Jamaica Gleaner

Russia closes grip on internet

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RUSSIAN LAWMAKERS approved a bill on Thursday that would expand government control over the Internet and which opponents fear heralds a new era of widespread censorship.

The bill would install equipment to route Russian Internet traffic through servers in the country. That would increase the power of state agencies to control informatio­n and block messaging applicatio­ns, while users would find it harder to circumvent government restrictio­ns.

The bill’s backers say it’s a defence measure in case Russia is cut off from the internet by the United States or other hostile powers.

Nikolai Zemtsov, a lawmaker who backed the bill, told The Associated Press that Russia could cooperate with ex-Soviet countries on a “Runet” where news from critical Western media was restricted.

“It could be that in our limited, sovereign Internet we will only be stronger,” he said.

But the move has caused concern in a society that has become used to an open Internet. Several thousand people took to Moscow’s streets in protest last month.

Sergei Boiko, a libertaria­n activist who helped organise the protests, said there could be further demonstrat­ions.

“The aim is to establish the authoritie­s’ monopoly on informatio­n in the country,” he told the AP. “It’s now no longer the Soviet times when it was enough to control the mass media, the telegraph and printing presses. That was enough. Now they need to control a broader environmen­t, and they need to control the Internet.”

Boiko predicted Internet speeds in Russia would slow dramatical­ly due to the installati­on of equipment required by the bill, and said it could “pickle” Russia’s fast-developing tech sector.

“The authoritie­s are prepared

to accept the degradatio­n of the Internet in Russia for the sake of controllin­g it,” he said.

The bill passed by 322-15 in a second reading in the Lower House of parliament.

The second reading is when amendments are finalised, and is usually the most important. The bill must pass a third reading and the Upper House before being signed into law by President Vladimir Putin.

Since last year, Russian authoritie­s have been trying to block the messaging app Telegram, which has refused to hand over users’ encrypted messages in defiance of a court order.

Telegram’s traffic used millions of different Internet protocol addresses, meaning attempts to block it resembled a game of whack-a-mole. Many unrelated apps, online stores and even Volvo car repair services were temporaril­y knocked offline last year before Russian officials eased their pressure. The new law could make a block easier.

Russia already requires certain personal informatio­n about Russian citizens to be stored on servers in the country. That measure led to the social network LinkedIn being blocked in 2016.

By moving to exert more control of the Internet, which is not overseen by a central authority, the Russian government is taking a page from China’s playbook.

China subjects its 700 million internet users to extensive monitoring and tight controls. Beijing has a system of automated filters – known as the ‘Great Firewall’ – to block political content as well as sites related to gambling and pornograph­y. Chinese users are blocked from using Western Internet sites such as Facebook, Google and Twitter, leaving the market open for homegrown giants like Tencent.

Chinese regulators have ratcheted up control on local microblogs such as Weibo, ordering them to set up a mechanism to remove false informatio­n. They’ve also been cracking down on virtual private networks – software that can be used to get around internet filters by creating encrypted links between computers and blocked sites.

 ??  ?? A man walks past an ads poster at an Internet devices shop in St Petersburg, Russia, on Thursday, April 11. Russian lawmakers approved on Thursday a bill that would expand government control over the internet.
A man walks past an ads poster at an Internet devices shop in St Petersburg, Russia, on Thursday, April 11. Russian lawmakers approved on Thursday a bill that would expand government control over the internet.

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