A nice place to discuss rumors, happenings, innovations, and challenges in the technology sphere. We also welcome discussions on the intersections of technology and society. If it’s technological news or discussion of technology, it probably belongs here.
Remember the overriding ethos on Beehaw: Be(e) Nice. Each user you encounter here is a person, and should be treated with kindness (even if they’re wrong, or use a Linux distro you don’t like). Personal attacks will not be tolerated.
Subcommunities on Beehaw:
This community’s icon was made by Aaron Schneider, under the CC-BY-NC-SA 4.0 license.
I feel sorry for whoever is still living in Russia.
Don’t be, as Torrentfreak is not reliable source. Screenshot of the law on their site is about measures, similar to GPDR in Europe.
Law about external auth services is talking only about all these login buttons like login with Google, with Apple, or Facebook.
It is not required to use service (it’s Russian e-government service, pretty useful). There are still several options (yes, there is VK com, Russian “Facebook”). And it does not explicitly forbids plain old account creation with an email.
There are looots of reasons to feel bad for people living in Russia.
For one, having a genocidal psychopathic dictator.
For another, having only one flex: being capable of starting a nuclear holocaust that wipes out humanity.
Russia isn’t bringing anything to the world except discord, war, corruption, and death. Russia is a net negative to the human species.
Do you have a source?
I know Russian and I have read the law, full text is available on the government site.
Fair enough, you have a direct link for me I could plug into deeply? My Russian doesn’t go past much more than ja ne snaju russki jesoik ;)
Be my guest: https://normativ.kontur.ru/document?moduleId=1&documentId=453093#h31
Thank you!
Fixed url (the ampersand gets turned into
&
if the link is raw)Well, unexpectedly it turns out that Russian legalese translated into English is not suddenly easier to understand, especially when a lot of it references other laws. I also plugged the result into GPT4. FWIW, my reading and GPT4s both are somewhere between OP and TorrentFreak. TF indeed seems overly alarmist, but there are also a lot of worrysome tendencies in the text. Anyway, GPT4 replies and the translated text in full follow.
GPT4’s interpretation:
GPT4’s summary:
And finally, the deepl translated text (with only 2 or 3 notes by myself in [brackets].
continued in reply, size limit
Continued, size limit
Privyet Babushka. Horosho.
That’s about all I know.
Russian-language independent media says otherwise. Websites like VK and RuTube will now require Russian Email addresses like yandex and mail-dot-ru.
What a nightmare. Not sure how the Russian people get out from under this. I’m still pretty scared about the chances of similar laws in the US.
What I remember from Meduza.io: telegram, and their own app which circumvents the blocks. And VPNs stay legal for now, so both those and the app will work, if possible reach fewer people. Which I guess is part of why meduza is lobbying non-russians for donations.
I highly recommend Private Internet Access to all Russians. no logs
I wouldn’t trust them personally:
https://restoreprivacy.com/private-internet-access-kape-crossrider/
Well… this is a bit clickbaity, vpn’s are not outlawed as the article states, but using them to do illegal things as you can imagine is obviously illegal. Shocking, i know. So I’m not really sure why “vpn bypass advice a crime” is in the headlines.
Advicing people to use VPN or alternate DNS servers to circumvent censorship is commonplace in many countries. Shockingly not a crime in those places.