Re: Russian government’s disconnection test

2019-11-02 Thread Nick Hilliard

Sean Donelan wrote on 02/11/2019 19:32:
Has anyone compared the network resiliancy and reliability in countries 
with centralized control with similar situated countries with 
decentralized networks?


US-EU connectivity is curious.  E.g. how many active transatlantic EU-US 
cable systems are there?  How many active transatlantic cable systems 
are there which are less than 15 years old?  How many active 
transatlantic cable systems are there which are less than 15 years old 
and which don't pass through the UK, which will be outside the EU in a 
couple of months time?  How many planned new US-EU cable systems 
terminate solely in the UK?


Answers: 19, 3, 2, 0.

I agree with Fred, but trying to keep this on a technical list. 


International connectivity is intrinsically linked to both politics and 
economics - always has been.


Nick


Re: Russian government’s disconnection test

2019-11-02 Thread Valdis Klētnieks
On Sat, 02 Nov 2019 14:49:58 -0400, Christopher Morrow said:
> I think the disconnect idea is actually a good one... I don't know
> that I want to DO IT, but :) it certainly seems like a reasonable
> disaster recovery planning exercise :) (likely doing it is the only
> way to really suss out the problems though)

Some of us remember disconnecting the uplink when the Morris Worm
first started wandering around, and then wondering how we were going
to get news of the details so we could patch our boxen so it would be safe
to reconnect the cable to the router

As more systems moved to secure update distribution schemes with only
allowing vendor-signed patches from https:// secured trusted sites, we may
find ourselves in a similar "don't dare be only, but have to be to fix the
problem" mess if a worm gets loose...

(Yes, you can probably ACL the router.  Not the sort of thing you want to be
doing at oh-dark-thirty if you don't know what ACL is safe to use and you are
cut off from a lot of info sources...)


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Re: Russian government’s disconnection test

2019-11-02 Thread Sean Donelan

On Fri, 1 Nov 2019, Fred Baker wrote:
This has nothing to do with cables, and everything to do with 
information control and politics.


I agree with Fred, but trying to keep this on a technical list.


Has anyone compared the network resiliancy and reliability in countries 
with centralized control with similar situated countries with 
decentralized networks?


For example, various developing countries have been doing deals to build 
out network infrastructure which follow the Great Firewall approach to 
network architecture.  I'm not certain if its always a deliberate 
decision, but often the economics of Walled Garden networks make them 
attractive.


There are enough developing countries around the world doing this, it 
should be possible to measure differences in reliability between 
countries.


Re: Russian government’s disconnection test

2019-11-02 Thread Christopher Morrow
I think the disconnect idea is actually a good one... I don't know
that I want to DO IT, but :) it certainly seems like a reasonable
disaster recovery planning exercise :) (likely doing it is the only
way to really suss out the problems though)

On Sat, Nov 2, 2019 at 12:19 PM Mike Bolitho  wrote:
>>
>> I would imagine that the internet is a whole less resilient today in 2019 
>> than it was back in the day before the cloud takeover.
>
>
> It's far more resilient now than it has ever been. More sub-sea cables. 
> Multiple routes across continents. The very fact that there are 
> AWS/Azure/Google Cloud data centers located around the globe makes anything 
> hosted there even more resilient, not less (and for the most part, I still 
> prefer on prem DC so I'm not even pushing "To the cloud!").
>

"as long as the customers (who need global reachability) build their
cloud applications/etc without just sticking everything in the
equivalent of us-east" :)

There are a  LOT of folk who ' tossed it in the cloud, all good now?'
and .. .sadly did not plan on disaster/global-reachability very well
:(

>
> - Mike Bolitho
>
>
> On Fri, Nov 1, 2019 at 5:16 PM Constantine A. Murenin  
> wrote:
>>
>> Unpopular opinion:  other countries should do the same.
>>
>> If somehow all the transatlantic (and/or transpacific) cables are offline; 
>> will the whole internet outside of the US stop working, too?
>>
>> AWS and all the other providers have DCs all over the world, but would they 
>> still work if they can't contact the mothership, and for how long?  (Has any 
>> of this ever been tested?)
>>
>> I would imagine that the internet is a whole less resilient today in 2019 
>> than it was back in the day before the cloud takeover.  You often can't even 
>> install OSS without an internet connection anymore.  Would Golang stop 
>> working?  What else?
>>
>> Would you and/or your corporation be able to access your own email?  All 
>> these things may seem silly, until you actually encounter the situation 
>> where you're offline, and it's too late to do anything.
>>
>> C.
>>
>> On Fri, 1 Nov 2019 at 18:04, Scott Weeks  wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> --- sur...@mauigateway.com wrote:
>>> From: "Scott Weeks" 
>>>
>>> Anyone got any technical info on how Russia plans to execute
>>> a disconnection test of the internet?
>>> 
>>>
>>>
>>> Got crickets, so now I have to respond to my own post on
>>> what I just found out about it.  Is that like talking to
>>> yourself? :)
>>>
>>> https://www.npr.org/2019/11/01/775366588/russian-law-takes-effect-that-gives-government-sweeping-power-over-internet
>>>
>>> "The "sovereign Internet law," as the government calls it,
>>> greatly enhances the Kremlin's control over the Web. It was
>>> passed earlier this year and allows Russia's government to
>>> cut off the Internet completely or from traffic outside
>>> Russia "in an emergency," as the BBC reported. But some of
>>> the applications could be more subtle, like the ability to
>>> block a single post."
>>>
>>> "The equipment would conduct what's known as "deep packet
>>> inspection," an advanced way to filter network traffic.
>>>
>>> "Regardless of what the government intends, some experts
>>> think it would be technically difficult for Russia to
>>> actually close its network if it wanted to, because of the
>>> sheer number of its international connections."
>>>
>>> "What I found was that there were hundreds of existing
>>> Internet exchange points in Russia, some of which have
>>> hundreds of participants...Many of them are international
>>> network providers, he says, so "basically it's challenging
>>> — if not impossible, I think — to completely isolate the
>>> Russian Internet."
>>>
>>> Belson says that the requirement for Internet service
>>> providers to install tracking software will very likely
>>> also be challenging in practice. He adds that it will be
>>> difficult to get hundreds of providers to deploy it and
>>> hard to coordinate that they're all filtering the same
>>> content.
>>>
>>> scott
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>


Re: Russian government’s disconnection test

2019-11-02 Thread Töma Gavrichenkov
Peace,

On Sat, Nov 2, 2019 at 7:20 PM Mike Bolitho  wrote:
>> I would imagine that the internet is a whole less resilient today in 2019 
>> than it was back in the day before the cloud takeover.
> It's far more resilient now than it has ever been. More sub-sea cables. 
> Multiple routes across continents.

Constantine is probably right in that the *World Wide Web* engineering
is now sorta less resilient to an arbitrary failure than it used to
be.  One glorious example of that would probably be the "left-pad"
incident circa 2016.  The *Internet*, however, is different from the
WWW, and it's undoubtedly much more stable today.

--
Töma


Re: Russian government’s disconnection test

2019-11-02 Thread Mike Bolitho
>
> I would imagine that the internet is a whole less resilient today in 2019
> than it was back in the day before the cloud takeover.


It's far *more* resilient now than it has ever been. More sub-sea cables.
Multiple routes across continents. The very fact that there are
AWS/Azure/Google Cloud data centers located around the globe makes anything
hosted there even more resilient, not less (and for the most part, I still
prefer on prem DC so I'm not even pushing "To the cloud!").


- Mike Bolitho


On Fri, Nov 1, 2019 at 5:16 PM Constantine A. Murenin 
wrote:

> Unpopular opinion:  other countries should do the same.
>
> If somehow all the transatlantic (and/or transpacific) cables are offline;
> will the whole internet outside of the US stop working, too?
>
> AWS and all the other providers have DCs all over the world, but would
> they still work if they can't contact the mothership, and for how long?
> (Has any of this ever been tested?)
>
> I would imagine that the internet is a whole less resilient today in 2019
> than it was back in the day before the cloud takeover.  You often can't
> even install OSS without an internet connection anymore.  Would Golang stop
> working?  What else?
>
> Would you and/or your corporation be able to access your own email?  All
> these things may seem silly, until you actually encounter the situation
> where you're offline, and it's too late to do anything.
>
> C.
>
> On Fri, 1 Nov 2019 at 18:04, Scott Weeks  wrote:
>
>>
>>
>> --- sur...@mauigateway.com wrote:
>> From: "Scott Weeks" 
>>
>> Anyone got any technical info on how Russia plans to execute
>> a disconnection test of the internet?
>> 
>>
>>
>> Got crickets, so now I have to respond to my own post on
>> what I just found out about it.  Is that like talking to
>> yourself? :)
>>
>>
>> https://www.npr.org/2019/11/01/775366588/russian-law-takes-effect-that-gives-government-sweeping-power-over-internet
>>
>> "The "sovereign Internet law," as the government calls it,
>> greatly enhances the Kremlin's control over the Web. It was
>> passed earlier this year and allows Russia's government to
>> cut off the Internet completely or from traffic outside
>> Russia "in an emergency," as the BBC reported. But some of
>> the applications could be more subtle, like the ability to
>> block a single post."
>>
>> "The equipment would conduct what's known as "deep packet
>> inspection," an advanced way to filter network traffic.
>>
>> "Regardless of what the government intends, some experts
>> think it would be technically difficult for Russia to
>> actually close its network if it wanted to, because of the
>> sheer number of its international connections."
>>
>> "What I found was that there were hundreds of existing
>> Internet exchange points in Russia, some of which have
>> hundreds of participants...Many of them are international
>> network providers, he says, so "basically it's challenging
>> — if not impossible, I think — to completely isolate the
>> Russian Internet."
>>
>> Belson says that the requirement for Internet service
>> providers to install tracking software will very likely
>> also be challenging in practice. He adds that it will be
>> difficult to get hundreds of providers to deploy it and
>> hard to coordinate that they're all filtering the same
>> content.
>>
>> scott
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>


Re: Russian government’s disconnection test

2019-11-01 Thread Töma Gavrichenkov
Peace,

On Sat, Nov 2, 2019 at 3:16 AM Constantine A. Murenin
 wrote:
> If somehow all the transatlantic (and/or transpacific) cables are offline

...then probably a horrific global disaster has occurred, and a sudden
degradation of the Internet connectivity would be about the least of
your problems.

--
Töma


Re: Russian government’s disconnection test

2019-11-01 Thread Fred Baker



> On Nov 1, 2019, at 8:15 PM, Constantine A. Murenin  wrote:
> 
> If somehow all the transatlantic (and/or transpacific) cables are offline; 
> will the whole internet outside of the US stop working, too?

This has nothing to do with cables, and everything to do with information 
control and politics.

Re: Russian government’s disconnection test

2019-11-01 Thread Constantine A. Murenin
Unpopular opinion:  other countries should do the same.

If somehow all the transatlantic (and/or transpacific) cables are offline;
will the whole internet outside of the US stop working, too?

AWS and all the other providers have DCs all over the world, but would they
still work if they can't contact the mothership, and for how long?  (Has
any of this ever been tested?)

I would imagine that the internet is a whole less resilient today in 2019
than it was back in the day before the cloud takeover.  You often can't
even install OSS without an internet connection anymore.  Would Golang stop
working?  What else?

Would you and/or your corporation be able to access your own email?  All
these things may seem silly, until you actually encounter the situation
where you're offline, and it's too late to do anything.

C.

On Fri, 1 Nov 2019 at 18:04, Scott Weeks  wrote:

>
>
> --- sur...@mauigateway.com wrote:
> From: "Scott Weeks" 
>
> Anyone got any technical info on how Russia plans to execute
> a disconnection test of the internet?
> 
>
>
> Got crickets, so now I have to respond to my own post on
> what I just found out about it.  Is that like talking to
> yourself? :)
>
>
> https://www.npr.org/2019/11/01/775366588/russian-law-takes-effect-that-gives-government-sweeping-power-over-internet
>
> "The "sovereign Internet law," as the government calls it,
> greatly enhances the Kremlin's control over the Web. It was
> passed earlier this year and allows Russia's government to
> cut off the Internet completely or from traffic outside
> Russia "in an emergency," as the BBC reported. But some of
> the applications could be more subtle, like the ability to
> block a single post."
>
> "The equipment would conduct what's known as "deep packet
> inspection," an advanced way to filter network traffic.
>
> "Regardless of what the government intends, some experts
> think it would be technically difficult for Russia to
> actually close its network if it wanted to, because of the
> sheer number of its international connections."
>
> "What I found was that there were hundreds of existing
> Internet exchange points in Russia, some of which have
> hundreds of participants...Many of them are international
> network providers, he says, so "basically it's challenging
> — if not impossible, I think — to completely isolate the
> Russian Internet."
>
> Belson says that the requirement for Internet service
> providers to install tracking software will very likely
> also be challenging in practice. He adds that it will be
> difficult to get hundreds of providers to deploy it and
> hard to coordinate that they're all filtering the same
> content.
>
> scott
>
>
>
>
>


Re: Russian government’s disconnection test

2019-11-01 Thread Sean Donelan

On Fri, 1 Nov 2019, John Von Essen wrote:
The thing that I always wonder about is the ability for citizens to 
bypass the restriction via satellite internet nowadays. I guess they 
need a law to make that illegal too, if found purchasing satellite 
internet gear, off to the gulag!


Essentially all international telecommunications treaties, including for 
satellites, were originally written during the cold war. Those treaties 
all have ways for sovereign nations to 'revoke' permission to operate in 
their jurisdiction, again including satellite downlinks.


While there will be some leakage, just like during the cold war, my guess 
-- if a sovereign nation invokes those treaty terms it would cut-off 
around 95% to 97% of ordinary public communications from/to that 
territory.


There might be some 'rogue' links, and military/government links that 
aren't cut-off.


Since the Bill Clinton Administration, the U.S. has had an official 
government policy *NOT* to invoke those treaty terms.  But doesn't 
prevent other countries from invoking them.



On the other hand, if Russia disconnected from the outside world, how 
would all their trolls and bot farms get any work done?


Already out-sourced to bulletproof hosting providers and so on, around the 
world ... again much like during the cold war.


Re: Russian government’s disconnection test

2019-11-01 Thread Nathan Angelacos


> 
> Got crickets, so now I have to respond to my own post on 
> what I just found out about it.  Is that like talking to 
> yourself? :)

Not when others are listening.

Thanks for the update.





Re: Russian government’s disconnection test

2019-11-01 Thread John Von Essen
I guess if all telecoms and carriers in Russia (or say China) are under strong 
government control/oversight, its fairly easy from a technology standpoint to 
block the outside world.

The thing that I always wonder about is the ability for citizens to bypass the 
restriction via satellite internet nowadays. I guess they need a law to make 
that illegal too, if found purchasing satellite internet gear, off to the gulag!

On the other hand, if Russia disconnected from the outside world, how would all 
their trolls and bot farms get any work done?

> On Nov 1, 2019, at 7:02 PM, Scott Weeks  wrote:
> 
> 
> 
> --- sur...@mauigateway.com wrote:
> From: "Scott Weeks" 
> 
> Anyone got any technical info on how Russia plans to execute 
> a disconnection test of the internet?  
> 
> 
> 
> Got crickets, so now I have to respond to my own post on 
> what I just found out about it.  Is that like talking to 
> yourself? :)
> 
> https://www.npr.org/2019/11/01/775366588/russian-law-takes-effect-that-gives-government-sweeping-power-over-internet
> 
> "The "sovereign Internet law," as the government calls it, 
> greatly enhances the Kremlin's control over the Web. It was 
> passed earlier this year and allows Russia's government to 
> cut off the Internet completely or from traffic outside 
> Russia "in an emergency," as the BBC reported. But some of 
> the applications could be more subtle, like the ability to 
> block a single post."
> 
> "The equipment would conduct what's known as "deep packet 
> inspection," an advanced way to filter network traffic. 
> 
> "Regardless of what the government intends, some experts 
> think it would be technically difficult for Russia to 
> actually close its network if it wanted to, because of the 
> sheer number of its international connections."
> 
> "What I found was that there were hundreds of existing 
> Internet exchange points in Russia, some of which have 
> hundreds of participants...Many of them are international 
> network providers, he says, so "basically it's challenging 
> — if not impossible, I think — to completely isolate the 
> Russian Internet."
> 
> Belson says that the requirement for Internet service 
> providers to install tracking software will very likely 
> also be challenging in practice. He adds that it will be 
> difficult to get hundreds of providers to deploy it and 
> hard to coordinate that they're all filtering the same 
> content.
> 
> scott
> 
> 
> 
> 



Re: Russian government’s disconnection test

2019-11-01 Thread Scott Weeks


--- sur...@mauigateway.com wrote:
From: "Scott Weeks" 

Anyone got any technical info on how Russia plans to execute 
a disconnection test of the internet?  



Got crickets, so now I have to respond to my own post on 
what I just found out about it.  Is that like talking to 
yourself? :)

https://www.npr.org/2019/11/01/775366588/russian-law-takes-effect-that-gives-government-sweeping-power-over-internet

"The "sovereign Internet law," as the government calls it, 
greatly enhances the Kremlin's control over the Web. It was 
passed earlier this year and allows Russia's government to 
cut off the Internet completely or from traffic outside 
Russia "in an emergency," as the BBC reported. But some of 
the applications could be more subtle, like the ability to 
block a single post."

"The equipment would conduct what's known as "deep packet 
inspection," an advanced way to filter network traffic. 

"Regardless of what the government intends, some experts 
think it would be technically difficult for Russia to 
actually close its network if it wanted to, because of the 
sheer number of its international connections."

"What I found was that there were hundreds of existing 
Internet exchange points in Russia, some of which have 
hundreds of participants...Many of them are international 
network providers, he says, so "basically it's challenging 
— if not impossible, I think — to completely isolate the 
Russian Internet."

Belson says that the requirement for Internet service 
providers to install tracking software will very likely 
also be challenging in practice. He adds that it will be 
difficult to get hundreds of providers to deploy it and 
hard to coordinate that they're all filtering the same 
content.

scott






Russian government’s disconnection test

2019-10-24 Thread Scott Weeks


Anyone got any technical info on how Russia plans to execute a 
disconnection test of the internet?  I am starting to see this 
on web sites again: 

https://slate.com/technology/2019/10/russia-runet-disconnection-domestic-internet.html

and started wondering how they plan to do that?  DNS? firewalls?
Shut off optics on fiber?  Stop satellite comms?  What about 
microwave?

https://aviatnetworks.com/solutions/ip-mpls-microwave


"Russia plans to execute a so-called disconnection test of the 
internet sometime in October—right ahead of Nov. 1, when a new 
law about domestic internet kicks into gear. Russia plans to then 
repeat this test at least once a year."

"For one, “equipment is being installed on the networks of 
major telecom operators,” Alexander Zharov, head of Roskomnadzor, 
told reporters."


scott