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Communications Government

Russia Limits Operations of Foreign Communications Satellite Operators (zdnet.com) 130

An anonymous reader quotes a report from ZDNet: This week, the Russian government has published a document outlining new rules that limit foreign communications satellite operators inside the country. The Russian government will require all foreign communications satellite companies to pass all incoming traffic through a ground gateway station. This means satellite operators won't be able to beam communications directly to customers without going through a ground station first. The Russian government cited an espionage threat of allowing foreign satellite companies to transmit data directly within the country's border, but critics of the Kremlin regime say the new requirement will enable Russian government agencies to intercept any incoming traffic. The new rules, set to enter into effect in six months, will also force all foreign communications satellite companies to obtain a permit from Russian authorities even before operating in the country. The Russian Defense Ministry, the Federal Security Service (FSB), and Federal Protective Service (FSO) will be in charge of reviewing applicants.
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Russia Limits Operations of Foreign Communications Satellite Operators

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  • Small d ivans (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Ryanrule ( 1657199 ) on Friday March 01, 2019 @11:50PM (#58203038)
    Trying to stop SpaceX. Good luck enforcing this broskis
    • Nothing new here, Russia has always being trying to legislate itself back into 17th century. Let's see how their economy follows it.
    • It has nothing to do with SpaceX (or PT Barnum, Jr.). It has to do with making sure that they at least are able to cheaply monitor the "low-hanging fruit" of big centralized communications centers. They will work the more difficult problem of decentralized systems later with much more sophisticated and complex SIGINT systems (which they are well-capable of doing).

      This is effectively remaking the old Soviet KGB domestic spying organization, and predictable as the sun rising in the East.

  • What if you say throw up a bunch of cubesats and just started broadcasting. If you're not trying to get money seems like there's a big opportunity for a human rights/free information benefactor to jump in. Or..., Ya know the US government, I could see us provide Russia free rural internet because of this before covering our own country.
    • If you would read the news their main concern is people sending data to the satellites not the opposite.

    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      The network of sat systems would broadcast into Russia as normal, like they do over any nation they pass over.
      The act of connecting up to the network without permission would be detected in real time.
      Like using power from the electric company without permission and an approved connection.
      Connecting to gas and water without paying for the connection to the utility company.
      Having a phone and IPS account without ever paying for that connection.
      Want to use a communications network? Get one that's approved
  • by fustakrakich ( 1673220 ) on Saturday March 02, 2019 @12:01AM (#58203052) Journal

    It would be interesting to see what they have to stop the signal.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      http://www.thedrive.com/the-war-zone/22941/russia-has-four-potential-killer-satellites-in-orbit-at-least-that-we-know-about

      • Just fantastic stuff if they actually use them. Goodbye low earth orbit, hello Kessler syndrome.

    • Sadly, satellite signals are very low level, easy to jam really.
      But in this case people's doors would be kicked in, in the middle of the night, black bags put over people's heads, and dragged to some windowless room where they have unspeakable things done to them. This is Russia we're talking about after all, not much better than PRNK or China.
      • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

        by Anonymous Coward

        ...people's doors would be kicked in, in the middle of the night, black bags put over people's heads, and dragged to some windowless room where they have unspeakable things done to them. This is Russia we're talking about after all...

        Well, golly gee! You can't let the CIA have all the fun, can you? What ever happened to sharing?

    • by melted ( 227442 )

      > what they have to stop the signal

      Rubber batons are very effective at stopping reception, when applied forcefully to the kidney area of the back.

    • by Aighearach ( 97333 ) on Saturday March 02, 2019 @02:22AM (#58203256)

      The issue isn't actually with operating the device in Russia.

      The issue is with having paying subscribers that live there.

      A foreigner trying to test the law will just get arrested as a spy for it, they won't "test" shit.

    • I remember a Chechen leader who was using a phone sat. The Russians tuned an air-launched missile to the frequency. You can guess the result.

      But no, I guess it would depend on what happens.

  • by Rick Schumann ( 4662797 ) on Saturday March 02, 2019 @12:20AM (#58203088) Journal
    ..the more grains of sand slip through your fingers.
    I really wish someone would end Putin. He's a fucking troublemaker and the world would be better off without him -- and several other people I could name.
    • I wonder who he's playing to. The Russian people don't believe anything their government tells them, and neither do we.

      • My best guess based on his history and pattern of behavior is he wants his 'legacy' to be creating Soviet Union 2.0, bringing back what he likely perceives as the 'glory days' of Russia; one might say "make Russia great again".
      • I wonder who he's playing to. The Russian people don't believe anything their government tells them, and neither do we.

        Obviously he's playing to the Russian people directly, or at least trying to. His polling numbers have been falling out of bed of late, so it's time to rattle swards, date young popular women and ride horses bareback shirtless. Or, as in this case, take steps to seemingly bolster Russian security and power. I expect a lot more of this kind of saber rattling in the days to come.

    • ..the more grains of sand slip through your fingers. I really wish someone would end Putin. He's a fucking troublemaker and the world would be better off without him -- and several other people I could name.

      This is really about Putin's falling poll numbers. His popularity is falling, so it's time to rattle some swards, ride some horses w/o a shirt and stuff like that. He's got to push the narrative that Russia is relevant and HE'S in charge of the Russian rise to power.

      The glaring truth here is that Russians see their continued decline and Putin's part in that. Putin is getting desperate and now that the "Russian Collusion" from 2016 narrative is dying, he has to do something. So he's looking for ways to

  • by Required Snark ( 1702878 ) on Saturday March 02, 2019 @12:43AM (#58203140)
    They're going to put up a wall to keep the satellites out.

    It's guaranteed to work, just ask Trump.

  • The new smuggling (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Bruce Perens ( 3872 ) <bruce@perens.com> on Saturday March 02, 2019 @12:56AM (#58203154) Homepage Journal
    The new smuggling will bring not drugs, liquor, or other banned physical things, but ungoverned data. There is already lots of this going on in the form of USB sticks with media from the West traded by people in countries with repressive governments, and use of internet proxies to receive data that is restricted by region where intellectual property is a tool of corporate totalitarianism (that means here in the US, folks). The new smuggling will be satellite ground stations providing direct, un-gatewayed access to global communications. Free speech is the crime here.
    • Except Russia, unlike China, does not have a firewall or filter global Internet access.

      • Actually they do. It's a lot less comprehensive than China's infamous national firewall, and less sophisticated in implimentation, but it does exist. The specifics if implementation are down to the individual ISPs, but they are required by law (since 2012) to block all sites on a blacklist maintained by the Russian government agency Roskomnadzor. Like most such systems, it is officially justified as a required measure for protecting children from harmful material, but the definition of harmful material is b

    • No kidding. It's not even the US government that's doing the censorship. It's corporations like Google, Facebook, Twitter who freely remove any information that's derogatory towards our ruling class. The internet, once the saviour of free speech, has been condemned by Google as problematic. We have but a year or two left.
    • What a strangely fatalist view. Your account smells like potato vodka.
      • The new McCarthyism is calling people Russian troll farms. The person you replied to is Bruce Perens, the man who co-founded the Open Source Initiative with Eric S. Raymond. But it sure feels good to call people dirty foreigners, doesn't it? Relieves you of any responsibility to engage with their ideas. After all, who debates with Russian bots? Better to stick your head in the sand and fail to argue.
  • by OnceWas ( 187243 ) on Saturday March 02, 2019 @01:53AM (#58203222)

    Much of the reason for satellite communications is to provide communications to locations that are out of reach of ground stations. The InReach devices communicate directly with satellites to trigger a rescue - and communicate - in remote areas. Espionnage 140 characters at a time?

    Bizarre.

  • by Invisible Now ( 525401 ) on Saturday March 02, 2019 @04:44AM (#58203512)

    Look around at all the rooftop dishes in you neighborhood. Which one is beaming or more likely intermittently bursting in a sneaky and sophisticated way a high capacity data uplink? how do you think espionage works? Shortwavew and Morse code? Microfiche hidden in shoe heels? Obviously every terestial Internet data path is being sniffed. And you can bet rural personal uplinks and even dish TV logo-ed urban apartment balcony dishes are suspected of being covert alternatives to all the flash in personal electronics and body cavities as ways to get data back to China, albeit not with the much more useful near real-time capabilities of Earthline VPN feeding covert terrestrial uplink dishes. Why Russia is making a The new regulation law about down links is just theater. Putin Angle-ing for a Netflix board seat?

    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      Re " intermittently bursting in a sneaky and sophisticated way a high capacity data uplink?"
      The location of the US/UK/commercial sat network getting that unexpected uplink can be detect over time by Russia.
      The USA and UK would just suggest their new spies now use a commercial account and send out spy "data" like any normal person using a commercial service.
      Some data like so many other accounts, on a free ad supported email service.
      The task of an embassy worker, NGO, charity worker, tourist giving spy ha
  • by Artem S. Tashkinov ( 764309 ) on Saturday March 02, 2019 @06:34AM (#58203662) Homepage
    Russia under Putin has slowly been drifting towards becoming another North Korea. Putin clearly understands that the legitimacy of the Russian government is under question and this is how he wants to control [slashdot.org] every piece of information flow, so that he and his circle will forever remain in power.
  • ... history are bound to repeat it; those of us who do are bound to predict it. © CaptainDork.

    Russia is in a place similar to Germany after WWI: They were once great and a superpower and a force to be reckoned with.

    Like Germany then, Russia wants to rise from the ashes. One way to do that is to refurbish the country from within by participating in a global economy and working to lift sanctions from just about every kid on the block.

    Another way is to go full isolationist, spending money it doesn't have

  • remember that the invasion of Crimea started by installing a new internet cable and severing the one that went thru Europe.

    This is exclusively to prevent well intentioned Ukrainian (and from other Russian controlled territories) ISPs from bypassing the new Russian-monitored cables.

    • false,

      the invasion of Crimea started by the U.S. CIA meddling in regional affairs. CIA: Destabilizing the world on your tax dollar

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