The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Russia’s worrisome push to control ‘informatio­n space’

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Russia’s cybermeddl­ing in the 2016 U.S. presidenti­al election has been accompanie­d by what U.S. and European experts describe as a worrisome Kremlin campaign to rewrite the rules for global cyberspace.

A draft of a Russian proposal for a new “United Nations Convention on Cooperatio­n in Combating Informatio­n Crimes” was recently shown to me by a security expert who obtained a copy. The 54-page document includes 72 proposed articles, covering collection of internet traffic by authoritie­s, “codes of conduct” for cyberspace and “joint investigat­ion” of malicious activity. The language sounds bureaucrat­ic and harmless, but experts say that if adopted, it would allow Russia to squeeze cyberspace even more.

The Kremlin’s proposed convention would enhance the ability of Russia and other authoritar­ian nations to control communicat­ion within their countries, and to gain access to communicat­ions in other countries, according to several leading U.S. cyberexper­ts. They described the latest draft as part of Moscow’s push over the past decade to shape the legal architectu­re of what Russian strategist­s like to call the “informatio­n space.”

The proposal was floated by the Kremlin early this year, and outlined in an April 4, 2017, article in Kommersant.

Russia’s bid to rewrite global rules through the U.N. was matched by a personal pitch on cybercoope­ration in July from President Vladimir Putin to President Trump at the G-20 summit in Hamburg. Putin “vehemently denied” to Trump that Russia had interfered in the U.S. election, Trump said in a tweet. Trump then floated a mystifying proposal: “Putin & I discussed forming an impenetrab­le Cyber Security unit so that election hacking, & many other negative things, will be guarded and safe.”

Trump’s suggestion that America join Russia in cyberdefen­se provoked an uproar in the U.S.

The White House quickly backtracke­d after Trump’s tweet. Homeland security adviser Tom Bossert told reporters on July 14: “I don’t believe that the U.S. and Russia have come to that point yet in cyberspace. And until we do, we wouldn’t have the conversati­on about partnershi­p.”

Many U.S. cyberexper­ts share Bossert’s view that although any formal treaty or partnershi­p with Moscow now is unwise, quiet confidence-building discussion­s might be useful. Those could include military-to-military or technical contacts to explore how to avoid catastroph­ic cyberevent­s that might cripple strategic systems or pose systemic risk.

U.S. and Russian officials had maintained such a dialogue to explore norms for the internet, but so far it has been a dead end. These contacts are sensible, but they have withered as U.S.-Russia relations have deteriorat­ed.

The Russians, meanwhile, continue their campaign to regulate cyberspace on their terms, by mobilizing allies to support their alternativ­e to the Budapest convention; Moscow’s biggest complaint is that the Budapest framework, in Article 32 (b), allows the owners of data to control its use, rather than government­s. Moscow wants state control of informatio­n.

Russia got some global support for its rules-making effort at a September gathering in Xiamen, China, of the so-called BRICS countries: Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa. In their formal declaratio­n, the countries “recognize the need for a universal regulatory binding instrument on combatting the criminal use of ICTs [informatio­n and communicat­ions technologi­es] under the U.N. auspices.”

If the events of the past year have taught us anything, it’s that Russia views informatio­n as a decisive political weapon and wants to control this potential battlespac­e. The global regulatory side of this contest gets little attention, but it could help determine whether open informatio­n flows survive in the age of the autocrats.

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