Russian Parliament Gears Up for Role in Net Economy

Published: 21 February 2001 y., Wednesday
During its spring session, the national parliament (known as the State Duma) is gearing up to consider as many as 15 bills to regulate the Internet, said a Duma official. "We need to manage our online relationships," said Yury Travkin, a consultant to the Duma's commission on information policy, in a telephone interview. "It is important for Russia to regulate its Internet if it wants to be serious about entering into the WTO [World Trade Organization]." While Travkin declined to list all the pending bills because committees are still massaging the drafts into shape, he said the package will most likely contain provisions banning commercial spam, or junk e-mail, protecting intellectual property, preventing copyright infringement, securing online payments and addressing the legitimacy of digital signatures. A bill that is likely to draw fire from defendants of free speech stipulates that all Internet publications need to register with the Communications Ministry if they want to be considered members of the mass media. The nationally prominent daily newspaper "Segodnya" reported that the Duma's economic policy committee has recommended that only officially registered, self-employed business people be able to shop in Internet stores. From a legal perspective, the proposed regulations will assist Russian companies blazing the trails of electronic commerce, said Timofei Kotenev, an e-commerce specialist at law firm Lovells. Under the proposed bills, companies that want to use digital signatures for legally-binding contracts will have to register with the Federal Communications and Information Agency - a move that could lead to privacy abuses. Adversaries of government control over the World Wide Web can easily justify their apprehensions. The ex-KGB, now called the Federal Security Service, or FSB, already monitors e-mails and other Internet communications though a program named SORM, or System for Operational-Investigative Activities. The FSB claims the program helps catch cyber criminals, terrorists, and spies. SORM requires security services to obtain a warrant prior to looking at electronic transmissions, but critics argue the FSB can simply ignore the rules.
Šaltinis: internetnews.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

Motorola's Moto 360 smartwatch expected to be released in July

Moto 360, Motorola's upcoming entry into the smartwatch industry, is rumored to be preparing for a July release. more »

Choreographer from Unisys helps organisations better manage their Cloud resources

Unisys Corporation has announced Choreographer, a cloud management platform designed to direct and optimise key IT services and processes. Choreographer automates the lifecycle management of data centre and public infrastructure resources to help more efficiently deploy applications in both private and public cloud environments. more »

The world’s largest mobile technology exhibition “Mobile World Congress 2014” shall take place in Barcelona

This February 24-27, the world’s largest mobile technology exhibition “Mobile World Congress 2014” shall take place in Barcelona. more »

Unisys Announces Third-Quarter 2013 Financial Results

Unisys Corporation reported a third-quarter 2013 net loss of $11.6 million, or a loss of 26 cents per diluted share, which included $22.6 million of pension expense. In the third quarter of 2012, the company reported a net loss of $12.4 million, or a loss of 28 cents per diluted share, which included $28.9 million of pension expense and $23.1 million of debt reduction charges. more »

Akamai and Cisco Working Together to Optimize Application Delivery for Enterprise Branch Offices over Hybrid WAN

Akamai Technologies, Inc. (NASDAQ: AKAM), the leading provider of cloud services for delivering, optimizing and securing online content and business applications, today announced plans for future integration of Akamai Unified Performance technology into the Cisco® ISR-AX series of routers. more »

Xbox One to welcome indie games makters

Microsoft is to allow independent games developers to self-publish on its Xbox One games console. "Indies" will be able to create their own games, publish to the Xbox when they like, and set their own pricing, the computer giant has confirmed. more »

Nokia Lumia 625 packs 4G and 4.7-inch screen

Nokia has unveiled the Lumia 625, the largest Lumia Windows Phone yet, with a 4.7-inch screen and 4G. more »

Unisys to Offer Unisys Stealth Solution for Amazon Web Services

Unisys Corporation (NYSE: UIS) announced the availability of its Unisys Stealth Solution for Amazon Web Services (AWS) designed to enhance security for clients moving data into the cloud. more »

Open IPTV Forum publishes HTML5 profile for Connected TVs

The Open IPTV Forum (OIPF) has published a profile of HTML5, CSS, DOM3 and other related web technologies aimed at connected TV services and devices that implement a browser-based application environment. more »

Most Americans Worry about Data Breaches but Disagree about the Need for Private Companies to Notify Government about Cyber Attacks

According to new research conducted by Unisys Corporation (NYSE: UIS), a majority of Americans are concerned about data breaches involving large organizations, but are evenly mixed on whether legislation should require private businesses to share cyber attack information with the government. more »