Re: Putinin Venäjä
Posted: 08 Mar 2022, 16:49
Jokuhan kyllä myös kirjoitti että Soigulla ei-isovenäläisenä olisi varsin huonot saumat pärjätä Putinin poistuttua kuvioista.
Neuvostoliitossa ei ollut tätäkään ongelmaa
https://www.punkinfinland.net/forum/
https://www.punkinfinland.net/forum/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=149387
Bolshevikeissähän oli muutenkin juutalaisia, puolalaisia ja sen sellaisia, mutta päteekö tämä enää nykynationalistisiin silovikkeihin.
No tällä mää sitä vähän ihmettelinkin. Toisaalta en ehkä niin suurta painoa sille Šoigun etnisyydelle laittaisi. Sen sijaan uskon, että Putin on varmaan tehnyt jonku bysanttilaisen väkivallanteon kaikille noille jees-miehilleen (Šoigu, Lavrov ja Medvedev), jonka myötä kukaan niistä ei saa edes itsenäistä ajatusta puserrettua itsestään.eh wrote: ↑08 Mar 2022, 16:48Tää kuulostaa aivan täysin jonkun länsimaisen hatusta vetämältä salaliittoteorialta, koska vähemmistökansaan kuuluva jees-mies (koska kukaan ei oo tuolla ministerinä tauotta melkein kolmeakymmentä vuotta olematta jees-mies) ei varmasti ole mitään vallankaappausta tekemässä nyt eikä ikinä.VISÖN 2001 wrote: ↑08 Mar 2022, 16:40Kun nyt parissa paikassa oon kuullut ikään kuin sivumainintana Šoigun vallankaappauksen, joka oli ensi viikolle budjetoitu, niin osaako joku heittää sen alkuperäisen lähteen tälle? Oliko arvioiden mukaan siis kyseessä alunperinkin Putinin katteeton vainoharha vai vieläkö vanha koira muka kykenisi uusiin temppuihin?
Extra-sackeyden lähteiden mukaan Putinkin on pelkkä venäläisen ZOGin marionetti.Nakkipipo wrote: ↑08 Mar 2022, 16:53Bolshevikeissähän oli muutenkin juutalaisia, puolalaisia ja sen sellaisia, mutta päteekö tämä enää nykynationalistisiin silovikkeihin.
Russia Will Probably Legalize Some Software Piracy to Mitigate Sanctions
With no signs that Vladimir Putin intends to stop his military campaign against Ukraine, there are hopes that sanctions will press the Russian president to stop the killing. However, Russia has plans to live under sanctions if necessary, which may include the legalization of some software piracy. There has also been a call to unblock the country's largest torrent site.
As Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine and his military’s horrendous campaign of bloodshed continues, world leaders and people around the globe are hoping that punishing sanctions against the Russian Federation will bring peace to Europe.
These are far-reaching and include measures to restrict Russia’s access to technology. Many companies were quick to respond.
For example, Apple restricted Apply Pay services in Russia then said it had stopped all product sales. Microsoft announced that it too had suspended new sales, with similar measures also taken by Sony and gaming company EA. Software giant Oracle suspended all of its operations in the Russian Federation too but these examples are just the tip of a massive iceberg.
At least for now, however, there are few signs that Russia intends to capitulate. Indeed, Putin appears to be digging in for the long haul and is seemingly intent on demonstrating that sanctions can be mitigated in dozens of ways, even if that means changing local law.
The Priority Plan – Green Light For Software Piracy
A document titled “Priority Action Plan for Ensuring the Development of the Russian Economy in the Conditions of External Sanctions Pressure” lays out just some of the measures under consideration. It’s the work of the Ministry of Economic Development of Russia and contains several measures that if adopted, will affect copyright, patent and trademark owners that act against Russia’s interests.
An item listed as point 6.7.3 attempts to deal with the problem of foreign companies revoking or refusing to issue software licenses. Under the law as it stands, unlicensed software is illegal but if the new measures are passed, in some cases software piracy will become non-punishable.
“Cancellation of liability for the use of software (SW) unlicensed in the Russian Federation, owned by a copyright holder from countries that have supported the sanctions,” the proposed measure reads.
The proposal covers both civil and criminal liability (Code of Administrative Offenses and the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation) and indicates that while sanctions are in place, piracy of software for which there are no Russian alternatives would be permissible.
Quite how this could deal with services accessed via the cloud is unclear but the overall aim is to smooth Russia’s transition from reliance on foreign companies’ products to solutions developed inside the country. Given the scale of that undertaking, software piracy is likely to become the norm for years to come.
Other Proposals To Remove Liability for IP Offenses
Item 6.7.1 further proposes the introduction of a compulsory licensing mechanism for computer programs and databases, giving the government the “rights to an invention, utility model, industrial design in relation to computer programs, databases, topologies of integrated circuits.”
Russia also has a plan for parallel imports, i.e products imported from another country without the permission of the intellectual property owner. Since it will need to import many things without official authorization, Russia’s government is considering removing liability for breaching exclusive rights, including copyrights and trademarks.
Parliamentarian Suggests Lifting RuTracker Ban
Given the state of Russian journalism at the moment, which includes government-imposed censorship and rampant misinformation, taking reports at face value is ill-advised.
That being said, on March 4, 2022, Gazeta.ru reported that Russian politician Dmitry Ionin had suggested that in the face of Western companies refusing to release new films in Russia, perhaps citizens would be able to turn to infamous torrent site RuTracker.
This led to speculation that RuTracker, which is ‘permanently’ blocked by ISPs in Russia for repeat copyright infringement, could be unblocked to serve local citizens. Users of one ISP, MTS, subsequently reported that they could access the site but the reasons for this are unclear.
A blocklist checker operated by digital rights group Roskomsvoboda shows that the site’s main domains are still blocked.
https://torrentfreak.com/russia-will-pr ... ns-220307/
Lisäksi kuten on jo todettu, niin ne tarvitsee sitä kaasua itse. Siellä on 42-44 miljoonaa ihmistä niin ne tarvitsee sitä lämmitykseen, ruuanlaittoon jne.Aatos Kipotti wrote: ↑08 Mar 2022, 16:39Ukrainahan taitaa saada provikkaa tästä kaasun kauttakulusta.pieni bränditön kolajuoma wrote: ↑08 Mar 2022, 16:30Ei ois Ukrainankaan kannalta fiksua, kun euroopassa tuskin innostuttaisiin tällaisesta ylläristähuutista joka tuutista wrote: ↑08 Mar 2022, 16:27ai siis venäjä räjäyttäis putket mitkä tekee sille rahaa? tähUkrainalainen sielunmaisema wrote: ↑08 Mar 2022, 16:14Tuntuu kyllä aivan hullulta, että noita ei oo ekana pistelty jonkun taktisen neronleimauksen seurauksena paskaksi. tota tärkeää infraa on kuitenki hajotettu jo pari viikkoa
On muuten hyvä tubekanava tämä, kiitoksia.Jimi Ketipinor wrote: ↑08 Mar 2022, 15:34Maksim Kats on alkanut lisätä videoihinsa englanninkielisiä tekstityksiä. Tyyppi paineli Israeliin kun tais olla kansalainenkin.Spoiler: