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The Internet

Russia May Fine Citizens Who Use SpaceX's Starlink Internet Service (arstechnica.com) 171

An anonymous reader quotes Ars Technica: Russia's legislative body, the State Duma, is considering fines for individuals and companies in the country that use Western-based satellite Internet services. The proposed law seeks to prevent accessing the Internet by means of SpaceX's Starlink service, OneWeb, or other non-Russian satellite constellations under development. According to a recent report in the Russian edition of Popular Mechanics, the recommended fines range from 10,000 to 30,000 rubles ($135-$405) for ordinary users, and from 500,000 to 1 million rubles ($6,750 to $13,500) for legal entities who use the Western satellite services.

In the Russian-language article, translated for Ars by Robinson Mitchell, members of the Duma assert that accessing the Internet independently would bypass the country's System of Operational Search Measures, which monitors Internet use and mobile communications. As part of the country's tight control on media and communications, all Russian Internet traffic must pass through a Russian communications provider. It is not surprising that Russia would take steps to block Starlink service -- the country's space chief, Dmitry Rogozin, views SpaceX as a chief rival in spaceflight.

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Russia May Fine Citizens Who Use SpaceX's Starlink Internet Service

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  • by Anonymouse Cowtard ( 6211666 ) on Tuesday January 12, 2021 @10:31PM (#60936164) Homepage
    Internet services YOU!
    • Internet services YOU!

      I was more amused by the phrase:

      Russian edition of Popular Mechanics

      So I thought: In Soviet Russia . . . Mechanics popularize you!

  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Tuesday January 12, 2021 @10:32PM (#60936170)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Receiving a signal is one thing, but sending seems like making you own homing beacon for the police to pick you up.

      • sending seems like making you own homing beacon for the police to pick you up.

        That is not a problem that a 1000 ruble bill can't fix.

        (1000 RR = 14 USD)

    • First of all, ain't going to work - all of the Soviet block has had extensive facilities to pick up and locate any unauthorized radio transmissions. While Eastern Europe dismantled them in the 1990es (f.e. there is an apartment block where one of the 3 triangulation points for Sofia used to be - next to where I grew up), Russia did not. They can and will locate the transmitters inside population centres within minutes.

      2. If you think that operating an unauthorized SAT service in USA will give you a lesser

      • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Wednesday January 13, 2021 @03:15AM (#60936802)

        StarLink isn't really "radio".

        StarLink uses 40-75GHz. That is, like, millimeter range microwaves.

        It is line-of-sight and uses a narrow beam.

        You could maybe detect a transmitter from an aircraft or drone, but it will be hard to do from a ground station.

        • While we removed radio kit from our drones in order to put bombs on them, Russians put more.

          Their small drones like Orlan 10 have a fully featured "fake" cell tower analogous to the USA Stingray as well as a full radio intercept suite up to GHz range. That is already in the field with both law enforcement and the relevant bits of the military which would be tasked with looking at this as a "security issue". Hopefully they will not use the "enforcement" bit - Orlan transmits radio intercept coordinates dir

          • addition to the full radio intercept suite and full Stingray

            This also gives them all individuals using the service straight away - they can interrogate all phones within So the only people who will be "smuggling" them will be designated martyrs which we have prepared/bought to demonstrate the horrifying undemocratic capabilities of Vlad the Implaler. Normal people will simply use a VPN.

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          Most likely Starlink will just voluntarily block service in certain countries on request. For example if China asked them to, it seems likely that Musk would agree because if he didn't it would affect Tesla production and sales there. He might get arrested if he tried to visit one of his facilities.

          Being an economic superpower has its advantages.

          For other countries it may depend how much leverage they how, or how much a pain they want to be. For example jamming could affect neighbouring states so it would p

  • How long do you suppose before they start shooting down satellites?

  • by MachineShedFred ( 621896 ) on Tuesday January 12, 2021 @10:50PM (#60936216) Journal

    This is what losing freedoms actually looks like - an authoritarian government that wants to punish you for using an Internet connection that they cannot listen in on, and cannot firewall access to stuff they don't want you to see.

    Get some perspective please.

    • PROTIP: In America, you do not need such primitivte tactics. We got highly advanced methods to make the population WANT what we want. No need to force anyone.

      Imagine our reaction when we found out, you could do it with ten semibrained tweets a day!

      • Huawei has been caught with backdoors, and engaging in corporate espionage. It is idiotic to trust them, and their promises that there's nothing malicious hidden in their hardware are empty. Once you prove yourself to be an untrustworthy actor, it only makes sense for no one to trust you again.

        That doesn't differentiate them from e.g. Cisco but then, there's plenty of people around here who don't give Cisco a pass either.

    • by getuid() ( 1305889 ) on Wednesday January 13, 2021 @04:05AM (#60936904)

      Honestly, you pretty much got it backwards.

      The net result is the same: you singled out as not being able to communicate. (And: no, "other communications" besides Twitter do not count *if* Twitter is the only game in town; or if you're excluded from all other viable games in town, like Facebook, YouTube, AWS servers in general etc.)

      Don't get me wrong, I not pro Trump (or against him, for that matter; I'm not from the US). But when the net result is you not being able to publish and/or receive via generally available methods, this *is* censorship, regardless of who does it. Just because one country or the other inadvertedly found a way to outsource this to private companies doesn't make it less moral.

    • by khchung ( 462899 )

      Yeah, you mean like losing the freedom under certain authoritarian government to buy certain Chinese stocks, download or using certain apps like WeChat and Tiktok, etc, all done by mandate called "executive order" from the Czar without any due process, right?

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Hardly a recent thing though. Receiving radio broadcasts from "enemy" states has been illegal in many places since pretty much the invention of radio.

  • The fact that it's a fine and not a criminal sentence means that this is just a ploy to discourage it .. I mean, the Russian government knows there are other ways to organize a revolution than via Starlink. They will take a wait-and-see approach. Meanwhile they need a way to download porn at their dacha.

  • by thesjaakspoiler ( 4782965 ) on Tuesday January 12, 2021 @11:06PM (#60936278)

    If Russia rolled out it's SpaceXski StarLinkski internet over the US and offered the service at reasonable rates without all kinds of upselling scams?

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      People forget that Google was half founded by a Russian.
      • But back then, Muslims were the scapegoat in the closet, taken out to scare people every time it didn't go so well in the own country.
        Then stupid Bush emptied the closet ...

        So they had to go back to Russians again. What a shame! ;)

      • People forget that Google was half founded by a Russian.

        People forget Russia and Russian are not the same thing.

    • People use all kinds of Chinese equipment already (except for the banned ones now). Russian ISP? Why not?

    • If Russia rolled out it's SpaceXski StarLinkski internet over the US and offered the service at reasonable rates without all kinds of upselling scams?

      Yes. Hell if they powered it by Huawei they wouldn't even need to pass new laws.

      Facetiousness about the law aside you can see quite clearly the USA's attack on Chinese hardware and software in the past months as a clear answer to your question.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      China has already announced it is working on that.

      It might be very competitive. Probably cheaper than Starlink and they will doubtless offer whatever censorship/monitoring state governments demand. The Chinese government may use it to increase soft power, similar to how the UK is failing to do with that dodgy satellite company it bought.

      It's going to get crowded up there with tens of thousands of satellites in each constellation.

    • by Ogive17 ( 691899 )
      The US Gov't would never allow a foreign service provider to offer service at reasonable rates.
    • Probably not, until it was shown that it was being used as an espionage tool.

  • by PPH ( 736903 ) on Tuesday January 12, 2021 @11:09PM (#60936290)

    You live out in the middle of Siberia and can't get service any other way. You contact Russian authorities and volunteer to have them come out and install their firewall box between the Starlink ground station and your router. Everyone should be happy.

    If this is just a ploy for them to hamstring Starlink while they get a competitive system up and running, it's likely that this solution will be rejected.

  • More bandwidth for the rest of us.

  • Because *somehow* all the cuntries in the world, how different they may be, lay down their arms and agree, to oppress their population with totalitarian surveillance. Ain't that one huge coincidence!

    • It's the natural consequence of giving power to people who want power. Like any dangerous tool or substance, it should really only be wielded by trained people and under controlled circumstances.
  • by Brane2 ( 608748 ) on Wednesday January 13, 2021 @12:34AM (#60936458)

    https://www.reddit.com/r/consp... [reddit.com]
    https://www.reddit.com/r/consp... [reddit.com]

    Souvereignty means having control over the governed area. Starlink and similar systems are tools for _global_ surveillance without governemtnal, much less public insight.

  • by bill_mcgonigle ( 4333 ) * on Wednesday January 13, 2021 @01:32AM (#60936576) Homepage Journal

    Those fines won't stop anybody.

    They did the same thing with Telegram.

  • That's why the Russian government is banning independent internet that they can't spy on. Not because SpaceX is a competitor.
    • I mean, I wouldn't call them insecure. Putin is about a secure a position as one can be in. Xi seems to wield more power, but he's also more likely to face opposition in China over his lifetime than Putin will face in Russia in his.

  • Using Starlink in Russia would be operating a radio transmitter without a license, or a license exemption, so they already have laws covering this.

    Currently Starlink requires a ground station with a fiber internet connection that is located within about forty miles of the users (depending on local terrain such as mountains in the way).

    Russia is big, currently Starlink could only cover small parts of Russia near the borders if a ground station is set up in a neighbouring country.

    The satellites are in a low o

  • by Elixon ( 832904 )

    Next law to come into effect in 2021 will ban all foreign toilet papers. All Russians will be mandated to use exclusively local voting ballots.

    There is no use for them in new Russia anyway so I consider it to be very ecological way how to dispose of old democracy. Good law.

  • People who use the service would need the "user terminal" (satellite dish), box and some kind of subscription payment. I think the hardest part would be just getting the thing. After that it shouldn't be hard to set it up and I bet there is a huge incentive for people to do it. Not just because Russia is inching towards firewalling its citizens (but that too), but because broadband coverage must be abysmal in the Russian boonies.

    That said I wonder if Starlink is going to be cheap or what the service quali

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