How Tor Is Fightingand BeatingRussian Censorship – WIRED

Posted: July 29, 2022 at 5:23 pm

For years, the anonymity service Tor has been the best way to stay private online and dodge web censorship. Much to the ire of governments and law enforcement agencies, Tor encrypts your web traffic and sends it through a chain of computers, making it very hard for people to track you online. Authoritarian governments see it as a particular threat to their longevity, and in recent months, Russia has stepped up its long-term ambition to block Toralthough not without a fight.

In December 2021, Russias media regulator, Roskomnadzor, enacted a 4-year-old court order that allows it to order internet service providers (ISPs) to block the Tor Project website, where the Tor Browser can be downloaded, and restrict access to its services. Since then, censors have been locked in a battle with Tors technical team and users in Russia, who are pushing to keep the Tor network online and allow people to access the uncensored web, which is otherwise heavily restricted in the country.

Russias efforts to block Tor come in two flavors: the technical and the political. So far, Tor has had some success on both fronts. It has found ways to avoid Russian blocking efforts, and this month, it was removed from Russias list of blocked websites following a legal challenge. (Although this doesnt mean blocking efforts will instantly end.)

We are being attacked by the Russian government, they are trying to block Tor, says Gustavo Gus, community team lead of the Tor Project. The past few months have seen Russian officials adapt their tactics, Gus says, while the Tor Projects anti-censorship engineers have successfully launched updates to stop its services from being blocked. The fight is not over, Gus says. People can connect to Tor. People can easily bypass censorship.

In Russia, the internet infrastructure is relatively decentralized: ISPs can receive blocking orders from Roskomnadzor, but its up to individual companies to implement them. (China is the only country to have effectively blocked Tor, which was possible due to more centralized internet control). While Russian authorities have been installing new equipment that uses deep packet inspection to monitor and block online services, the effectiveness of these blocks is mixed.

The censorship thats happening in Russia is not constant and uniform, Gus says. Gus explains that because of different ISPs, Tor may be blocked for some people but not others, even those in the same city. Both Tors metrics and external analysis appear to show the dwindling effectiveness of Russian censorship.

Tors data shows that since the end of 2021 there has been a big drop in the number of people directly connecting to Tor in Russia. However, people are able to connect to its services using volunteer-run bridgesentry points to the network that cant easily be blocked, as their details arent publicand Tors anti-censorship tool Snowflake. External data from the internet monitoring group Open Observatory of Network Interference shows a big rise in people in Russia accessing Tor using Snowflake.

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How Tor Is Fightingand BeatingRussian Censorship - WIRED

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