Tech

Cloudflare refuses to pull out of Russia, says Putin would celebrate shutoff

Cloudflare CEO Matthew Prince speaking on stage at a technology conference.

Enlarge / Cloudflare CEO Matthew Prince speaks during the Wall Street Journal Tech Live global technology conference in Laguna Beach, California on Monday, Oct. 21, 2019.

Cloudflare is resisting requests to fully shut off its services in Russia, saying that such a move would hurt Russian citizens and likely be “celebrated” by Putin’s government. “[W]e have received several calls to terminate all of Cloudflare’s services inside Russia, ” CEO Matthew Prince wrote in a blog post yesterday. “We have carefully considered these requests and discussed them with government and civil society experts. Our conclusion, within consultation with those experts, is that Russia needs more Internet access, not less. ”

Prince said Cloudflare has seen “a dramatic increase” inside users on Russian networks navigating to international media sites, “reflecting a desire by ordinary Russian citizens to see world news beyond that provided within Russia. We’ve also seen an increase in Russian blocking and throttling efforts, combined with Russian efforts to control the content associated with the media operating inside Russian federation with a new ‘ fake news ‘ law. ”

Prince noted that over the past few years, Russia’s government “has threatened repeatedly to block certain Cloudflare services and customers. ” His blog post argued that the Cloudflare cutoff would be welcomed by the Russian government:

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