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Sunday, June 9, 2019
From hippies to hackers: New film tracks saga of Russia's internet
AFP
Thousands have rallied against the tough new laws on internet use in Russia
In the early days of Russia's internet, hippies founded the first
telecoms venture with Americans, an astrophysicist ran the country's
most visited website and providers punished hackers by kneecapping them
with baseball bats.
The heady time, which coincided with the 1991 break up of the Soviet
Union, is the subject of a new documentary that looks back at a very
different era as the Kremlin clamps down on internet freedom in
present-day Russia.
Setting the tone, footage from 1990 shows American Joel Shatz and his
Soviet partner Joseph Goldin -- the duo behind the first Soviet-American
telecoms venture -- driving a ballistic missile transporter carrying
clowns to Red Square after convincing the traffic police that the
performance had been approved "by the highest authorities".
Andrei Loshak, a former television reporter, tracks the main
personalities behind the Russia-based internet, known as Runet, for the
documentary "Holy War. The history of Runet," to be screened Sunday at
Moscow's Beat Film Festival.
His travels take him back and forth across the Atlantic to film the
current lives of early internet savants, website editors and trolls, who
are now Silicon Valley entrepreneurs, cannabis investors and
pro-Kremlin politicians.
Although Russia now dominates headlines with ever-tougher legislation
restricting internet use, in the 1990s "the internet developed
completely freely," Loshak says.
Russia has benefited enormously: internet access is cheap and home-grown
platforms are more popular than US-based corporations like Google and
Facebook.
"The internet was the place where everything developed as it can develop when the government does not intervene," he says.
In one clip, Russian President Vladimir Putin is shown meeting internet
entrepreneurs in 1999 and telling them that the Internet is a "promising
initiative" that he would not touch.
"And in fact, he did not touch the internet for 15 years," Loshak says, adding: "Thanks for that, curiously."
However, a raft of new laws clamping down on internet use were passed
following mass anti-government demonstrations in 2011-12 and Moscow's
rift with the West after its annexation of Crimea in 2014.
'Insane laws'
New restrictions of online content are proposed weekly, while internet
companies are now required to store personal data in Russia and comply
with security services.
Many websites and services deemed dangerous for law and order are
blocked, from professional social network LinkedIn to the Telegram
messaging app -- though the blocks are easily circumvented for the
moment.
In March, Putin signed laws making it a crime to publish "fake news" or show "disrespect towards authorities" on social media.
In May he signed a law on "digital sovereignty" that will provide the
Kremlin with the ability to cut off Russia, or a particular Russian
region, from the global internet.
Russia now slaps fines on users badmouthing Putin online.
Current Time, the producers of the documentary, say it is particularly
pertinent for younger audiences who did not witness the early days of
the internet in Russia first-hand.
"It reminds them that information is not supposed to be censored or
weaponised. It's supposed to be free," they said in a statement to AFP.
The "insane laws" will continue, since the government views the internet as a threat, Loshak says.
"It's a battle, and it's not very clear who will come out on top."
The restrictions have already taken a toll.
"There are fewer large internet media outlets in Russia now, they have lost their influence," Loshak says.
"And new companies stopped appearing. There have been practically no
IPOs" since the Russian internet leader Yandex went public in 2011.
But Loshak believes it's too late for Russia to impose a rigid
Chinese-style system of censorship because the internet was born in an
atmosphere of freedom and that cannot be easily undone.
"In China, they didn't have the 90s like in Russia, when everything was swept away and we had real freedom," he says.
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