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FSB demands detailed personal information on Russians using social networks

'The Motherland Hears You' by popular Russian artist Vasya Lozhkin. (A satirical depiction of omnipresent domestic surveillance by Russian security services, such as the FSB, police, tax revenue enforcement, etc.)
‘The Motherland Hears You’ by popular Russian artist Vasya Lozhkin. (A satirical depiction of omnipresent domestic surveillance by Russian security services, such as the FSB, police, tax revenue enforcement, etc.)
Edited by: A. N.

In its effort to gain control over social networks, an effort that is likely to fall short given various workarounds available to Internet savvy users, Russia’s Federal Security Service (FSB) is demanding that by next year, instant messenger services and social networks provide it with the kind of personal data that most people prefer to keep secret to avoid identity theft.

The draft order, which has been issued by the communications ministry and is slated to take effect next July, will require these services to provide the following information about each user:

  • User name
  • Full real name
  • Date of birth
  • Exact Address
  • Passport number
  • List of relatives
  • Friends list
  • Contacts list
  • List of all foreign languages spoken
  • Date and time of account’s creation
  • Date and time of all communications
  • Full text of all communications
  • Full archives of all audio and video communications
  • All shared files
  • Records of all e-payments
  • Location for use of each service
  • IP address
  • Telephone number
  • Email address
  • Software used

Such requirements are intended to send a chill through Russian social networks. And they will certainly discourage some from making use of these networks lest they fall victim to the powers that be. But more than that they will underscore the increasingly Orwellian nature of the Russian state under Vladimir Putin.

The immediately interesting question is whether those in other countries will complain as much about this as they have about NSA’s far less invasive procedures.

Edited by: A. N.
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