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- 012.70.3 GlasNet
-
- Anatoly Voronov
- <avoronov@glas.apc.org>
-
- In the last three months Glasnet, a new computer network in
- Moscow under the sponsorship of the IGC (Institute for Global
- Communications, San Francisco, USA), has achieved several
- successful results. GlasNet has been admitted as a member of
- the Association for Progressive Communications (APC), composed of
- PeaceNet, Econet (USA), GreenNet (UK), Web (Canada), Pegasus
- (Australia), Alternex (Brazil), NordNet (Sweden), Comlink
- (Germany), Nicarao (Nicaragua), and Chasque (Uruguay).
-
- GlasNet stood firmly during the Coup in August, 1991. This
- infuriated the Soviet bureaucrats who supported tacitly Mr.
- Yanaev & Co. (now on sine die vacations living as Yeltsin's
- guests in the 0-star Hotel "Matrosskaya Tishina Jail" run by KGB,
- now Federal Security Agency of Russia). The GlasNet stance
- infuriated certain "champions of friendship and international co-
- operation in the humanitarian field". Academician Yevgeni
- Velikhov fired Anatoly Voronov, then GlasNet Executive Director,
- citing activities "not in keeping with" his position.
-
- Voronov wrote a letter to International Herald Tribune (The Price
- of Resistance, IHT, October 1991, don't remember the exact
- date). Then GlasNet received its own juridical identity, and has
- now nothing to do with the so-called "International Foundation"
- controlled by Mr. Velikhov and Metropolitan Pitirim, top Russian
- Orthodox Church official, denounced recently by the Argumenti i
- Fakty weekly as KGB's secret agent, alias "Abbat".
-
- GlasNet improved its technical basis, installing its host
- machines in the telephone exchange close to the Metro Krasnie
- Vorota in downtown Moscow. In May GlasNet will have the X.25
- access facility of the Sovpak network (DNIC 2503). GlasNet
- currently has more that 300 users, with the growth rate of 50 per
- month.
-
- GlasNet now offers email, conferencing, fax and telex facilities
- at the rates 20-25% lower than any other network which charges
- its users in rubles. The GlasMail service, consisting in sending
- email messages to GlasNet host in Moscow and then relaying it as
- an ordinary letter, FAX or Telegram, is expanding. This way the
- Westerners can send their messages to the Russian citizens who do
- not have access to the modern email technology.
-
- Considerable discounts (up to 300%) are given to the pro bono
- users whose activities comply with the APC and GlasNet Charter
- (peace, ecology, social activities, NGOs, human contacts).
- GlasNet is currently the only telecommunications facility which
- individual users can afford in Russia.
-
- Now GlasNet is preparing to raise its voice against the "Modem
- Hunt" planned by the Russian Ministry of Telecommunications: a
- heavy tax imposed on the modem and fax users (see sidebar)
-
-
-
- [Sidebar]
- Spring Modem Hunt in Moscow: Happy Fools' Day, Gentlemen!
- COMMERSANT Weekly, No. 13, March 23-30 1992, p.14
-
- Translation of article by Kirill Maslentsin published by the
- Moscow Weekly Commersant.
-
- ===start of text===
-
- Starting from April 1st, the Commercial Service of the Moscow
- City Telephone Network (Proizvodstvennoe Ob'edinenie MGTS) will
- detect the unregistered modems. The experts doubt that this
- action, objectively necessary, is manageable to be carried out
- quickly, because the Commercial Service of the MGTS finds itself
- yet in the organizational stage.
-
- According to Alexander Shambazov, Deputy Director of the PO MGTS,
- approximately 100.000 modems are currently in use in Moscow.
- Shambazov was unable to say how many of them had been registered.
- Up-to-date, every Telephone Service node in Moscow used to
- register the modems separately (usually, at owner's request), and
- MGTS does not have the consolidated information.
-
- The Commercial Service, created recently by the MGTS, will
- compile the general database on modem owners. This department
- will detect the "illegal" modems whose owners do not pay for the
- use of these devices.
-
- In Mr. Shambazov's opinion, companies which run the phone
- communications networks, or sell the information contained in
- their databases, and the companies who manufacture and sell the
- modems, will help to detect the "illegal" modems. The MGTS will
- request these companies to submit their user lists. It is not
- excluded that MGTS will obtain the required information, because
- all the companies implied are interested to come to terms with
- the Telco. Shambazov informed that MGTS has the modem detection
- equipment.
-
- The experts consider that the "modem hunt", on its early stage,
- won't be very efficient, because the MGTS Commercial Service is
- still being organized, and its structure is weak. Nevertheless,
- one may expect that the frightened users of the "illegal devices"
- will "plead guilty" massively.
-
- According to the information obtained, the offenders won't be
- fined. They'll simply be urged to conclude a contract (if the
- modem is certified). The usage fee will be 1296 R/year for the
- self-financed companies, and 324 R/year for the organizations
- financed by the State budget. But if a company uses a modem for
- commercial purposes (for example, selling the information), will
- have to pay 50.000 rubles per year. Nothing was said with regard
- to the modems owned by the individuals.
-
- ===end of text===
-