Vladimir Putin trying to ring-fence Russian web with “sovereign internet” law, but it could backfire
President Vladimir Putin has signed legislation aimed at ring-fencing the Russian internet from the rest of the world.The law, if implemented, would give Russia’s government the ability to shut down large sections of the web, and make censorship much easier.Experts, and even the Russian government’s own internet ombudsman, say it will be difficult, if not impossible, to implement the law successfully — and it could even backfire.Moscow — President Vladimir Putin signed a bill last week aimed at creating a “sovereign internet” in Russia. The legislation, which the government says is meant to protect the country’s cyberspace from attacks by hostile powers, outlines new government controls over all internet traffic in Russia. It has prompted concerns that the Kremlin might use its new powers to further crack down on freedom of speech to silence its critics.
The lawmakers who drafted the legislation have called it a response to the “aggressive nature” of the U.S. government’s National Cybersecurity Strategy, which was released in September 2018. In the document, the White House listed Russia as a key threat and vowed to take appropriate measures to thwart hostile acts originating from the country. Implementation of the law, its authors said, would protect all users of the internet in Russia by isolating the World Wide Web in the country completely from the rest of the world. The theory being that, should the U.S. one day decide to disconnect Russia from the global web, users would still have a sustainable connection. How Russian state TV has changed its tune on Donald Trump”It will make Russian segment of the internet immune to threats,” Senator Andrei Klishas, who co-authored the bill, proclaimed in December.
Mounting censorship attemptsCritics of the law have condemned it as yet another tool in the Kremlin’s expanding censorship toolkit. Its adoption came just two months after Putin signed another piece of controversial legislation restricting online media and outlawing “fake news” and insulting the government. The Kremlin has been trying to assert control over the internet since about 2012, when mass anti-government protests, coordinated via social media, erupted in Moscow. Over the past seven years, Russian state institutions have gained new powers to block websites, prosecute and imprison social media users for comments and likes, and carry out surveillance of online communications. But while the new powers are vast, the government has had only limited success in implementing them. In some cases, the efforts have simply failed, experts have told CBS News.
“Look at where they are with blocking Telegram; nowhere,” Mikhail Klimarev, director of an organization in Russia called the Internet Protection Society, told CBS News. The popular messaging app was officially banned in Russia last year, but is still widely used. “Any success with the Yarovaya Law (which legalized the mass surveillance of internet users in Russia) two years after it was adopted? None,” Klimarev said. “It is just not working. This law won’t work either.” Shot to the foot?The “sovereign internet” law comes into force in November. Its implementation will cost Russia’s federal government at least $306 million. Some estimates show the actual price-tag to try and ring-fence Russia’s corner of the internet could be triple that figure, however.