Seems that the putin bear is doing everything in his power to try and control the internet , where did he get all his inspiration from I wonder..
But he seems he will go beyond anything else judging by the moves he has done only in the last year
Let's recapitulate some of the latest moves:
1) Crack the tor protocol
http://www.bbc.com/news/technology-28526021Russia has offered 3.9m roubles ($110,000; £65,000) in a contest seeking a way to crack the identities of users of the Tor network.
The Russian interior ministry made the offer, saying the aim was "to ensure the country's defence and security".
2) War on bloggers:
http://www.bbc.com/news/technology-28583669It means bloggers with more than 3,000 daily readers must register with the mass media regulator, Roskomnadzor, and conform to the regulations that govern the country's larger media outlets.
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/jul/31/russia-controls-blogosphere-new-law3) Again with the bitcoin ban
http://www.coindesk.com/russian-ministry-finance-drafts-bill-banning-bitcoin/Seems like this time is bit more serious but hell , try and ban it mr bear
4) Anonymous online payments
(Legislative initiative 428896-6 [ru]) would place new limits on online money transfers. This draft law would raise limits on anonymous online financial transactions and ban all international online financial transactions, where the electronic money operator (e.g., PayPal, Yandex.Dengi, WebMoney) does not know the client’s legal identity. The legislation also raises operating costs for NGOs, requiring them to report on every three thousand dollars spent in foreign donations. (Currently, NGOs must report on every six thousand such dollars.)
The proposed restrictions on anonymous online money transfers could be significant. Currently in Russia, one can deposit up to 1,200 dollars into a single anonymous online wallet, and one can pay out almost 450 dollars from that account in a single transaction. Under the new legislation, Russians wouldn’t be able to spend more than 450 dollars in a whole calendar month from any one anonymous online money account, and single-day transactions would be limited to just under 30 dollars (1000 rubles).
Funny how this was quoted as an "anti terrorist" move.
Now to the more severe ones
5) Websites must inform Russian authorities and store every move an user makes on the website in question
The first of the three bills (Legislative initiative 428884-6 [ru]) creates new requirements for mandatory archives and notifications, granting the federal government wide jurisdiction. The most concerning article of the bill stipulates that “individuals or legal entities” who “[organize] the dissemination of information and (or) the exchange of information between Internet users are obligated to store all information about the arrival, transmission, delivery, and processing of voice data, written text, images, sounds, or other kinds of action” that occur when using their website. At all times, data archives must include the most recent six months of activity.
It appears that this obligation would apply to the owners and operators of websites and services ranging from multinational services like Facebook to small community blogs and discussion platforms.
Website “organizers” must also “inform” (yвeдoмить
) Russian security services when users first begin using their sites, and whenever users “exchange information.” Taken literally, this requirement could create a nearly impossible task for administrators of blogs, social media sites, and other discussion platforms with large quantities of users.
6) No more anonymous wifi
Medvedev signs order banning anonymous Wi-Fi
http://en.itar-tass.com/russia/744055Customers of Internet cafes and users of publicly offered Wi-Fi will have to provide operators with proof of identity, such as a driving license, by SMS or a special online access form, according to a statement on the Communication Ministry’s website.
7) The government can block your website with a single move.. to protect the children from nazi extremists and terrorists
https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20140313/14025726571/russia-using-internet-censorship-laws-to-block-websites-opposition-candidate.shtmlhttps://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2014/03/russia-blocks-access-major-independent-news-sites You have data of russian citizens on your server? That data must be hosted in russia alone
http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/07/04/us-russia-internet-bill-restrictions-idUSKBN0F91SG20140704The law will mean that from 2016, all Internet companies will have to move Russian data onto servers based in Russia or face being blocked from the web. That would likely affect U.S.-based social networks such as Facebook, analysts say.
Coming after new rules requiring blogs attracting more than 3,000 daily visits to register with a communications watchdog and a regulation allowing websites to be shut without a court order, critics say the law is part of a wave of censorship.
Putin, an ex-KGB officer who has called the Internet a "CIA project", denied he was restricting web freedoms, saying his main concern was protecting children from indecent content.