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The Internet Encryption

Russia Admits To Blocking Millions of IP Addresses (sfgate.com) 73

It turns out, the Russian government, in its quest to block Telegram, accidentally shut down several other services as well. From a report: The chief of the Russian communications watchdog acknowledged Wednesday that millions of unrelated IP addresses have been frozen in a so-far futile attempt to block a popular messaging app. Telegram, the messaging app that was ordered to be blocked last week, was still available to users in Russia despite authorities' frantic attempts to hit it by blocking other services. The row erupted after Telegram, which was developed by Russian entrepreneur Pavel Durov, refused to hand its encryption keys to the intelligence agencies. The Russian government insists it needs them to pre-empt extremist attacks but Telegram dismissed the request as a breach of privacy. Alexander Zharov, chief of the Federal Communications Agency, said in an interview with the Izvestia daily published Wednesday that Russia is blocking 18 networks that are used by Amazon and Google and which host sites that they believe Telegram is using to circumvent the ban.
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Russia Admits To Blocking Millions of IP Addresses

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday April 18, 2018 @11:38AM (#56458269)

    In post soviet Russia Telegram stops internet

  • by I'm just joshin ( 633449 ) on Wednesday April 18, 2018 @11:38AM (#56458271)

    The timing correlates with a drop in attacks on our servers.

    Block away Vlad, block away.

    • I admit that I had already blocked millions of their IP addresses.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        Yep, if you look to be coming from a Russian, Iranian, Chinese, or North Korean netblock, your packets get dropped on the floor.

        • I was just blocking anything that sent SPAM or exhibited suspicious network behavior. It wasn't until recently that I happened to notice they were mostly from Russia. Granted, a good amount were from China, too, as well as, for some reason, Verizon cellphones.

        • by higuita ( 129722 )

          Those are hacked machines already... the real hackers are using other people machines, usually several times/jumps... and they can be everywhere in the world, even in your internal network

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Fun fact, there are several rather large porn / adult sites hosted out of Russia and hide behind CDNs. I don't expect the blocks to last all that long.

      There's also the gaming community, though I don't think anyone in NA would care if Russia, China, Korea, etc all lost access. Less screaming, cheating kids.

  • few montht ago when ukraine blocked some most outrageous russian propaganda sites , russian mass media was telling people that such blocking is âoenot democraticâ and pointless. At the same time they shown on state TV how to circumvent blocking with a use of vpn. :D Well , russian government is so russian, they are doing a job of ruining their country very well..
  • ...they don't want foreign entities trying to destroy their society through the internet!

    • No, they don't.

      If I were to punch someone, I will actually try to block their punch back. Self interests usually overrides the abstract notion of Hypocrisy.

      It doesn't mean I have some moral high ground, just that I have some physical advantage. Life isn't fair. Balance and Ying/Yang are just abstract notions. Perhaps the repercussions will bite them in the future. But they will immediately react to their current self interest.

      Russia doesn't care they messed with an outer society via the internet, it is t

    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      Russia understands PRISM and knows who the NSA and GCHQ enters another nation.
  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Wednesday April 18, 2018 @12:02PM (#56458401)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by simasg ( 857075 )
      You are confusing encryption and end-to-end encryption. By default, all traffic on Telegram is encrypted, but stored on their servers (encryption keys are never stored in the same country to prevent seizing of them by authorities). End-to-end encryption does not store anything on their servers.

      Here Pavel Durov (Telegram founder) explains why end-to-end encryption is not enabled by default: http://telegra.ph/Why-Isnt-Telegram-End-to-End-Encrypted-by-Default-08-14 [telegra.ph]

  • If Russia is blocking Telegram on the grounds that they won't give out encryption keys to the government .... what to think of the fact that Whatsapp isn't blocked?
  • We don't need no stinking First Amendment! Vlad knows what we should be permitted to see!

  • With that kind of tactics against extremists, the Russian government *are* extremists. The defense is making more damage than the threat.

  • They can get an orangeutan elected president but they can't shut up the 7th most used chat app?

    Heads must roll.

  • by bettodavis ( 1782302 ) on Wednesday April 18, 2018 @03:51PM (#56459977)
    The sad truth is that if the USA blocked most non official/commercial Russian and Chinese IP addresses, we would see a big drop on piracy, hacking and political trolling/manipulation.

    And why not? they are already doing it with anyone they don't like.

    Symmetric communication and open exchange between nations will probably come to be seen as an earned privilege. Those that systematically and officially abuse it should have that privilege removed.
    • by Bert64 ( 520050 )

      In which case you block normal chinese or russian citizens from accessing sites hosted abroad...

      Just because you see attacks coming from russia or china, doesn't mean that's where they originated. Chances are the boxes launching the attacks are compromised and someone elsewhere is pulling the strings.
      Network security is simply not taken seriously in many countries, they make little or no effort to secure boxes and don't care if they are infected with malware so long as they still barely function. Pirate sof

  • QQ, blocking the signal is harrrrrrd. Ha.

    Normally the remarks are "users will still tunnel to it" but it's a good laugh that they're still upright out in the open. And I hope it stays that way, if only as a reminder that decentralization means a resistance to being killed.

  • This sounds like a great service. How can I get them to add my IP addresses to their blocking list? I'm blocking them on my end right now, but it would simplify my iptables config if they could just be cut off at the source.

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