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The Internet

How Russia Took Over Ukraine's Internet in Occupied Territories (nytimes.com) 54

Several weeks after taking over Ukraine's southern port city of Kherson, Russian soldiers arrived at the offices of local internet service providers and ordered them to give up control of their networks. From a report: "They came to them and put guns to their head and just said, 'Do this,'" said Maxim Smelyanets, who owns an internet provider that operates in the area and is based in Kyiv. "They did that step by step for each company." Russian authorities then rerouted mobile and internet data from Kherson through Russian networks, government and industry officials said. They blocked access to Facebook, Instagram and Twitter, as well as to Ukrainian news websites and other sources of independent information. Then they shut off Ukrainian cellular networks, forcing Kherson's residents to use Russian mobile service providers instead.

What happened in Kherson is playing out in other parts of Russian-occupied Ukraine. After more than five months of war, Russia controls large sections of eastern and southern Ukraine. Bombings have leveled cities and villages; civilians have been detained, tortured and killed; and supplies of food and medicine are running low, according to witnesses interviewed by The New York Times and human rights groups. Ukrainians in those regions have access only to Russian state television and radio. To cap off that control, Russia has also begun occupying the cyberspace of parts of those areas. That has cleaved off Ukrainians in Russia-occupied Kherson, Melitopol and Mariupol from the rest of the country, limiting access to news about the war and communication with loved ones. In some territories, the internet and cellular networks have been shut down altogether.

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How Russia Took Over Ukraine's Internet in Occupied Territories

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  • can they bill them big fees and drain the banks accounts?
    Say the rented hardware costs big bucks and bill them for war damage?

  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Tuesday August 09, 2022 @10:54AM (#62774644)
    Russia is doing a "soft" genocide in any terrain they take. They kidnap any Ukrainians in the region, ship them somewhere, and replace them with Russian citizens. This is their solution to the occupation problem. They don't have the troops to occupy the country against the inevitable insurgency so they're just going to replace everyone there with loyal citizens.

    Most likely those Ukrainians are in death camps somewhere (e.g. work camps where you're underfed until you die). I can't imagine they'd be resettled since they'd be a huge danger to Russia. Pretty much guaranteed to become insurgents. So off to some kind of prison camp they go. It's legit terrifying that we're not tracking those people better.
    • by jacks smirking reven ( 909048 ) on Tuesday August 09, 2022 @11:02AM (#62774656)

      Exactly and this certainly isn't new for them in Ukraine. They always make a big stink about protecting the "native Russian speakers" in Ukraine but the question is why there are so many native Russians there?

      Because they enacted a system of genocide, imprisionment and replacement of the citizenry in the country over the decades of Imperial and Soviet rule: Russification of Ukraine [wikipedia.org]

      • It's a strategy that goes back to the Mongol era in Russia. Russians are Mongols.

    • This is not new to Russia. Russification was practiced by the czars as well as the soviets. This is a major reason that former "ally" neighbors greatly distrust Russia, because of the intentional attempt to destroy local culture, language, and even people. China does this too and gets a lot of blame for it, but many overlook the long history of this with Russia as well.

      But it is almost surreal to see this happening in the moment, and in the way it is going. So capture a place, but maybe hold it and regro

  • by LindleyF ( 9395567 ) on Tuesday August 09, 2022 @11:03AM (#62774660)
    People are driving in and out of occupied territory all the time. A delay-tolerant edge network that syncs data automatically as people approach compatible devices would be super-valuable in bypassing central controls.
    • You'd need to establish a community of people willing to run that network. And as the technology would have to be accessible to the public, that community would be infiltrated. Russia doesn't need to out-tech the activists, it just needs to intimidate them.

      Stop random people on the street. Demand to see their phone. If they refuse, beat them. If they accept, check the phone for the app. See the app? Beat them, then drag them off to the police station and charge them with distributing misinformation. Make su

  • This is pretty normal stuff for any oppressive regime or occupying force. Confiscate weapons, take control of communications, restrict travel, etc.
    • Re: (Score:2, Offtopic)

      by GoTeam ( 5042081 )

      Confiscate weapons, take control of communications, restrict travel, etc.

      I'm glad no one is trying to do these things in the US!

    • It's too bad because Russia has well-educated people who could make it an economic powerhouse without being a big dick. I realize that "capitalism" happened too fast in the 90's and shocked a lot of citizens, but perhaps Norway or Denmark is a better model for them than USA.

  • So how many Starlink terminals are operating in the region now? Anyone know?

  • by Rick Schumann ( 4662797 ) on Tuesday August 09, 2022 @12:07PM (#62774774) Journal
    Sounds exactly like what being taken over by the USSR would be like.
  • by WindBourne ( 631190 ) on Tuesday August 09, 2022 @12:08PM (#62774778) Journal
    This is why sat internet links are so important. Transceivers should be stored by governments around a nation for Nat. Sec. reasons. And not just starlink, but others with bases away from a nations territory.
  • ... and said they were leaving.

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