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posted by cmn32480 on Wednesday September 02 2015, @04:50PM   Printer-friendly
from the gimme-more-control dept.

Archive.org has become the latest site to be blocked in Russia:

Archive.org, home to the popular Wayback Machine, is again blocked in Russia, according to a site that monitors IP addresses banned in that country. The Internet Archive's address, 207.241.224.2, turns up in the latest dump by Antizapret on GitHub.

The anti-censorship Antizapret maintains a list (currently beyond 12,000 addresses) of blocked IPs, and also provides information about anti-censorship tools like VPNs. The blog Meduza.io, which reported Antizapret's original announcement, says the Kremlin's media watchdog agency, Roskomnadzor, took exception to Wayback archiving links to Syrian Islamist videos. Because Archive.org uses HTTPS, the individual pages can't be blocked, so the whole site's been blacklisted.

It's not the first time the non-profit archive's robots have stored content that Roskomnadzor doesn't like. Wayback raised Russia's ire in June when it scooped up a page referring to the "theory and practice of partisan resistance."

Previously, Reddit was blocked in Russia for hosting a single page about growing psychedelic mushrooms, and Wikipedia was briefly blacklisted for its entry on Charas, a hashish form of cannabis. A day after Wikipedia's block was lifted, Moscow's head of communication and culture, Yevgeny Gerasimov, discussed plans for an alternate Russian version of the site.

The effects of erratic site blocking may pale in comparison to the data localization requirement that amended the Russian Federal Law on Personal Data, which came into effect on Sept. 1. Bloomberg reports:

A law now forces tech firms with Russian customers to operate local servers to handle Russian personal data. It's the latest in a string of about 20 laws tightening government control of the Internet, all put into place since President Vladimir Putin's re-election in 2012. Taken at face value the new program is aimed at protecting the privacy of Russian citizens. It's not a uniquely Russian idea, and is something Brazil and Germany are also exploring in the post-Snowden era. Yet human rights activists fear the regulation will be misused, allowing officials to spy on citizens and suppress political activists. It comes into force days after Wikipedia was briefly blacklisted because of an article about cannabis.

"The regime is already ramping up censorship and surveillance and using it to target opposition activists, so the requiring of companies to host data on servers in the country makes it easier for the government to access that data," says Laura Reed, a research analyst from Freedom House.

In theory Russia's intelligence services need a court order to access any data, but observers say they are rarely turned down. All eyes are now on Facebook, Google and Twitter, which have been meeting with the Kremlin in private to make sense of the law. At this stage it's not clear whether they will agree to comply. Google declined to comment. Facebook simply says it won't comment on speculation, and that "we regularly meet with government officials and have nothing more to share at this time."


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  • (Score: 2) by frojack on Wednesday September 02 2015, @06:39PM

    by frojack (1554) on Wednesday September 02 2015, @06:39PM (#231384) Journal

    The tracking that goes on in the US seems to be primarily for advertising purposes.

    (Or that is what the trackers claim, but recent articles suggest that even the trackers have no idea about what to do with all that data [business2community.com] they are drowning in).

    Click on a few articles about [insert subject] and I am sure to get spam and page ads trying to sell me [insert subject] after a little while.

    (Shopping for a new car is a sure fire way to test this. You have to turn off ABP to see these, although with a sale as large as a car on the line, the car companies have a way of pushing right past APB with html5 ads).

    However, in the US, I don't see any blocking, and I don't see any obvious sign of government tracking. US government tracking isn't about denial of access. Its about silent data collection.

    Should I decide to go rogue, they would track me down in a heartbeat.

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  • (Score: 1) by Francis on Wednesday September 02 2015, @06:49PM

    by Francis (5544) on Wednesday September 02 2015, @06:49PM (#231392)

    Why would the government bother to track us when they can just use an NSL to get access to the information that companies have?

    It's much more cost effective than actually doing their own data collection. This is one of the reasons why I'm so uncomfortable with companies like FB and Google tracking the hell out of everybody. Even if they don't use the data themselves or sell it, it's still available for government witch hunts.

    • (Score: 1, Insightful) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday September 02 2015, @07:20PM

      by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday September 02 2015, @07:20PM (#231403)

      It's much more cost effective than actually doing their own data collection.

      The U.S. effort seems to be well-funded, so it's pursuing an "all of the above" strategy including full-take surveillance (e.g. Room 641A [wikipedia.org] and PRISM [wikipedia.org]).

      • (Score: 1) by Francis on Wednesday September 02 2015, @07:31PM

        by Francis (5544) on Wednesday September 02 2015, @07:31PM (#231412)

        That's a fair point.

        But, I suspect that's more about sustaining the military-industrial complex than anything else. It's certainly not about getting better data as they already have so much data that they can't analyze more than a small portion of it. At best it's useful after the fact to try and identify the perpetrators or establish motive.

    • (Score: 2) by frojack on Wednesday September 02 2015, @07:56PM

      by frojack (1554) on Wednesday September 02 2015, @07:56PM (#231422) Journal

      Why would the government bother to track us when they can just use an NSL to get access to the information that companies have?

      Agreed. Which is why we should be pushing companies like Google to stop retaining so much history, and pushing companies like Facebook over a cliff.

      Instead they paint a thin layer of SSL over their massive collection which goes back years, and tell us it is secure. Its far from
      secure. When they use client side encryption/decryption and they don't hold the keys, then we can talk about secure.

      (Google allows you to kill off all your data and close an account. But there are weasel words in this promise.)

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  • (Score: 2) by WizardFusion on Thursday September 03 2015, @10:17AM

    by WizardFusion (498) on Thursday September 03 2015, @10:17AM (#231649) Journal

    Do you have an example of a page with HTML5 adverts.? I have not seen any adverts on any site for quite a while.
    I use"ScriptBlock" (and allow only sites that I really need), "Ghostery" (to block all trackers, no exceptions) and "uBlock Origin" (to also block trackers and adverts)
    I would like to also test my home DNS blackhole ad blocker too.

    Thanks