Russia Blocks Another Archive Site Because It Might Contain Old Pages About Drugs

from the block-bloc dept

The Russian block party continues. The government agency in charge of censoring the internet is still working its way backwards, hoping to erase the collective memories of the web… or at least, keep Russian citizens from seeing certain bits of the archived past.

Last summer, Russia blocked the Internet Archive's "Wayback Machine," an extremely useful tool that allows users to see historical snapshots of websites. The government may only have intended to block a single page, but because the Internet Archive utilizes HTTPS, the only practical way for ISPs to block the targeted pages was to block it at the domain level.

The same thing is now happening to archive.is, another useful tool that allows users to archive pages they feel might be altered or disappear altogether at some point in the future. (via Google Translate and an anonymous TD reader)

Roskomnadzor introduced archive.is service to Internet resources registry, prohibited by the law of the Russian Federation.

On the site supervisory authority pointed out that archive.is entered in the register by order of the Federal Service for Drug Control 28 January 2016.

Service continues to work as usual, but for many Russian customers of providers it is no longer available.
The problem here is the Russian's take on the War on Drugs. Because it's illegal to discuss drug use/abuse/sales, Roskomnadzor has disappeared another archive that might contain copies of pages it's blocked in the past. That the service would be of use to Russian citizens for non-drug related purposes appears to be of no concern to the Russian government.

And again, it's the use of HTTPS that's resulted in the entire site being blocked. Targeted pages can't be targeted if the connection is encrypted. So, down goes the entire site and, of course, no one in the web censorship body seems to be bothered by the collateral damage.

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Filed Under: archives, censorship, drugs, free speech, roskomnadzor, russia, site blocking
Companies: archive.is


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  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 4 Feb 2016 @ 11:53am

    Are they censoring because of drug information, or because of the associated anti-authoritarian ideas that are commonly associated with drugs?

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Mark Wing, 4 Feb 2016 @ 1:52pm

    Putin doesn't want people learning that he does blow with James Woods.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      PaulT (profile), 5 Feb 2016 @ 12:11am

      Re:

      Who wouldn't if they got the chance?

      link to this | view in chronology ]

      • identicon
        Wendy Cockcroft, 5 Feb 2016 @ 6:08am

        Re: Re:

        I dunno, but you might not want him living in your house: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=doARYLLi7Jo

        link to this | view in chronology ]

      • icon
        tqk (profile), 5 Feb 2016 @ 1:24pm

        Re: Re:

        Putin doesn't want people learning that he does blow with James Woods.

        Who wouldn't if they got the chance?

        Seriously? I've watched a few of the things he's done as a movie or TV actor which I thought were well worth seeing. He can be entertaining that way. He's a competent, skilled actor. However, I doubt I'd enjoy ever being in the same room with him from what I've read of his off-screen persona.

        Add to that I've never understood what people saw in cocaine or its derivatives. If he's a cokehead, that doesn't speak very highly of him. About the only one of them I ever liked was Sherlock Holmes, and he only did it to fill downtimes, and he was fictional.

        link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    Wesha (profile), 4 Feb 2016 @ 4:37pm

    Relax, guys. In Russia, nobody cares.

    I always say that law in Russia looks like this:

    http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_2RpeUxNxtU4/TQtLmeYnOZI/AAAAAAAAAg0/fYMNLYnessM/s1600/Parking+Control .jpg.png

    They lawmakers can forbid aaaaaall they want. Nobody cares. We'll find our way around.

    "The Duma pretends to make laws. People pretend to obey them."

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    diginess, 7 Feb 2016 @ 8:43am

    incompetence

    Whoever made the decision to outright block the wayback machine obviously has no idea what they are doing. That's like a podunk government blocking YouTube for one video. You have an information resource with terabytes of information which may not be available elsewhere, and you block it because a few kilobytes offend you. Soon your citizens will all be familiar with VPNs.

    link to this | view in chronology ]


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