd already conclude Russian internet is censored/ manipulated.

              Comment

              • Tasty1
                Bla bla blaa
                • Jan 2005
                • 9529

                #8
                Will be the same everywhere on the world within a few years. Now the Dutch government starts tapping all internet traffic. Than copyright organisations will go after torrent uploaders/downloaders. Than 'fake' news sites will be blocked. Wikileaks will be blocked cause the material is illegal. Than some porn excuses. People will use VPN more and more. And than they will forbid encrypted vpn connections cause someone drove a car in a crowd and used an encrypted Phone.

                So Russia, China are ahead of Europe if it comes to control the internet. but for how long?

                everything is fake

                Comment

                • Boozer
                  So Fucking Banned
                  • Feb 2005
                  • 3134

                  #9
                  It would be great if we could add our sites to this blacklist.

                  Comment

                  • Sarn
                    WW3
                    • Sep 2015
                    • 12405

                    #10
                    Originally posted by Bladewire

                    There is hope! Russian citizen fighting against Putin's regime

                    ----

                    Comment

                    • Bladewire
                      StraightBro
                      • Aug 2003
                      • 56228

                      #11
                      Originally posted by Bjorn_Tasty1
                      Will be the same everywhere on the world within a few years. Now the Dutch government starts tapping all internet traffic. Than copyright organisations will go after torrent uploaders/downloaders. Than 'fake' news sites will be blocked. Wikileaks will be blocked cause the material is illegal. Than some porn excuses. People will use VPN more and more. And than they will forbid encrypted vpn connections cause someone drove a car in a crowd and used an encrypted Phone.

                      So Russia, China are ahead of Europe if it comes to control the internet. but for how long?
                      Yes Russia & China are ahead in fascism and population thought control by keeping their population ignorant. This is unfortunate for their citizens.

                      Russians are ahead in lying about who they are online by creating false identities pretending to be foreigners and spreading Putin's hate propaganda through those fake accounts.

                      It sucks Russians have to lie about who they are, and manipulate, instead of being honest online, but this is how Putin operates, lies, theft, hacking & manipulation.

                      New Web tool tracks Russian ?influence ops? on Twitter - GoFuckYourself.com - Adult Webmaster Forum


                      Skype: CallTomNow

                      Comment

                      • Bladewire
                        StraightBro
                        • Aug 2003
                        • 56228

                        #12
                        Originally posted by MrBaldBastard
                        Given the forum replies here and on other boards I'd already conclude Russian internet is censored/ manipulated.
                        Agreed.

                        No openly Russian posters say anything against Putin, then they mysteriously have "non Russian" nics backing up Putin's censorship.


                        Skype: CallTomNow

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