A Friday laugh …

https://www.thedailybeast.com/russia-accidentally-sabotages-its-internet?ref=scroll


Russia Accidentally Sabotages Its Internet

It’s the latest Kremlin attempt to clamp down on Russians’ online activity. And 
it blocked almost 16 million IP addresses belonging to Amazon and Google.

By Kimberly Zenz<https://www.thedailybeast.com/author/kimberly-zenz>  04.19.18 
1:41 PM ET

Last Friday, a Russian court ruled against the encrypted messaging app Telegram 
for refusing to grant Russian authorities access to its chats. Telegram argued 
that it was technically unable to do this, as the chats are encrypted on users’ 
devices. The government countered that Telegram should then rewrite the app’s 
software to make it possible. Telegram refused.

On Monday, the government began efforts to block access to 
Telegram<https://www.thedailybeast.com/encrypted-messaging-app-telegram-banned-in-russia>.
 That started a chain of events that interfered with businesses and 
organizations throughout Russia, but failed to prevent most Russian users from 
accessing Telegram.

Russia’s main media and telecommunications censorship body, the Federal Service 
for Supervision of Communications, Information Technology and Mass Media, also 
called by its Russian abbreviation Roskomnadzor, ordered Russia’s ISPs to block 
access to IP addresses that used Telegram.

This is easier said than done. Telegram uses domain fronting, a technique for 
evading censorship by connecting through a series of servers. Domain fronting 
is essentially a proxy for the hosting provider—it allows the content owner, in 
this case Telegram, to direct users to their content through multiple 
connections. Telegram’s initial connection is through the global cloud 
computing services provided by Amazon and Google, so when Russia’s censors look 
for forbidden Telegram domains, all they see is Amazon and Google.

Telegram began using this technique last December following efforts by Iran to 
censor the messenger during protests in that country.

As long as Telegram has access to the considerable resources of Amazon and 
Google, completely blocking it will be difficult. If Roskomnadzor blocks a 
particular IP address or domain, Telegram can move to another. These are pushed 
to users via the cloud computing provider outside of Russia, in this case 
Google and Amazon. The Russian government has little insight.

In a bid to prevent Telegram from moving between multiple Amazon and Google IP 
addresses, Roskomnadzor took the unprecedented step of ordering ISPs to block 
almost 16 million IP addresses, in the hopes of blocking a significant portion 
of those used by Telegram. Unsurprisingly for such a large number, Telegram was 
not the only user of so many IP addresses, and as a result of the blocks 
multiple companies in Russia found themselves cut off from the internet.

Gamers hoping to use Nintendo’s online service were blocked, as were Volvo 
dealerships running aftermarket diagnostics programs, Viber users, and ticket 
sales for museums in the Kremlin.

Roskomnadzor may have even censored itself: Its website was inaccessible and 
its system for monitoring compliance with filtering orders was offline for a 
short time.

The legal advocacy organization Agora reported that it received complaints from 
73 companies and will be pressing charges on their behalf.

One company that does not appear to be significantly impacted is Telegram. 
Telegram has remained largely available to Russian users. Roskomnadzor claims 
that the blocks cut off 30 percent of Russian traffic to Telegram, but Telegram 
says that figure is closer to 5 percent. Those that do encounter blocks are 
able to circumvent them using Virtual Private Networks and proxies. Russian 
users unsure where they could find a VPN are currently surrounded by ads for 
VPNs on social media taking advantage of the high-profile situation to promote 
their particular services.

Popular Telegram channels report that views and subscriptions are increasing 
with the ban providing them with a bit of a Streisand effect. Telegram founder 
Pavel Durov reports that Telegram has not observed a significant drop in 
engagement, and promised a million dollars in bitcoin to developers of VPNs and 
other services that allow users to keep their access.

Opposition resources appear to be benefiting as well. Sites unavailable to many 
readers because they were already blocked are now accessible to Russians using 
VPNs to access Telegram.

Even the government’s leadership seems to be having a hard time quitting 
Telegram. On Friday, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov used a conference call 
with journalists organized on Telegram to announce that his office would soon 
move to another service.

That service would be ICQ, the messenger last popular in the West in the late 
1990s. ICQ maintained some popularity in Russia for a bit longer, lasting until 
it was replaced in recent years by messengers like Telegram. At the time, the 
Russian government explored multiple options to control ICQ, first floating 
regulation, then the idea of funding a Russian competitor, before settling on 
its purchase in 2010 by Digital Sky Technologies. The company is headed by Yuri 
Milner, a Russian billionaire with ties to the Russian government known in the 
West for his investments in Facebook and Twitter.

While Russians could shift to ICQ—or more likely, other encrypted messengers 
like Signal or WhatsApp—many will probably stay with Telegram. It is the 
messenger they already know and use, but it is also more than just a means for 
private communication.

In addition to private chats, Telegram supports channels. These channels can be 
joined by large numbers of people and are used to discuss a range of topics 
from pop culture to business development. Among them are channels for sharing 
news, political discussions and rumors without state interference, and for 
organizing opposition activity and protests.

These groups attracted government displeasure, and played an important role in 
the decision to take such drastic measures against Telegram, but they are not 
the only ones. Another group of Telegram users that understandably concerns the 
Russian government is terrorists, including ISIS and terrorists in Russia. The 
Federal Security Service, or FSB, has said that it has “reliable information” 
that terrorists used Telegram to plan a terrorist attack on the St. Petersburg 
metro that killed 15 people in April 2017. The ability to share information in 
more public channels while conducting secure chats all in one place is as 
attractive to them as it is to anti-corruption activists.

These terrorists are a concern, but they are a small number of users and 
already showed signs of migrating from Telegram after all the publicity about 
their use of the platform. The terrorists are now an excuse to clumsily go 
after the entire app, and with it, 16 million IP addresses and the businesses 
that rely on them.

The apparent failure to stop Telegram and high level of collateral damage has 
many observers snickering at Roskomnadzor and the Russian government. It could 
be easy to dismiss it as yet another example of Russian efforts at regulating 
the internet by people who do not understand how it works. However, this time 
there may be a bigger strategy than simply knocking Telegram offline with the 
internet equivalent of a very a large hammer.

This is not the first time that Russia used pressure on Amazon and Google’s 
cloud services to silence a messenger. That was the walkie-talkie app Zello. 
Beginning in 2016, Russian truck drivers conducted a series of organized 
protests against a road tax system jointly operated by the state and the 
Rotenberg brothers, two oligarchs known for their personal friendship with 
Vladimir Putin. The truckers used Zello to coordinate protests.

When Russia attempted to censor Zello, that app avoided censorship efforts 
using Amazon and Google cloud services to move between IP addresses. Earlier 
this month, the Russian government threatened to block 15 million IP addresses 
if cloud service providers did not cease assisting Zello. Amazon was the first 
to give in, asking Zello to leave. The company then moved to Google, but after 
about 10 days Google also gave in to Russian pressure asked Zello to stop using 
their services.

That successful pressure may be why Roskomnadzor is pursuing such a drastic 
course of action against Telegram now. Telegram is bigger than Zello, and 
better known, which makes cutting it off more difficult for cloud service 
providers such as Amazon and Google. Roskomnadzor may be hoping that a 
demonstrated willingness to cause the companies’ customers real pain in pursuit 
of a block may encourage cooperation in this case, or in future efforts to 
block sites. It could also serve as a deterrent to companies considering 
refusing to cooperate with Russian authorities.

One of those companies could be Facebook. In an interview with the newspaper 
Izvestia, Roskomnadzor head Aleksander Zharov said that his agency would be 
investigating Facebook by the end of the year if it did not comply with a law 
requiring that the personal data of all Russians be stored in Russia, the same 
law that Roskomnadzor cited as justification for blocking Zello. Zharov 
previously announced plans to investigate Twitter for the same law as well, 
although Roskomnadzor already announced that Twitter agreed to comply.

All of which should be a concern not just to Russians, but to the whole world. 
If these intimidation tactics work in Russia, then there is nothing stopping 
other governments from doing the same, as long as they are willing to let their 
businesses suffer the consequences. This may even have already begun. This 
Wednesday, Iran announced that officials were forbidden from using Telegram and 
further censorship may follow.
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