Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 19 – Russia’s
communication minister, Nikolay Nikoforov, says that the existing Russian
system of blocking objectionable websites isn’t working because users find it
too easy to employ workarounds and, as a result, Moscow is considering putting
in place a system that will track all users of all sites.
Nikiforov made that declaration about
what would be a fundamental, difficult and likely enormously expensive shift in
Russian policy to the Duma yesterday during the government hour, Anatoly
Komrakov reports in today’s Nezavisimaya
gazeta (ng.ru/politics/2017-10-19/2_7098_internet.html).
“We are still acting in an outdated
way,” the minister said. “The internet and digital technologies are developing
in such a way that the method of blocking does not allow us to achieve the
desired result and for every case of blocking, people will always think up
technologies that will allow them to go around it.”
The government recognizes, as was
announced by Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev in July, that it needs to be more “pro-active”
and effective, Nikoforov continued. It needs in real time to know which people
are looking at which sites and thus getting information that violates Russian
law and threatens the national security of the country.
Such an approach will require the
development of new technologies. Along with this, Nikiforov says, by 2024, the
Russian government hopes to reduce to under five percent the share of domestic
Russian traffic which passes through servers based abroad. That will cost an
estimated 100 billion rubles (1.6 billion US dollars).
Pavel Butenko of the Intouch
innovation company, told Nezavisimaya
gazeta that Nikiforov “in essence” has said that he and his ministry want “to
concentrate attention not on the blocking of resources but on citizens who gain
access to prohibited content.” Once such people are identified, he said, the
government can impose sanctions on them.
The expert suggested that it will be
some time before the regime can make a transition to this approach. Another specialist, Ilyas Sharapov of the TSS
Security Company, says that this will involve using Big Data and then using
that to draw conclusions about what is getting through to Russians.
Sharapov said that he would expect
the future policy to involve both blocking and tracking rather than the
replacement of one by the other. He and
other specialists suggested that this approach would be extremely expensive,
something that could be a problem in the current period of budgetary
stringency.
And the cost may be a serious
obstacle unless it can somehow be passed on to users. Indeed, budget problems are already forcing
Moscow to consider cutting the staff of the notorious Center E which fights
extremism (nazaccent.ru/content/25707-v-mvd-rasskazali-o-budushih-sokrasheniyah.html
and rbc.ru/society/17/10/2017/59e5df539a79479149873386).
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