China steps up social media censorship, ‘upgrades’ Great Firewall ahead of congress — Radio Free Asia

China steps up social media censorship, ‘upgrades’ Great Firewall ahead of congress — Radio Free Asia

The ruling Chinese Communist Party (CCP) has stepped up its censorship of social media ahead of its five-yearly congress, with users complaining that it was no longer possible to “speak normally” using Douyin, Weibo and WeChat.
“I’m unable to have a normal conversation in any of my group chats with friends, relatives or classmates,” the Twitter account @observerincn tweeted on Oct. 4.
“I started to climb the Great Firewall [use circumvention software to use sites outside China], to find a place where we could talk normally, but none of my friends or relatives were there,” the account said.
“Inside the Great Firewall, the thing that prevents people from communicating normally, causing division and confrontation, isn’t just the fact that the internet has been hijacked by the devil,” it said. “It’s also the endless intimidation and abuse.”
A resident of the eastern province of Jiangsu surnamed Feng said several of her chat groups on WeChat have been blocked in recent days.
“A lot of groups are getting blocked,” Feng told RFA. “People are setting up up new groups.”
“My WeChat group was blocked and my friends stopped sending me messages,” she said. “It’s gotten much worse now; they are stopping people chatting in groups and among followers.”
“You can chat privately one-to-one,” Feng said.
One Twitter account replied to @observerincn, saying most blogs, podcasts and livestreams had now disappeared.
“There have been a lot of public security announcements that are now blatantly intimidating to ordinary people, telling them not to spread rumors or believe rumors,” the account said. “If you’re investigated, you will be clearly told that your children and even future generations will be seriously affected.”
“This is by no means an isolated case, but based on my own experience and that of several friends of mine.”
VPN crackdown
Feng said it is also getting harder for her to use a virtual private network (VPN) to scale the Great Firewall and read content that is blocked by government censors in China.
“I can’t [get over the wall]; it’s blocked and I can’t open FreeVPN,” she said. “This time, [the controls] are very strict.”
“The 20th National Congress is on Oct. 16, but police were contacting me and coming to my home as early as Aug. 15 to tell me they were starting stability maintenance measures.”
Internet technician Li Ming said China’s internet censorship had likely had a technological upgrade.
“VPNs and virtual private servers don’t seem to be blocked, but the use of … other types [of blocking] are more powerful now,” Li said. “They are blocking at the level of protocols, not servers, which probably mean they are capturing data packets.”
“Now, if you … enter an address, they block the data packets, which is different from before, so it’s probably an upgrade,” he said.
According to information security site Thousand Eyes, China has always used deep packet inspection as part of its intrusion detection system (IDS).
“If the IDS technology detects undesirable content and determines that a connection from a client to a web server is to be blocked, the router injects forged [reset code] into the data streams so that the endpoints abandon the connection,” it said.
“After blocking the connection, the system [blocks] further communication between the same pair of machines, even for harmless requests that would not previously have been blocked,” according to an analysis on the site.
“These timeouts can last for up to hours at a time and escalate if more attempts are made to access the censored content.”
If Li Ming’s observation were correct, the system would now be blocking data packets rather than just forcing connections to drop when they are detected.
Blocking outside users
Users outside China said they are also having difficulty using WeChat.
Former 1989 Tiananmen protest leader Wang Dan, said via Twitter that WeChat appeared to be preventing blocked users from outside China from chatting privately with users back home, a move which he termed “a new firewall.”
Wang said the move showed that the CCP continues to fear any free flow of information.
“Whatever they say about self-confidence this, self-confidence that is fake,” he said. “They are living in a turbulent world where they have to fear every shadow, all day, every day.”
A resident of Sichuan surnamed Zhao said he had noticed his posts on WeChat disappearing more often than before.
“Sometimes I post something with a slightly more sensitive title, but I can’t get it to send,” Zhao said. “Sometimes I will post something, but then, a short while later it’s gone, or only visible to me, not to others.”
WeChat, which is heavily relied upon by millions in China for anything from social contact and news updates to online shopping and fan sites, with 1.26 billion active users by the end of the third quarter of 2022.
WeChat’s parent company Tencent hadn’t responded to a request for comment by the time of writing.
Social media users are beginning to give up trying to use the platforms at all.
One user in the eastern province of Jiangxi said he had deleted his Weibo account, quit his WeChat groups, and doesn’t bother using any China-based chat apps at all any more.
Another user told RFA that he had quit all of his WeChat groups, but was re-added to a family group chat so he could stay in touch.
The powerful Cyberspace Administration of China said on Sept. 29 that is continuing to run operations labeling unconfirmed posts and comments as rumors, to “rectify the chaos of the rumor mill.”
It said internet workers at 12 platforms including Weibo, Douyin, Baidu, Tencent, Xiaohongshu, Bilibili, Zhihu and Douban had so far labeled 80,000 items as “rumors.”
Translated and edited by Luisetta Mudie.
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VPN use in Russia is surging as government tightens internet control

VPN use in Russia is surging as government tightens internet control

Russia has tightened its control over its internet. Authorities have blocked access to Meta-owned Facebook and restricted access to Twitter.Nurphoto | Getty ImagesRussians are turning to virtual private networks to bypass the country’s tightening internet controls following the invasion of Ukraine.VPNs can mask an internet user’s identity and location to help them access blocked websites and services.The top 10 VPN apps in Apple’s App Store and Google Play Store in Russia collectively saw nearly 6 million downloads between Feb. 24, the day the invasion began, to March 8, according to data from SensorTower compiled for CNBC.This was up 1,500% when compared with the top 10 VPN apps in the previous 13-day period. Russia’s internet has been subject to censorship for years, though major U.S. platforms like Facebook, Twitter and Google have been freely available, unlike in China where they are completely blocked. These companies however have operated under the threat of being blocked, especially if they host content that is perceived to be critical of the Kremlin.But President Vladimir Putin has looked to tighten his grip on the internet more recently. In 2019, Russia enacted the “sovereign internet” law giving authorities wide-ranging powers to try to disconnect its internet from the rest of the world. At the time, Russia said the law was designed to enhance its protection against cyberattacks.As the invasion continues, Russia is looking to further restrict access to foreign internet platforms. Meta-owned Facebook was blocked on March 4, while access to Twitter is restricted.On March 5, demand for VPNs surged more than 10 fold above the average, according to Top10VPN, a review and data website.”As various companies have begun restricting access to their products in Russia, VPN apps have experienced a surge in adoption in the market as Russian users attempt to bypass these restrictions,” a SensorTower spokesperson told CNBC via email.”The installs of VPN apps will likely continue to climb as restrictions continue ramping up. At the moment, marketplaces such as Apple’s App Store and Google Play are still available — however, that may very well change in the future.”VPN company Surfshark said its weekly sales in Russia increased by 3,500% since Feb. 24, with the most significant spikes recorded on March 5 to March 6 when Facebook was blocked.”Such a rapid surge means that people living in Russia are actively looking for ways to avoid government surveillance and censorship,” a Surfshark spokesperson told CNBC.Meanwhile, Twitter has launched a version of its website on Tor, a service that encrypts internet traffic to help mask the identity of users and prevent surveillance on them.While Russia has moved to block services, a growing list technology companies have decided to suspend operations in the company.This month, Netflix and Apple are among a long list of technology companies that have suspended sales or services in Russia. .

VPN Usage Has Skyrocketed As Russians Scramble To Find Ways To Reach Social Media

VPN Usage Has Skyrocketed As Russians Scramble To Find Ways To Reach Social Media

Demand for VPN (virtual private networks) had skyrocketed by 10,000 percent since the plug was … [+] pulled on Instagram and other social networks

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On Monday, Moscow followed through on its threat to block the Meta-owned Instagram, essentially cutting off access to millions of Russians. The platform was the second most popular Meta app in Russia after the messaging service WhatsApp.

Influencers in Russia are now finding themselves essentially behind a new “Iron Curtain” unable to reach their millions of followers.
“On Monday, Instagram will be blocked in Russia. This decision will cut 80 million in Russia off from one another, and from the rest of the world as ~80% of people in Russia follow an Instagram account outside their country. This is wrong,” Adam Mosseri (@mosseri), head of Meta’s Instagram, posted on Twitter on Monday evening.

The move by the Kremlin came after Meta had not-so-quietly adjusted its content policies, which allowed for calls for violence against Russian soldiers and government officials, even from those within Russia.

Meta Global Affairs President Nick Clegg (@nickclegg), also took to Twitter to explain the policies, “Responding to reports that the Russian government is considering designating Meta as an extremist organization for its policies in support of speech.”

In his official statement, Clegg wrote: “The fact is, if we applied our standard content policies without any adjustments we would now be removing content from ordinary Ukrainians expressing their resistance and fury at the invading military forces, which would rightly be viewed as unacceptable.”

Influencers Cut Off From Their Followers
Regardless of what led to the blocking of Instagram and other platforms, many Russian “influenceri” were quite vocal on how the move would impact them.
“Roughly half of all my income came through Instagram advertising. To be honest with you, I am absolutely devastated that I am losing my page. I ran my profile for over 10 years. Most likely I will have to find new sources of income, will have to rediscover myself,” Karina Istomia, a DJ and Instagram influencer with more than 400,000 followers told The Guardian on Monday.
“This [Instagram] is my life, this is my soul. This is what I have been waking up to and falling asleep with for the last five years, I’m in a state of resentment and nowhere near a state of acceptance,” Russian fashion blogger Karina Nigay, who boasts nearly 3 million followers, said while holding back tears in a video that has been widely shared across social media.
However, Russian activist Lyubov Sobol (@SobolLubov) responded and called out Nigay, writing, “Blogger girl crying due to blocking instagram. Maybe it’s time to stop being out of politics and turn on your brains? All the big stars who didn’t speak out in the first week against the war probably just decided to keep quiet and wait it out. Just a shame.”

@nexta_tv was equally critical, tweeting, “One of the #Russian bloggers cries that in two days her Instagram will stop working. She does not care at all about the thousands of dead people, including her compatriots. Obviously, her biggest worry right now is that she won’t be able to post pictures of food from restaurants.”

VPN Usage Skyrockets
In addition to the outrage, it seems that many Russians aren’t simply going to accept that Instagram and other platforms are being blocked.
According to a report from Atlas VPN on Tuesday, demand for VPN (virtual private networks) had skyrocketed by 10,000 percent since the plug was pulled on Instagram and other social networks. VPN installs in Russia reached an all-time high and surged by 11,253 percent above the norm.
The report also highlighted that VPN usage was slowly increasing before the surge. Searches on Google began around three weeks ago, on February 25, 2022.
To date, Moscow hasn’t attempted to crack down on VPN, which is one of the few tools that Russians have to overcome government restrictions to access free speech online. Activist may feel more comfortable sharing their opinions online as the VPN can hide IP addresses from the public, and allow users to access blocked websites and applications.
“It is difficult to predict how far the Russian government will go in its efforts to tamp down anti-war sentiment online and further shape the narrative of the war,” Atlas VPN stated. “However, if the current trend of censorship continues, we can expect the demand for Virtual Private Networks to continue its unparalleled growth.”
Let’s hope the Russians using the VPN services are trying to learn the truth about the war in Ukraine, and won’t just check in with their favorite influencers.
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