Russia
enacts 'draconian' law for bloggers and online media
Stes de Necker
According to BBC News, Russia's parliament
has voted through a series of internet laws.
A new law imposing restrictions on users of
social media has come into effect in Russia.
It means bloggers with more than 3,000
daily readers must register with the mass media regulator, Roskomnadzor, and
conform to the regulations that govern the country's larger media outlets.
Internet companies will also be required to
allow Russian authorities access to users' information.
One human rights group called the move
"draconian".
“The internet is the last island of free
expression in Russia” (Hugh Williamson, Human Rights Watch)
The law was approved by Russia's upper
house of parliament in April.
It includes measures to ensure that
bloggers cannot remain anonymous, and states that social networks must maintain
six months of data on its users.
The information must be stored on servers
based in Russian territory, so that government authorities can gain access.
Russia has blocked the sites of opponents
such as Garry Kasparov.
Critics see it as the latest in a series of
recent moves to curb internet freedom.
Hugh Williamson, of New York-based Human
Rights Watch, has called the law "another milestone in Russia's relentless
crackdown on free expression".
"The internet is the last island of
free expression in Russia and these draconian regulations are clearly aimed at
putting it under government control," he added.
Opposition figures have used the internet
to air their views, with some gaining millions of followers.
Commentators opposing Vladimir Putin often
face restrictions in broadcast outlets and newspapers.
Russia's president was once a staunch
defender of internet freedoms.
Russian bloggers are bracing themselves for
the moment when Russia's new "information security law" comes into
force on 1 August. Some already share advice on how to use proxy servers in
order to access social media sites that, in their view, are under threat of
being closed.
It is hard to see how the law will be
enforced. The servers for most of the popular social media platforms that many
Russians use are based outside Russia.
Many popular bloggers are already looking
for, and apparently finding, ways to "cheat" the feature that counts
page visits and keep their daily unique visitor numbers just under 3000, or to
make sure that the statistics are hidden altogether.
Anton Nossik, who is considered Russia's
"internet guru", wrote in his Live Journal blog that the new law
didn't threaten individual bloggers directly, but provided legal grounds to
block popular social networks like Facebook, Twitter, Live Journal and Google.
"The issue of banning all these
platforms in Russia is a political one and it will be decided by only one
person", Mr Nossik wrote, with a thinly veiled reference to President
Vladimir Putin.
Earlier in the year, Russia enacted a law
that gave the government powers to block websites without explanation.
In March, Moscow blocked the blog of Mr
Navalny, along with two news sites and a organisation run by Garry Kasparov - a
vocal critic of the Russian government.
In a statement, Russia's prosecutor
general's office said the blocks were imposed because of the sites' role in
helping stage illegal protests.
Earlier this week, Twitter blocked access
to an anti-Kremlin account that often publishes leaked government documents,
following a request by Russia's federal communications agency Roskomnadzor.
Mr Putin said Russian search engine Yandex
is controlled by foreign intelligence.
For many years, Russia had relatively lax
internet laws.
However Moscow has recently changed its
tune, with Mr Putin branding the internet an ongoing "CIA project".
He also claimed that the popular Russian
search engine Yandex was controlled by foreign intelligence.
Two years ago, Russia enacted a law enabling
authorities to blacklist and force certain websites offline without a trial.
The government said the legislation was
designed to protect children from harmful internet content, such as pro-suicide
or pornography websites.
On Thursday, lawyers for US intelligence
officer Edward Snowden said the whistle blower had filed for refugee status in
Russia.
Mr Snowden received temporary shelter in
Russia last year.
He had evaded US authorities after he
leaked classified government documents revealing mass surveillance programmes
undertaken by the NSA in the US and GCHQ in the UK.
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