This is the BBC so don't expect any objectivity.
Russia 'successfully tests' its
unplugged internet
How would a domestic internet work?
Technical
challenges
Russia 'successfully tests' its
unplugged internet
RNZ,
25
December, 2019
Russia
has successfully tested a country-wide alternative to the global
internet, its government has announced.
Details
of what the test involved were vague but, according to the Ministry
of Communications, ordinary users did not notice any changes.
The
results will now be presented to President Putin.
Experts
remain concerned about the trend for some countries to dismantle the
internet.
"Sadly,
the Russian direction of travel is just another step in the
increasing breaking-up of the internet," said Prof Alan
Woodward, a computer scientist at the University of Surrey.
"Increasingly,
authoritarian countries which want to control what citizens see are
looking at what Iran and China have already done.
"It
means people will not have access to dialogue about what is going on
in their own country, they will be kept within their own bubble."
How would a domestic internet work?
The
initiative involves restricting the points at which Russia's version
of the net connects to its global counterpart, giving the government
more control over what its citizens can access.
"That
would effectively get ISPs [internet service providers] and telcos to
configure the internet within their borders as a gigantic intranet,
just like a large corporation does," explained Prof Woodward.
So
how would the government establish what some have dubbed a "sovereign
Runet"?
Countries
receive foreign web services via undersea cables or "nodes"
- connection points at which data is transmitted to and from other
countries' communication networks. These would need to be blocked or
at least regulated.
This
would require the co-operation of domestic ISPs and would be much
easier to achieve if there were just a handful of state-owned firms
involved. The more networks and connections a country has, the more
difficult it is to control access.
Then
Russia would need to create an alternative system.
In
Iran, the National Information Network allows access to web services
while policing all content on the network and limiting external
information. It is run by the state-owned Telecommunication Company
of Iran.
One
of the benefits of effectively turning all internet access into a
government-controlled walled garden, is that virtual private networks
(VPNs), often used to circumvent blocks, would not work.
Another
example of this is the so-called Great Firewall of China. It blocks
access to many foreign internet services, which in turn has helped
several domestic tech giants establish themselves.
Russia
already tech champions of its own, such as Yandex and Mail.Ru, but
other local firms might also benefit.
The
country plans to create its own Wikipedia and politicians have passed
a bill that bans the sale of smartphones that do not have Russian
software pre-installed.
One
expert warned that the policy could help the state repress free
speech, but added that it was not a foregone conclusion that it would
succeed.
"The
Russian government has run into technical challenges in the past when
trying to increase online control, such as its largely unsuccessful
efforts to block Russians from accessing encrypted messaging app
Telegram," Justin Sherman, a cyber-security policy fellow at the
New America think tank, told the BBC.
"Without
more information about this test though, it's hard to assess exactly
how far Russia has progressed in the path towards an isolatable
domestic internet.
"And
on the business front, it remains to be seen just how much domestic
and foreign pushback Russia will get."
Local
news agencies, including Pravda, reported the deputy head of the
Ministry of Communications had said that the tests of the scheme had
gone as planned.
"The
results of the exercises showed that, in general, both the
authorities and telecoms operators are ready to effectively respond
to emerging risks and threats, to ensure the stable functioning of
both the internet and unified telecommunication network in the
Russian Federation," said Alexey Sokolov.
The
state-owned Tass news agency reported the tests had assessed the
vulnerability of internet-of-things devices, and also involved an
exercise to test Runet's ability to stand up to "external
negative influences".
-BBC
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.