Not Long After Passing Censorship Legislation, Russian Government Censors All of LiveJournal
from the in-soviet-russia,-speech-censors-you dept
Not too long ago, despite the protests of several sites, Russia passed its own little version of SOPA. It did so for the typical "for the children" reasoning. Even though this new censorship power is only a couple of weeks old, the Russia government wasted no time in taking advantage of it. In what could only conceivably be an act of celebration, perhaps after a vodka binge, the government decided to block all of LiveJournal.It began by blocking the entirety of LiveJournal, the country’s largest blogging community, to the city of Yaroslavl and part of surrounding Moscow from July 18 to 20.Wait. All of LiveJournal? Why? What could possibly go through the minds of these government officials that would cause them to block an entire network of blogs, most of which were not doing anything illegal?
On July 18, local law enforcement informed a Yaroslavl court about pat-index, a neo-Nazi blog it had found on LiveJournal during a sweep. The blog’s hateful message violates Russian federal laws against extremism. Because of Bill 89417-6, the court now has the power to stamp it out completely and immediately.You see, the court order demanded the blockage based on the IP of the blog in question. What could possibly go wrong with such a simple open and shut use of such an easy to use identification source? Oh, right. All of LiveJournal uses the same IP address. So when the government officials got their court order to block those few illegal blogs, they took out just a few extra. Kind of reminds me of when Homeland Security, here in the US, took out over 84,000 websites in a similar action.
The court ordered Internet provider Netis Telekom to block, among other illegal sites, this blog’s IP. The court order shows the IP to be blocked as 208.93.0.128.
This reminds me of the debates around SOPA. You know, when we and other people, who actually understand the dangers of the legislation, warned repeatedly that such legislation would result in collateral damage of this nature. This collateral damage is also part of the reason why this Russian bill was protested. Legitimate speech was censored for several days. That is not acceptable. It should be a wake up call to the legislators that passed the bill. Unfortunately, too many people in power are unwilling to relinquish the ability to censor speech once they have it. Hopefully, the citizens of Russia will take note of this unacceptable abuse of power and demand the law be repealed.
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Filed Under: censorship, collateral damage, for the children, free speech, russia, sopa
Companies: livejournal
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You forget to mention that the government didn't give you an answer and even you were confused whether or not it was true. Don't confuse us please.
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You forget to mention that the government didn't give you an answer and even you were confused whether or not it was true. Don't confuse us please.
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In Soviet Russia...the internet blocks YOU!
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And we are watching you !
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Now that Russia passed it, wait for some crazy reps or senators in US to use it as a "good example" in 3..2..1..
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So there's collateral damage and actual theft thanks to this law?
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Though this case does show quite nicely just how unreliable any blocking is, especially when the people ordering it can't operate anything more advanced than a desktop calculator...
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It's not large collateral dmg that worries me
It's the cases where only a small amount of collateral damage occurs that worries me. If you think two days is a long time, How long to do you think it would have taken for a server with a "mere" ten low-traffic web sites to get fixed. After a while, those tens become hundreds, and later thousands...
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fuzzy bunnies
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Censorship
Last month, the U.S. House of Representatives shelved its proposed Stop Online Piracy Act, or SOPA (H.R. 3261). The legislation’s surface intent seemed sound: It would have given holders of music, films, books and other intellectual property copyrighted in the United States some teeth to stop its illegal distribution, even if that property was stored in an offshore server. But the bill required such sweeping enforcement that Google communications director Bob Boorstin said, “YouTube would just go dark immediately.” If you were caught unwittingly posting a video of your niece singing along with the latest Taylor Swift tune, you could be blocked from Facebook and by your Internet provider and you’d have the burden of proving your innocence.
Hawaii’s legislature recently considered a bill (HB 2288) that would have required Internet providers to track state residents’ online activities and retain detailed records for at least two years. Internet providers, businesses and consumer-rights activists immediately protested the legislation, which is being revised.
Though SOPA was postponed indefinitely after tech-industry backlash, alternative legislation — the Online Protection and Enforcement of Digital Trade Act, or OPEN — was introduced last month in the House. It seeks to improve enforcement of copyrights online. If you access sharing or social-media sites, consider how — if it becomes law — it might affect you or the sites you patronize.
How much information about your online activities is tracked and/or sold depends on the policies of the Internet service provider and websites you use.
Google will roll out a new privacy policy March 1 that it says will streamline more than 70 privacy agreements into one cross-platform policy that’s clearer and easier to understand. Opponents point out that it will allow any information you’ve shared or created on one Google platform — Gmail, YouTube, Google+, etc. — to be shared across all Google products.
The fear is that Google will soon have a “massive, all-inclusive database of your most private information, from your political leanings to your searches for prescription drugs. And there’s nothing you can do about it, short of giving up your Google habit,” Fox Van Allen wrote Jan. 25 on Tecca, a consumer tech website.
Last year, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security solicited bids for building a network capable of monitoring “publicly available social media” to track potential terrorist activity. The department’s “privacy impact assessment” — at http://www.dhs.gov/xlibrary/assets/privacy/privacy_pia_ops_publiclyavail… — said it would track only publicly available information, but it still makes me want to review my Facebook privacy settings.
In October, Verizon changed its privacy policy to detail what broadband-user information it collects and sells. It collects information on your Internet activity, downloaded apps, physical location and demographics — stripped of your name and other personal identification — and sells it to advertisers or anyone else willing to pay for it. Verizon is the most transparent of the carriers, which all likely engage in data gathering.
You may think that monitoring and selling information about your online activity isn’t a big deal if it isn’t tracked back to you. However, while your personal details may be stripped from data before it’s sold, there’s no telling what may be done with the information if it’s maintained in databases that are out of your hands.
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I guess all those posts about my cat were offensive to the Russians!
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Much in the same way that collateral damage due to copyright infringement isn't theft, neither is censorship theft.
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In soviet russia, they have no money!
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"...perhaps after a vodka binge..."
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This was not an 'accident'. This was a motivated attempt at silencing free speech on the internet and demonstrates why ANY censorship laws against ANYTHING (even something so controversial as child pornography) are bad because they can be and are abused.
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Re: "...perhaps after a vodka binge..."
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Re: fuzzy bunnies
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About a quarter of population in Russia believes that the Internet is Yandex, Mail.Ru Vkontakte (local Google, GMail and Facebook). A sizable number of (mostly old, 40+) people believe that the Internet is some kind of place where people can hack your computer by just looking at it, where there's terrorists and hackers everywhere, and where a good, law-abiding citizen has no business in being. Do you *really* think these people know the difference between an IP address, domain name and a website?
You obviously judge it by looking at yourself and your little sister. You are young, and so is she. 6 year old people don't go to be a judge. But some old-ass technology illiterate schmuck in his 60's - perfectly can. Especially if his daddy was a judge too.
In other words, you have no idea of what is Russia.
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THINK OF THE CHILDREN, RUSSIA!
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Actual theft: I paid for something and it was taken from me.
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Russia is on the United Nation because of the nukes, not because it cares about human rights or whatever is not their interests. Not that the US is far behind nowadays.
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pending
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They are strong in censorship...
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Online Privacy
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