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Russian Government Orders ISPs to Hand Over Names of VPN Users
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<blockquote data-quote="CyberDevil" data-source="post: 1113857" data-attributes="member: 91290"><p>In our countries (countries of the conventional Western world) it is still possible at least to go to Twitter or Bluesky and discuss what to do or what not to do. I can freely say in my country that my country is doing some crime (this is purely an example outside the real world and politics) and nothing will happen to me, as I believe in the USA and Slovakia. However, in Russia the situation is much worse. Any negative assessment of the Russian army's actions === prison, any publication of events inside the country in a context disapproved by the authorities === prosecution and arrest. My personal humble opinion is that blocking propaganda does not violate freedom of speech, as long as we have the freedom I wrote about above. After all, aggressive regimes benefit from the freedom to spread their narratives far more than democratic regimes.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="CyberDevil, post: 1113857, member: 91290"] In our countries (countries of the conventional Western world) it is still possible at least to go to Twitter or Bluesky and discuss what to do or what not to do. I can freely say in my country that my country is doing some crime (this is purely an example outside the real world and politics) and nothing will happen to me, as I believe in the USA and Slovakia. However, in Russia the situation is much worse. Any negative assessment of the Russian army's actions === prison, any publication of events inside the country in a context disapproved by the authorities === prosecution and arrest. My personal humble opinion is that blocking propaganda does not violate freedom of speech, as long as we have the freedom I wrote about above. After all, aggressive regimes benefit from the freedom to spread their narratives far more than democratic regimes. [/QUOTE]
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