Great Firewall of Russia.
Russia is getting closer to implementing the sort of internet regulations that exist under the Great Firewall of China. Earlier this year, internet providers began preparing to conduct tests to find out if Russia can build an internet disconnected from the rest of the world. Now, Russia plans to block major VPN (virtual private network) services that allow users to reach banned websites.
In March, Russiaโs telecommunications regulations agency Roscomnadzor told the top VPN providers to link their servers to the government-run IT system, which it uses to prevent people in the country from accessing banned sites.
Roskomnadzor wrote to the ten providersโExpressVPN, HideMyAss!, Hola VPN, IPVanish, Kaspersky Secure Connection, KeepSolid, NordVPN, OpenVPN, TorGuard, and VyprVPNโand said the operations had 30 days to respond, according to a Reuters report at the time.
โIn the cases of non-compliance with the obligations stipulated by the law, Roskomnadzor may decide to restrict access to a VPN service,โ Roskomnadzor said in a statement, according to Reuters.
TorrentFreak reports that since the notice went out, NordVPN explained it would not comply because the act would be a violation of customer service agreements. IPVanish, VPN Unlimited, VyprVPN, and OpenVPN also dismissed the censorship efforts.
Roscomnadzor chief Alexander Zharov told Russian outlet Interfax on Thursday that only Kaspersky connected to the state IT server.
โAll the others did not answer, moreover, they wrote on their websites that they would not comply with Russian law,โ Zharov told Interfax. โAnd the law says unequivocally if the company refuses to comply with the lawโit should be blocked.โ
Zharov said that Roscomnadzor plans to block the other VPN services within a month.
As TorrentFreak reports, this would mean that the non-complying VPN services would be put on Russiaโs blacklist, so local ISPs would have to block consumers from the services, but itโs unclear if this would affect the VPNโs servers or their web presences.
If these nine VPNs are blocked, Russians will still have many more to turn to, Zharov acknowledged. โThese ten VPNs do not exhaust the entire list of proxy programs available to our citizens,โ Zharov told Interfax. โI donโt think there will be a tragedy if they are blocked.โ
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