Caption:
Credit
Ivan Sekretarev/Associated Press
SAN
FRANCISCO — Government censorship of the Internet is a cat-and-mouse
game. And despite more aggressive tactics in recent months, the cats
have been largely frustrated while the mice wriggle away.
But this year, the challenges for Silicon Valley will mount, with Russia
and Turkey in particular trying to tighten controls on foreign-based
Internet companies. Major American companies like Facebook, Twitter and
Google are increasingly being put in the tricky position of figuring out
which laws and orders to comply with around the world — and which to
ignore or contest.
On
Wednesday, Russia’s president, Vladimir V. Putin, signed the latest
version of a personal data law that will require companies to store data
about Russian users on computers inside the country, where it will be
easier for the government to get access to it. With few companies
expected to comply with the law, which goes into effect Sept. 1, a
confrontation may well erupt.
The
clumsiness of current censorship efforts was apparent in mid-December,
when Russia’s Internet regulator demanded that Facebook remove a page
that was promoting an anti-government rally. After Facebook blocked the page
for its 10 million or so Russian users, dozens of copycat pages popped
up and the word spread on other social networks like Twitter. That
created even more publicity for the planned Jan. 15 event, intended to
protest the sentencing of Aleksei A. Navalny, a leading opposition
figure.
The
Turkish government faced similar embarrassment when it tried to stop
the dissemination of leaked documents and audio recordings on Twitter in
March. The administration of Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who was then prime
minister and is now president, ordered the shutdown of Twitter within Turkey after the company refused to block the posts, which implicated government officials in a corruption investigation.
Not only did the government lose a court fight
on the issue, but while Twitter was blocked, legions of Turkish users
taught one another technical tricks to evade the ban, even
spray-painting the instructions on the walls of buildings.
“We
all became hackers,” Asli Tunc, a professor of communication at
Istanbul Bilgi University, said in a phone interview. “And we all got on
Twitter.”
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