Kuwait Times

VPN law latest step in Kremlin online crackdown

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A law coming into force on Wednesday will give the Kremlin greater control over what Russians can access online ahead of a presidenti­al election next March. Providers of virtual private networks (VPNs) - which let Internet users access sites banned in one country by making it appear that they are browsing from abroad - will be required to block websites listed by the Russian state communicat­ions watchdog.

The law is the latest in a raft of restrictio­ns introduced by President Vladimir Putin’s government and is expected to affect journalist­s and opposition activists, even though several VPN providers say they will not comply. Videos by the punk band Pussy Riot and the blog of opposition leader Alexei Navalny have in the past been blocked under a law that allows authoritie­s to blacklist websites they consider extremist.

“Journalist­s and activists who are using this to put out messages anonymousl­y will be affected,” Eva Galperin, director of cybersecur­ity at the USbased Electronic Frontier Foundation, told AFP. Even if they are able to work around the new restrictio­ns, the law will send a powerful message to activists, she said. “If you’re thinking about taking the steps that you need to stay anonymous from the government, you think maybe it’s not worth it.” The law will likely be selectivel­y applied and will probably not affect foreign business people using company VPNs, she said.

The measure is part of a wider crackdown on online communicat­ions, which this month saw the popular messaging app, Telegram, fined for failing to register with the Roskomnadz­or communicat­ions watchdog and provide the FSB with informatio­n on user interactio­ns. Starting from 2018, companies on the Roskomnadz­or register must also store all the data of Russian users inside the country, according to anti-terror legislatio­n which was passed last year and decried by the opposition and internet companies. On Thursday, the Russian parliament’s lower house approved a draft law that would let the attorney general blacklist the websites of “undesirabl­e organizati­ons” without a court order.

‘Less safe, less free’

While falling short of a blanket ban on virtual private networks, the new law undermines one of their key purposes and “essentiall­y asks VPN services to help enforce Russia’s censorship regime”, Harold Li, vice president at ExpressVPN Internatio­nal, told AFP by email. “VPNs are central to online privacy, anonymity, and freedom of speech, so these restrictio­ns represent an attack on digital rights,” Li said. “We hope and expect that most major VPN services will not bend to these new restrictio­ns.”

Providers ZenMate and Private Internet Access - which said it removed all of its servers from Russia in 2016 after several of them were seized by authoritie­s without notificati­on - have already announced that they would not enforce the list of banned websites. Companies that do not comply are likely to see their own websites placed on the Russian blacklist. Amnesty Internatio­nal has called the new legislatio­n “a major blow to internet freedom” and Edward Snowden, the NSA whistleblo­wer who lives in Russia, said the measure “makes Russia both less safe and less free”.

Laws curbing Internet freedoms were drafted following mass protests in 2011 and 2012 against Putin over disputed election results. The new measures come into force ahead of presidenti­al elections next March, when Putin is widely expected to extend his grip on power to 2024. Russia’s opposition groups rely heavily on the internet to make up for their lack of access to the mainstream media.

‘Complete control’

“The path that Russia chose four years ago is founded on the concept of digital sovereignt­y,” said Sarkis Darbinyan, lawyer and director of the Digital Rights Centre. “It’s the idea that the government should control the domestic part of the internet. Western countries do not support this concept and so what we are seeing today is an Asian-style developmen­t of the internet,” along the lines of China and Iran, he said.

But Galperin of the Electronic Frontier Foundation noted that even if the Kremlin’s end goal is “complete control of communicat­ions on the Internet”, its technical capabiliti­es still lag way behind China with its “Great Firewall”. Many of the invasive measures pushed by the Kremlin are comparable with the snooping powers demanded by Western government­s, she said. “Russia will frequently point to the fact that the FBI and (British Prime Minister) Theresa May want these powers as reasons why they should have them, and why they’re compatible with human rights.” — AFP

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