Road to Sochi

Russian team

How to act

Our petition

Advertisement

Home Breaking Human Rights and Democracy Reporters Without Borders: Internet censorship rampant in Russia
Reporters Without Borders: Internet censorship rampant in Russia PDF Print E-mail
User Rating: / 0
PoorBest 
Written by smoc   
Friday, 19 March 2010 07:56

Russia was definitely included into a list of countries with Internet censorship. This is stated in a report by the international journalist organization, Reporters Without Borders, dated March 12, the World Day Against Cybercensorship.

  In Russia, as Reporters Without Borders note, aside from the control exerted by the Kremlin on most of its media outlets, the Internet became the most free space for sharing information.

  Yet its independence is being jeopardized by arrests and prosecutions of the bloggers, as well as by blockings of so-called "extremist" websites, including the Kavkaz-Center.

  The propaganda of the Russian regime is increasingly omnipresent in the Web, and the Runet is transforming into a tool for political control, the report says

  A Finam analyst, Delitsyn, specified that the attitude of the Russian state and partly of the society to the Internet is rather skeptical: the Internet is not recognized as absolutely good, the emphasis is largely placed on the risks that it carries with.

  The authors of the Report recall Putin's words, who in January 2010 in response to a proposal by the Yabloko's leader Mitrokhin to take into account evidence of falsified regional elections, published in the Internet, said: "In the Internet, 50 percent is porn. Why should we refer to the Internet?"

  The "Reporters" emphasized that since 2000 every Russian provider must install a SORM-2 system that makes it possible for the interior ministry and the FSB to have an access to the list of pages visited by the users and to the contents of their e-mails, and in 2007 a law has been passed allowing the FSB to intercept Internet data without court ruling.

  In addition, the organization notes that popular social nets - such as VKontakte and Livejournal - were purchased by "oligarchs closely linked to the KGB regime".

  As recognized by the director of the hosting company Masterhost, Ovchinnikov, sometimes a call from the authorities is enough to destroy the information on our site or to block the access to a site.

  Reporters Without Borders also drew attention to the nearest neighbor of Russia - Belarus, which incidentally also blocks the Kavkaz-Center. This country has long been named as "suspicious" in Internet suppression and could now become a full "Internet enemy" because this summer a decree comes into force about state regulation of the Net by the state..

  Delitsyn explains the suppression by Russian authorities' of the truth in the Net by the fact that quite a lot of people (one third of adults) now use Internet in Russia, so it became an influential media platform.

  "There's a lot of Internet users in Russia now, and the Internet has become an influential media outlet, so the attitude towards it is the same as to the other media", the Finam's analyst says.

  "It would be naive to assume that this parallel media, which is being used by everybody, remains without attention by those institutions that control our media now", the expert concludes.

  Delitsyn recalled that in 1991, during a coup, the leaders of the Emergency Committee took control over traditional media, but they did not know about the existence of the Internet. Now the situation changed radically.

 

Add comment


Security code
Refresh

Paul Goble reports on the extent to which Russians have alienated their closest neighbors. If you think Russians will now ask themselves how they’ve offended, think again.

With the exception of only one country and the partial exception of a second, ten post-Soviet states are now using textbooks that present Russia in all its historical forms as the enemy of the peoples of these countries, a pattern that is likely to make it more rather than less difficult for these countries to cooperate in the future.

Countdown Timer

Sochi 2014 - There are
left to act

Share our news

Share |

Follow Us

follow us on facebookfollow us on twitter


Latest Comment

Donate to Us

Enter Amount:

Translate Us

Statistics

Members : 273
Content : 717
Web Links : 34
Content View Hits : 415811

Expose Thumbnail Scroller

georgia01 georgia11 georgia33 georgia03 georgia35 georgia10 georgia30 georgia02 georgia20 georgia26

Advertisement

BoycottSochi.eu was founded because we do not accept breaking human rights and hypocrisy of modern times. Boycott Sochi, Powered by Joomla!; Joomla templates by SG web hosting