Paul
Goble
Staunton, December 25 – The Kremlin
wants to block protests by shutting down portions of the Internet or
frightening people from posting by bringing criminal charges against those who
do, but it does not appear to recognize that it may provoke protests by doing
so and that if it blocked YouTube, it could create a revolutionary situation,
Leonid Volkov says.
The Navalny associate who is the
founder of the Russian Society for the Defense of the Internet points out that
except for the Moscow election demonstrations, protests against Internet
blocking were the largest demonstrations in Russia in the last two years (znak.com/2019-12-25/pochemu_rossiyskim_vlastyam_vazhno_nauchitsya_tochechno_otklyuchat_internet_k_2021_godu).olkov
The Kremlin clearly wants to
suppress protests by blocking the internet, Volkov says; but despite threats to
shut the entire internet down, the Putin regime has no such plans: the costs of
doing so in an economy and society like Russia’s are simply too high. “Plans
would cease to fly, banks, exchanges and businesses as a whole would cease to
work.”
And
while the regime might like to shut down YouTube, which has a Russian audience
of 40 million a day, it won’t because “the last thing which a government headed
by an aging dictator who is losing popularity wants to do is to infuriate 30
million apolitical users of YouTube.”
Were
the Kremlin to block YouTube even for a few days, “of these 30 million
apolitical useers, some three million would become politically active and also
hate you for the fact that they were forced to give up their customary rituals
and procedures because YouTube is very firmly rooted in their lives. I hope
that [those in the Kremlin] understand this,” Volkov says.
Brazil
and Turkey are places where the regimes blocked services and sent millions into
the street to protest. “Blocking YouTube
[in Russia] could create a quasi-revolutionary situation” that no one now in
power needs. Consequently, he continues, the regime will try to target posts
and sites more narrowly in the coming year.
That
won’t be easy with regard to posts on major services like YouTube. If users
follow their rules, it is difficult although not impossible for anyone
including a government to force the service to take posts down. Most such
services, including Facebook, Twitter and Apple, simply ignore complaints if
those posting meet their respective standards.
“We
see,” Volkov says, “that neither Google, nor Apple, nor Facebook, nor Microsoft,
nor Twitter fulfill the demands of Russian legislation.” Given that, the Russian authorities are going
after those who post on these platforms with criminal charges. That tactic has had some success in reducing
the number of opposition posts.
But
Russians are learning how to get around the blockages the Russian authorities have
imposed and are going only going to become more skilled in doing so given the work
of the Internet Freedom Conference held earlier this month, with a repetition
scheduled to take place in 2020.
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