Russia Orders Major VPN Providers To Block 'Banned' Sites (torrentfreak.com) 87
Russian authorities have ordered ten major VPN providers to begin blocking sites on the country's blacklist. "NordVPN, ExpressVPN, IPVanish and HideMyAss are among those affected," reports TorrentFreak. "TorGuard also received a notification and has pulled its services out of Russia with immediate effect." From the report: During the past few days, telecoms watch Roscomnadzor says it sent compliance notifications to 10 major VPN services with servers inside Russia -- NordVPN, ExpressVPN, TorGuard, IPVanish, VPN Unlimited, VyprVPN, Kaspersky Secure Connection, HideMyAss!, Hola VPN, and OpenVPN. The government agency is demanding that the affected services begin interfacing with the FGIS database, blocking the sites listed within. Several other local companies -- search giant Yandex, Sputnik, Mail.ru, and Rambler -- are already connected to the database and filtering as required.
"In accordance with paragraph 5 of Article 15.8 of the Federal Law No. 149-FZ of 27.07.2006 'On Information, Information Technology and on Protection of Information' hereby we are informing you about the necessity to get connected to the Federal state informational system of the blocked information sources and networks [FGIS] within thirty working days from the receipt [of this notice]," the notice reads. A notice received by TorGuard reveals that the provider was indeed given just under a month to comply. The notice also details the consequences for not doing so, i.e being placed on the blacklist with the rest of the banned sites so it cannot operate in Russia. The demand from Roscomnadzor sent to TorGuard and the other companies also requires that they hand over information to the authorities, including details of their operators and places of business. The notice itself states that for foreign entities, Russian authorities require the full entity name, country of residence, tax number and/or trade register number, postal and email address details, plus other information.
"In accordance with paragraph 5 of Article 15.8 of the Federal Law No. 149-FZ of 27.07.2006 'On Information, Information Technology and on Protection of Information' hereby we are informing you about the necessity to get connected to the Federal state informational system of the blocked information sources and networks [FGIS] within thirty working days from the receipt [of this notice]," the notice reads. A notice received by TorGuard reveals that the provider was indeed given just under a month to comply. The notice also details the consequences for not doing so, i.e being placed on the blacklist with the rest of the banned sites so it cannot operate in Russia. The demand from Roscomnadzor sent to TorGuard and the other companies also requires that they hand over information to the authorities, including details of their operators and places of business. The notice itself states that for foreign entities, Russian authorities require the full entity name, country of residence, tax number and/or trade register number, postal and email address details, plus other information.
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To run a VPN efficiently, you should run the company in as many countries as possible. So from Russia, you VPN to your American subsidiary VPN, so traffic is VPN to VPN, it is cheaper because the in country traffic is cheaper. So the local VPN links to no one but their VPN subsidiaries in other countries, who then establish actual traffic. Technically you are only ever establishing network traffic with your offshore subsidiary and they are adhering to the law at that location.
All you need is one person at
Re:And if they are any good... (Score:5, Interesting)
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Suspecting nutso Russian government crackdowns is being a xenophobic asshole? Yeah, no, I don't recommend anyone operate in Russia either.
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Scripts like streisand [github.com] mean that a user can put together their own VPN server (and Tor OBFS4 private bridge) on a cheap VPS paid with monero.
How can countries who claim to 'ban VPNs' ever hope to ban every VPS provider in the world?
Need a Score Card (Score:2)
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And those State Sponsored VPNs are now blocking banned sites.
Just remember that before you sign up to a free VPN service, thinking your data is going to be so much more secure.
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We're just getting started. China and Russia have already banned most VPN's. You can bet that New Zealand will be the next to ban them (purely to protect their citizens from white supremacy, of course), followed by an EU-wide ban. Canada and Australia will follow. How long after that before some opportunistic politicians in the U.S. try to follow suite?
New Zealand (Score:3, Informative)
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You forgot to mention the EU and upload filters.
Now your whataboutism may only get to +4 Insightful.
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Many countries do. The UK has the secretive "Cleanfeed" system, and the list of blocked sites is not published.
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Many countries do. The UK has the secretive "Cleanfeed" system, and the list of blocked sites is not published.
Such a system however, is stupidly easy to bypass.
Not even China with all their resources has successfully managed to stop people from reaching banned material.
Given the current state of things here in the UK, we've got bigger problems to worry about though.
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I think we might be overstating a bit the success that the Chinese people have had against the filters.
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Most countries do not have free speech and the right to bare arms, as a Constitutional Amendments. While many countries may have these as rights on the book, they are not fundamental to the government so the governments are allowed more leeway for good or for ill.
Free Speech and bearing arms The United States 1st and 2nt amendment respectively. Are the two most dangerous things people can have as a right. It isn't unreasonable to think other countries would want to have more control over these. As well m
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That is separate from government spying. They are blocking VPNs without a back door for the dictator, which has nothing to do with the level of viciousness of "fightin' words".
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I'm sure the Mueller and leftist US mainsteam news media will deliver to you your salvation from evil republicans and Russians they're colluding with. Any day now.
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There's a Jew-hating Democrat
Criticism of Israel and Israel's lobbying practices is not antisemitism.
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The walls are still closing in!
Any day now.
OTIP VPN (Score:1)
Re:TorGuard pulled services (Score:5, Insightful)
In most cases, I agree with you.
With regard to VPNs, however, I must disagree. VPNs are a valuable tool in subverting censorship and giving those who live in censored countries access to the information they need to make changes.
I spent 6 years behind the Great Firewall. I know what it's like to be in a country that controls the internet with a heavy hand. If all the VPNs pulled out it would just bolster the power of the oppressive governments.
We don't want "echo chambers". We want free and open discourse, the exchange of ideas, and mutual understanding between countries and cultures. The way to overthrow oppressive regimes is to give the citizens access to information, insight, and opinion and let them make their own decisions.
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You are free to create your own platforms, where your free speech overrides that of the users. If enough people like your opinions, the free market will run its course and your platform may become ve
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I agreed until the utopic free market, free to start your own services, bit. Sure you "can", until everyone colludes to ruin you.
This is the downside of free speech. Sure, you have "free speech." But "freedom of association" also means people can make judgments about you from your speech and decide you're the sort of person they want to have no interaction with.
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They Blocked My VPN (Score:4, Insightful)
Just great! They blocked my VPN provider. Now how am I going to, um, hmmm, ... ah, never mind.
On a serious note I hope that something happens that the people of Russia can start getting their freedoms back.
Re:They Blocked My VPN (Score:4, Funny)
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A crypto, P2P, onion routing network that's able to escape any gov lists and bans.
Still has to go through your ISP. They can block the protocols, ports, etc.
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Now VPN services have to accept national gov ban lists?
NZ has its sites to ban.
The internet needs something better to get past nations bans.
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The internet needs something better to get past nations bans.
Yes it does. Whaddawe gonna do?
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Eh, legislation works, when you have guns. We need to support the engineers to develop robust technology to accompany that legislation. Then maybe we can drop the guns.
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ISP have blocked ports and protocol in order to stop piracy or other illegal communications between individuals since the 90s. It never worked. What makes you think they will be able to block someone from accessing a particular website? Look at a site like the Daily Stormer. Pretty much everyone is banning it. It doesn't change that anyone interested can still access it without any difficulty.
For now, blocking websites kind of work because very few people care to use solutions to bypass those blocks. Howeve
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The ISP can use whitelists to pass through authorized communications and block everything else. The public relations issues holding them back is but a speed bump. Bypassing the ISP entirely is our only hope for open secure communications. We have to make our own, a real P2P and multicast network, well distributed for robustness against all interference.
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Well, if you're going to use the utilities, you're going to have to go through an ISP.
Unless you think you're going to do this over wireless, in which case any robust network will be easily traceable, and you'll find yourself on the wrong side of the FCC really quickly.
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Yeah, we'll need decoys and mobility. Extreme circumstances [wikipedia.org] will call for extreme countermeasures.
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They can, but then the circumvention systems switch to modes which disguise their traffic as something legitimate. Eventually the only way to stop the people circumventing filtering is to make that filtering so strict that over-blocking becomes commonplace, at which point even those who do not care to view subversive material will start to complain that their perfectly legal activities are frequently being blocked.
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We know you have to comply with a dictator in a dictatorship. That's the whole problem, and why things like VPN and TOR exist.
DNC take note! (Score:1)
Important function (Score:2)
Serial commenter (Score:2)