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The Kremlin Tightens Its Grip on the Internet

reporter writes "According to a report just published by "The Washington Post", the percentage of Russian adults having access to the Internet has risen from 8% in 2002 to 25% in 2007. This growth has attracted the attention of the Kremlin. Its allies are creating pro-Kremlin web sites and are purchasing web sites known for high-quality independent journalism. Pro-Kremlin bloggers have used their skills to bury news about anti-Kremlin demonstrations: at Russian news portals, web links to news about pro-Kremlin rallies consistently rank higher than web links to news about anti-Kremlin demonstrations. The most disturbing development is that the Kremlin intends to develop a Russian Internet which is separate from the global Internet. Russian officials are studying the techniques that the Chinese use to censor the Internet."

18 of 280 comments (clear)

  1. Spooky by Stormwatch · · Score: 5, Funny

    Seriously. I got a "Nothing for you to see here. Please move along."

    1. Re:Spooky by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny
      > Seriously. I got a "Nothing for you to see here. Please move along."

      You must be American. I got a "Please to move along, for nothing here sees YOU!"

  2. Not surprising by Bearhouse · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Putin, and more importantly, the team of ex-KGB people around him, will of course seek to control the Internet in Russia.
    All the other media, such as newpapers and TV, are firmly pro-Kremlin. Independant journalists are imprisoned or assasinated by - of course - nameless 'enemies of the state'.

    It's a shame that the promise of democracy there turned out to be yet another 'false dawn'.

    Europe will do nothing, since the bear's paw is firmly on their throat, i.e. the oil and gas supply...

    Next up, Google et al 'voluntary censorship'?

  3. well by FrivolousPig · · Score: 5, Insightful

    In a world where information is power, governments who don't actually represent their people will always try to control the knowledge that their people have access to, lest they loose their grip on them.

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    ~ All comments automatically moderated -1 since 2004 ~
  4. But we must be tolerant by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Of people's attempts to silence others. After all, if we weren't, we'd have to go after a hell of a lot of muslims urgently. And they do a lot more silencing than even the kremlin.

  5. In other news... by realdodgeman · · Score: 5, Insightful

    After 10 years of research, investigators have discovered that governments are, in fact, manipulative.

  6. Surprised? by blind+biker · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If you are, you haven't been paying attention. All independent TV stations have been closed, one way or the other, in Russia. The same is true for newspapers, with few exceptions. And the journalists brave enough to speak up have dire times looking ahead. Remember Anna Politkovskaya?

    --
    "The agriculture ministry is not in charge of Gundam" - Japanese ministry official.
    1. Re:Surprised? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      For me, as a Russian citizen, that certainly is a huge problem. There is no free mainstream media, TV is so much controlled, that there is not much point watching it (not that there is much point watchin it in any other country, I am pretty sure about this, as I used to live in US and visit Europe quite often).

      That being said, I doubt Kremlin would control Interner media, at least if they have a little bit of brain that is. The reason being, it is quite importnat to give those liberals like myslef some breathing space and keep them off the streets and demonstrations.

  7. Russia already has a second world... by 3seas · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ...its the Russian mafia network.

    So even if the kremlin managed to create their own country internet there would still be the russian mafias world wide internet.

    1. Re:Russia already has a second world... by Vlad_the_Inhaler · · Score: 5, Funny

      If the Russians are going to keep our Internet out, can they please also keep their spam in.

      --
      Mielipiteet omiani - Opinions personal, facts suspect.
  8. Hardly so simple by tjstork · · Score: 5, Informative

    You could very well replace the name "Russia" in the article with "United States" and I don't think it would surprise most here. I guess the pro-kremlin bloggers would then be Fox News?

    A couple of things.

    Russia is not so simple. First, Putin is enormously popular in Russia. He has put food in the belly of the Russian people, their standards of living are higher, and so on. In the mind of the average Russian, over there, someone supporting the likes of a pure democracy movement are the crooks and cronies from the Yeltsin era. Those crooks and cronies, in turn, are the very former communist leaders that they rebelled against to begin with!

    Secondly, yes, there is Fox News and they tend to feature columnists that are sympathetic to the right wing of American politics. Guess what, that's half the country dude. The only reason Republicans are in trouble now, well, there are a lot, is because of the skyrocketing cost of energy and the growing realization that the Republicans in Washington aren't so Republican after all. If you think the likes of Hannity give Bush a blank check, you'd be dead wrong. Hannity -routinely- condemns Bush on immigration and was one of the key players to stop the Bush immigration reform bill dead in its tracks. Similarly, just wait until Bush flip flops on the ridiculous law of the sea treaty or tries to enact some sort of a carbon tax. He'd be dead meat.

    Finally, the key difference between the USA and other places around the world that the left is so fond of comparing us too, is that, the left wing is allowed to spout its own opinions. If MoveOn was in Russia or China, they most certainly not exist. But then, neither would the NRA.

    --
    This is my sig.
    1. Re:Hardly so simple by wytcld · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Just to keep this in perspective, Stalin is enormously popular in Russia. About 60% of younger Russians, in a recent poll, said they admire Stalin greatly. The main difference between Russia and the US now in that regard is one of degree - the base for authoritarianism in Russia is that 60% (plus some), whereas the base for authoritarianism in the US is only at the 30% of hard-core Bushies - now leaning towards Rudy - plus a few percent of the Hillary supporters.

      But those figures are for what we might call "hard" authoritarianism. There's "soft" authoritarianism that's another large block in the US: the sort that enforces "conventional wisdom" across our corporate media. It's not the stuff that FOX is the outlier on that's the key that locks the American mind, but the stuff that FOX/ABC/NBC/CBS/Time/Newsweek and often even the NY Times share as common stances and assumptions. That's what took us into the Iraq disaster in such stupid form, not that "Bush lied us into it." It's a kinder, gentler authoritarianism - that lets us believe we're a "free" people while jailing a larger proportion of our population than any other industrialized country, and ignoring the clear majority will in favor of universal health care, large-scale restructuring of energy use, and the end of corporate domination of our politics.

      I'm sure Putin would agree that Russia should only have it so good.

      --
      "with their freedom lost all virtue lose" - Milton
  9. Good thing that can't happen here! by nbauman · · Score: 5, Insightful

    http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=07/08/07/130258 Democracy Now!
    August 7th, 2007
    Freedom Next Time: Filmmaker & Journalist John Pilger on Propaganda, the Press, Censorship and Resisting the American Empire

    John Pilger: One of my favorite stories about the Cold War concerns a group of Russian journalists who were touring the United States. On the final day of their visit, they were asked by the host for their impressions. "I have to tell you," said the spokesman, "that we were astonished to find after reading all the newspapers and watching TV day after day that all the opinions on all the vital issues are the same. To get that result in our country we send journalists to the gulag. We even tear out their fingernails. Here you don't have to do any of that. What is the secret?"

  10. What CNN tells about anti-Bush demonstrations... by barwasp · · Score: 5, Interesting

    nothing... CNN thinks the following US news are enough:

    * Entire school system shuts for superbug scrub
    * Train kills 5-year-old boy
    * Genarlow Wilson freed | 'We want him home' Video
    * Indian tribes expel members
    * Mobile home dwellers ride out fire, wait for help
    * Fatal fetus theft leads to death sentence
    * Mob considered whacking Guiliani Video
    * Feds: Look out for shoe-bombers
    * Commander loses job amid nuclear sub probe

    ...so in the US anti-bush news are just anti-patriotic / anti-american... the only difference between the Russian news control is that Putin started a bit earlier than Bush.


    > Pro-Kremlin bloggers have used their skills to bury news about anti-Kremlin demonstrations:

    ahhh, if some CNN wievers want to learn about recent anti-bush demonstrations, tune into BBC.

  11. Re:They'll need a catchy name for it by Ragzouken · · Score: 5, Funny

    Perhaps the iCurtain?

  12. Russian Police Psychiatry: Scarier than Halloween by reporter · · Score: 5, Informative
    Russian society has regressed beyond merely (1) government control of the media and (2) Kremlin-ordered assassinations that eliminate probing journalists. There is now a third way: police psychiatry.

    The "Washington Post" recently published a chilling story about "police psychiatry" in Russia. Powerful thugs in the government (including the police) and in commercial businesses bribe judges and doctors to declare that a mentally healthy person is mentally incompetent. Then, the "justice" (in a very loose sense of the word) system will imprison the victim in a mental institution. There, the doctors proceed to "treat" the victim with beatings and injections of psychotic substances.

    The article by the "Washington Post" mentions that Larissa Arap, a human-rights activist, was one such victim. She had written a damning article about the horrible state of psychiatric wards in Russia. In response, psychiatrists and judges -- under orders from the Kremlin -- imprisoned her in a psychiatric ward. She was subjected to 6 weeks of beatings and injections with an unknown psychotic substance. After numerous letters pleading for her life from Gary Kasparov and other human-rights activits, the Kremlin finally released her.

    What is most disturbing about police psychiatry is that it is practiced not only by the Kremlin. This "tool" is also used by ordinary Russians who want to rid themselves of people whom they dislike.

    Slashdot should create a new topic category for Russia. It deserves its own topic category for story submissions; the horrors in today's Russia should be an active topic of discussion (condemnation?) for any Westerner who has an iota of compassion. This article by the "Washington Post" should scare any Westerner.

  13. hmm by mapkinase · · Score: 4, Informative

    Couple of words of Internet landscape in Russia. As many of you know, Livejournal is the service of choice for most of Russian bloggers and, most importantly, the only service that is used for the political discourse. Other services like number #2 in ratings, Liveinternet.ru populated by pop-music fans and all kinds of juvenile nonsense.

    On the contrary, there are many political blogs among top bloggers at the cyrillic sector of Livejournal. It interesting that the most dominant and most vocal part of political blogs are not those that advocate Western style democracy and human rights, but on the contrary are criticizing Putin from extremely right-wing position.

    I am looking at blogs.yandex.ru, 5 most cited blog entries, and among number 2 (rus) is defending arrested leader of "Red blitzkrieg" by the blogger well known for his sympathies for all things Soviet.

    number 3 (rus) is also on the same subject by the relatively well known lady journalist of the similar political views.

    The highest ranking blog among the official politicians (#22 in the all-list) belongs to a politician who was in political leadership of Latvia at the time of breakup from the former Soviet Union and spent a lot of time undermining efforts of Latvians to gain independence. Right wing.

    Blogger number 19 is a Nazi sympathizer with Russian pseudo-pagan twist.

    The lefties are presented much less among top bloggers.

    I am saying this because among quite diverse opposition to Putin right-wingers opposing Western style democracy and human-rights issues are dominating. If they would come to power, the situation would be even worse than at Putin's time from the Western point of view.

    In the West Putin's seems like an autocrat, anti-democrat, but to THAT opposition he is a Western poodle. The most viable alternative to Putin at the hypothetical condition of free election (free from government manipulation as well as foreign financial and all other kinds of support to the "liberal" opposition) would be not much famed recently chessmaster, but people like Rogozin (Russian equivalent of Le Pen or Heider).

    This might be irrelevant to the topic of censorship, but it is quite relevant to Russians.

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    I do not believe in karma. "Funny"=-6. Do good and forbid evil. Yours, Oft-Offtopic Flamebaiting Troll.
  14. Re:from bad days to better days by rtb61 · · Score: 4, Insightful
    I see you miss the whole western ideal of individualism, of the rights of the individual and in turn the collective rights of all individuals over the rights of the state, especially when the rights of the state are really only the rights of a minority of greed obsessed, power mad, psychopathic individuals hiding behind a nationalistic image of a state.

    The rights of an individual and in turn the collective rights of all individuals can be shared across all humanity. Nationalism has been and always will be seen as destructive. It is nothing but self serving camouflage for the failings of a society which the power 'elite'(those crazy, fucked up, psychopaths) hide behind to gain and maintain control over the ignorant masses. That is the real threat and power of the Internet, turning the ignorant masses into the informed masses and the power elite into convicts.

    Not that democracies are always working to the benefit of individuals. In fact at the moment, there is a clear cut example of the abuse of the collective rights of individuals by the current US administration working in conjunction with major corporations and mass media, all based upon typical nationalistic lies. So no society is immune from the threat imposed by autocratic sociopaths, screaming nationalistic propaganda whilst they line their own pockets with the profits and blood of their fellow country men. A free and open internet is the best way by which to put those lies to a final well deserved end and put some of the worst criminal behind bars.

    All, no thanks to those money grubbing slimy executives hiding behind their corporate façades, like the googlites, the microsofties and the yahoos et al corporate profits over the future of humanity.

    --
    Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen