Paul
Goble
Staunton, February 4 – The Russian
authorities are putting ever more pressure on the Internet in the hopes of
imposing Kremlin control on the last relatively free segment of the Russian
media, but their efforts are being countered by those most affected who are
offering what they describe as “very easy” workarounds so that those who want to
visit banned sites can.
As reported in today’s “Vedomosti,”
the Agora Human Rights Association says that the number of extra-judicial restrictions
of Internet sites in Russia increased by 50 percent in 2013 from a year
earlier, a move that affects ever more Russians since nearly half use the
Internet on a daily basis (vedomosti.ru/politics/news/22253001/blokiruyuschij-god#ixzz2sKii8rrE).
In 2011, Agora says, there were 500
cases of such restriction of Internet freedom in the Russian Federation. In
2012, there were 1197, and in 2013, there were 1832. And those figures do not
include blocked sites. Among the sites now blocked are not only those
containing child pornography, information on how to commit suicide, and the use
of drugs, the authorities are also now blocking sites that they conclude, without
the judgment of a court, have pirated content.
Of even great concern, Agora
continues, is the use of “administrative pressure” against Internet media in
order to convince them not to carry political materials the Russian authorities
disapprove of, such as materials about the Pussy Riot case, or other stories
that the authorities classify as “extremism,” a term without precise legal definition.
Such pressure, the Agora
investigators say, is likely to lead some sites to “migrate” to foreign
jurisdictions but it is also having another effect. Confident that Russians are increasingly
computer savvy, at least some Russian sites are now providing guidance on
workarounds so that those who want to visit them can even if they are blocked.
One such site is RONS, “Russia Will
Be Liberated by Ourselves.” It provided detailed guidance on how its nationalist
followers can go to whatever sites they like regardless of what Moscow
does. Doing so, it said, is “not just
easy but very easy,” an indication that the competition between offense
and defense in this area too is going to continue to heat up (http://ronsslav.com/kak-oboyti-blokirovku-zapreshhennyh-saytov/).
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