The Kremlin has already begun work on plans to monitor and decrypt Russia's online traffic in real-time, the Kommersant newspaper has reported. Kommersant reported that Natalya Kaspersky, CEO of cyber-security firm InfoWatch and a member of the Kremlin's IT and Sovereignty working group, confirmed that talks on the project were already under way. Kaspersky later denied the claims, saying that the
Russia has brought an administrative case against a religious leader under the country’s controversial new package of anti-terrorist laws. Sergei Zhuravlyov, a representative of the Ukrainian Reformed Orthodox Church of Christ the Savior, stands accused of spreading hate speech and maintaining ties to an illegal organization. According to an Aug. 27 blog post by Zhuravlyov, he was arrested while p
【モスクワAFP=時事】モスクワで9日、インターネットへの規制を強化する新たな反テロ法に抗議するデモが行われた。 数百人が集まったが、当局が許可した開催地はモスクワ北東部の人里離れた森の中。一般市民の目にはほとんど触れない場所だった。参加者は「こんな森の中に集められたという事実がロシアで何が起きているかを示している」と訴えた。
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Our journalism is banned in Russia. We need your help to keep providing you with the truth. Russian President Vladimir Putin has tasked Russia’s Federal Security Service (FSB) with finding the encryption keys needed to monitor the country's online messaging, the Meduza news website reported Thursday. The FSB have been given two weeks to find the keys, which will make it possible to implement contr
Strict anti-terror laws that require phone and Internet providers to store all communications records for six months have been passed by Russia's parliament, prompting criticism from privacy advocates and human rights campaigners. The "Yarovaya law"—crafted by United Russia party member Irina Yarovaya in response to the bombing of a Russian passenger jet over Egypt in October 2015—passed through t
The upper house of the Russian parliament, the Federation Council (FC), has passed a controversial anti-terrorism legislation package, the Interfax news agency reported Wednesday. The laws include far-reaching surveillance initiatives, harsher punishments for inciting or justifying terrorism online, and an increase in the number of crimes with which children aged between 14 and 17 can be charged.
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