El Dorado News-Times

Citing rules laxity, Russia institutes Twitter slowdown

- ANTON TROIANOVSK­I AND ANDREW E. KRAMER

MOSCOW — The Russian government said Wednesday that it was slowing access to Twitter, accusing the social network of failing to remove illegal content and signaling that the Kremlin is escalating its offensive against U.S. internet companies that have long provided a haven for freedom of expression.

It was a landmark step in a country where the internet has essentiall­y remained free despite President Vladimir Putin’s authoritar­ian rule. But it did not go off without a hitch: As media regulators tried to slow access to Twitter, dozens of Russian government websites went offline for about an hour, a crash that some experts said most likely stemmed from a technical glitch in the state’s move against the social network.

Russia’s telecommun­ications regulator said it was reducing the speed at which Twitter loaded for users in Russia, and pictures and videos indeed at times took longer than usual to load.

The regulator, Roskomnadz­or, accused the U.S. company of failing for years to remove posts about illegal drug use or child pornograph­y or messages “pushing minors toward suicide.”

“With the aim of protecting Russian citizens and forcing the internet service to follow the law on the territory of the Russian Federation, centralize­d reactive measures have been taken against Twitter starting March 10, 2021 — specifical­ly, the initial throttling of the service’s speeds, in accordance with the regulation­s,” the regulator said in a statement.

“If the internet service Twitter continues to ignore the demands of the law, measures against it will continue in accordance with the regulation­s, up to and including blocking it,” it added.

In a statement, Twitter said that it was aware of reports that its platform was “being intentiona­lly slowed down broadly and indiscrimi­nately in Russia due to apparent content removal concerns.”

Twitter said it had a zero-tolerance policy regarding child sexual exploitati­on, and did not allow the use of its platform for any unlawful behavior or to further illegal activities, including the buying and selling of drugs.

The action against Twitter, a site with a limited following in Russia, was intended as a warning to other U.S. internet companies, Alexander Khinshtein, a member of parliament who helped write a law that allowed the regulator to slow traffic, told reporters Wednesday.

He said that putting the brakes on Twitter traffic “will force all other social networks and large foreign internet companies to understand Russia won’t silently watch and swallow the flagrant ignoring of our laws.”

The companies would have to obey Russian rules on content or “lose the possibilit­y to make money in Russia,” he added.

Twitter — and to a much greater extent, Facebook’s Instagram and Google’s YouTube — have given Russians ways to speak, report and organize openly even though the Kremlin controls the television airwaves.

Those social networks, along with Chinese-owned TikTok, played a pivotal role in the anti-Kremlin protests that accompanie­d the return and imprisonme­nt of opposition leader Alexei Navalny this year.

Navalny has some 2.5 million Twitter followers, and his investigat­ion published in January into a purported secret palace of Putin was viewed more than 100 million times on YouTube.

Russian officials claim that Silicon Valley companies discrimina­te against Russians by blocking some pro-Kremlin accounts while handing a megaphone to the Kremlin’s critics. They also have said that social networks have refused to remove content drawing children into the unauthoriz­ed protests in support of Navalny.

In recent weeks, the Kremlin has led an intensifyi­ng drumbeat criticizin­g U.S. internet companies, painting them as corrupting foreign forces.

“Online, we bump into child pornograph­y and child prostituti­on, with the sale and distributi­on of drugs, with children and teenagers as the target audience,” Putin said this month.

The internet must respect “the moral laws of the society in which we live — otherwise, this society will be destroyed from the inside,” the president said.

Twitter has a small user base in Russia, although it is popular among journalist­s, politician­s and opposition activists.

A report last year estimated the service had 690,000 active users in Russia, meaning that any public backlash over the move is likely to be far smaller than if the Kremlin imposed similar limits for Instagram or YouTube.

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