Publication in Russian on the Zen blog
https://dzen.ru/a/abmgf1KnzxSsPxTx
Technological amenities in a "tyrannical state" serve not the citizens, but the regime. They can be limited or disabled when required by the authorities.
Comforts in an authoritarian system are not rights, but privileges that can be revoked.
It's funny to read the news about how Muscovites have become interested in pagers and paper cards amid mobile Internet outages, and the authorities are talking about the revival of payphones in Moscow.
Do you remember how great it all started? How the public admired how damn convenient the city has become, how awesome our super-fast mobile Internet and mobile banking are now, there is no such thing anywhere in Europe, and Moscow is getting so prettier that it has become more European than any Europe.
They tried to explain to these enthusiastic idiots: in a tyrannical state, all this household grace will work for tyranny, not for you, and then grace will collapse, because in Russia, tyranny is always followed by war. Some devils are scolding you at the entrance to the subway, and you don't resent it, because the subway is so high now, with such cool cars, and the stalls on the street are "terrible" demolished, and instead progressive establishments with three million varieties of craft beer.
People really didn't realize that the subway rush would definitely end with Internet whitelists. They didn't realize the logic of the historical process at all. Well, now, pagers, payphones. Or else there will be more. The process is in full swing.
You can immediately explore other alternative means of communication. Tapping on sewer pipes, setting up "roads" - an inter-cell communication system with strings on the windows practiced in the pre-trial detention center. Etc.

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My hobbies are history, philosophy, psychology, music, economics, politics, and sociology. I write about this and much more. Professional model. She has performed at international music festivals. I dance, I sing, I parody the voices of the performers. I am studying in the Netherlands at the Academy of Arts, Faculty of Film Industry and Arts. Co-owner of a video studio in St. Petersburg.
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In Russia, following the mobile Internet, they plan to slow down the home wired Internet...
..for example, the provider "Dom.<url> has introduced limits in St. Petersburg, Samara and Yekaterinburg. If you pump out more than a certain limit of traffic within a month, the speed will automatically slow down to minuscule levels.
