Russia has banned VPNs capable of circumventing website blocking, and will require users of chat apps to have a phone number associated with their accounts:
Vladimir Putin has banned virtual private networks (VPNs) and Tor in a crackdown on apps that allow access to websites prohibited in Russia. The law, signed by Mr Putin, was passed by Russia's parliament last week and will now come into force on 1 November. A second law to ban anonymous use of online messaging services will take effect on 1 January next year.
It would make it easier for the state to snoop on citizens' browsing habits, one internet security expert suggested.
The laws signed by Mr Putin are meant only to block access to "unlawful content" and not target law-abiding web users, the head of the lower house of parliament said, according to the RIA news agency.
One feature of the second law is the provision to require internet operators to restrict users' access if they are found to be distributing illegal content.
Also at Engadget, ZDNet, RT, TechCrunch, and CNET.
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(Score: 2, Insightful) by lars on Tuesday August 01 2017, @01:06PM (1 child)
To an ISP, does it not just look like any other encrypted traffic? How do you block it without blocking all encryption?
(Score: 3, Insightful) by Lester on Tuesday August 01 2017, @06:34PM
Well, probably they can have list of suspicious IPs etc.
But the most important is that they don't need to prove that you are using encrypted communication for illegal activies. Just using VPN or Tor you are a criminal. Are you going to take the risk of jail just for reading a blog?. It is a deterrence law. Most people won't take the risk, so what now is a common public topic, will be known by marginal underground conspirers.