1,700 Websites In Russia Go Dark In SOPA-Style Protest
An anonymous reader writes "Russians are going nuts over a new anti-piracy law that enables Roskomnadzor (the Federal Supervision Agency for Information Technologies and Communications) to 'blacklist' Internet resources before the issue of a court order. Indeed, 1700 websites have issued a blackout, just like U.S. firms did in protest at the Stop Online Piracy Act. The law, widely known as the Russian SOPA, has been slammed by some major tech firms from the country, including Yandex. Freedom of speech campaigners are worried it could be used for political censorship, while digital companies say it will slow down the development of Internet services in the country."
...websites log out you!
What's the difference between indiscriminately shutting down arbitrary websites without a court order and doing the same after a rubber-stamp judge applies his magic seal without reading the court orders*?
* Which would cut into his precious golf time.
-- Ethanol-fueled
Not smart to fuck with the russian government.
Are we sure they weren't just hosted on Bluehost?
Matthew Walker
http://www.tweeterdiet.com/ - My Diet Tracking Tool
the soviet union was the butt of all privacy and secret police jokes...
Perhaps Mr. Snowden will be able to help...
It's basically harmless. Doesn't use significant resources.
Doesn't do you any good though either: Yandex is a Russian search engine. The users speak Russian, so not many are going to be visiting an english-language site.
Simple.
They hosted on HostGator.
the 8eaper BSD's 200 running NT
Hmm, yeah, that would probably do the trick alright. IIS on NT in a BSD VM. I'd be on strike too if that's what I had to work with.