A
A
Alexander Sinitsyn2019-11-02 01:21:40
Law in IT
Alexander Sinitsyn, 2019-11-02 01:21:40

Can anyone explain the law on autonomous runet?

What will it affect and can it somehow threaten non-rf-ru domains?

Answer the question

In order to leave comments, you need to log in

5 answer(s)
A
antonwx, 2019-11-02
@antonwx

In Russia, as practice shows, anything can happen at any time, and no laws are needed for this.

spoiler
Арендовал vps-сервер, оказался заблокирован ркн-ом по ip. Отправил им запрос, мол, вот, это мой сервер теперь, я его арендовал, разблокируйте. Ответили в духе - сасай лалка, ничего мы тебе не разблокируем, гуляй отсюда.

S
SagePtr, 2019-11-02
@SagePtr

Domains are not threatened, but Russian citizens can be cut off from the rest of the world at any time. Well, also citizens of other countries will no longer be available to any sites located on the territory of the Russian Federation.

K
Karpion, 2019-11-02
@Karpion

In theory, such a law is needed so that if, during a boycott / sanctions, the external Internet is turned off for us, the damage is minimized. In particular, in such a law d.b. it is written "Traffic between computers located in Russia - should go through the territory of Russia without going outside. Traffic with foreign countries - as far as possible should go there directly so that a third country cannot block it. Sites located in Russia - should not use resources located abroad. - something like this.
The second reason for such a law is the need to be able to turn off foreign channels at the decision of Russia. For example, in the case of a "color revolution" - it will be necessary for the revolutionaries to disable the ability to coordinate through foreign services; and internal services can be controlled in more detail (another thing is that revolutionaries can prepare infrastructure for themselves in this case; but it’s up to secret police agents to find out about it in advance, then the revolutionary infrastructure will be turned off at the right time with a knife switch).
But in fact - most likely, the application of the law will be reduced to attempts to prevent criticism of the authorities. Google "enraged printer".

N
Nikolai, 2019-11-18
@niknik_ykt

Personally, I think that this very law will lead the country to the iron curtain, like in North Korea. There is a reason for the curtain (it is likely that it has been around for a long time and is waiting for its publication). Total control

Didn't find what you were looking for?

Ask your question

Ask a Question

731 491 924 answers to any question