For the people who have not yet decided on a search engine. The most EU way you can go is Ecosia or Qwant as they are building their own search index.
Ecosia is my personal pick as its also aimed at planting trees and they have quite a good browser alongside it.
rt.com is blocked for me. If you can access it and you’re based in the EU it means you’re using a foreign DNS provider like 1.1.1.1 or 8.8.8.8.
I understand well the arguments used by governments to restrict access to books and websites. I reject them. I believe I am the best person to decide which knowledge I am allowed to access. I am certainly far more qualified than the government.
@JasSmith And you fall in trap many intelligent people fall into… just because YOU may be qualified to discern what is lie and what is truth and know how to verify sources properly, does not mean that the majority of people does and that is where we need legislation to take the helm to prevent greater damage to society as a whole.
“The masses have no habit of self-reliance or original action”
It’s a perfectly valid ideological divide here, so I can’t tell you you’re “wrong.” I would argue that in order to believe that democracy is valid, one must subscribe to the belief in individual agency. That is, the ability for people to make rational decisions about not only themselves, but their society. If one believes that, they should believe that the same people must have access to as much knowledge as they wish - especially if it’s from the guys who oppose the current people in power. Democracy fails to function if the people in power can suppress criticism.
@JasSmith Nope it does not mean that… has nothing to do with DNS… I use the same DNS for all my connections. Like I wrote earlier… blocking happens usually on ISP level.
I can access it from both my work and private cellphone internet cnnections as well as from work internet. Private Internet provider makes it appear like a certificate error on rt.com side.
That is not what I would call censorship (for me that is on state level), but the overreach of a single provider.
@JasSmith BTW… changing your DNS provider is a piece of cake, so censorship on that level would not be very effective unless ALL DNS providers would decide to block something.
I work in IT so I can confidently inform you that the vast majority of people do not change their DNS providers. Very few people would know how. Recall that my comment above is not about how easy circumventing censorship is, it was about the censorship existing at all, and how the EU would censor results in a search engine they create.
@JasSmith I know. IT Admin myself…
@JasSmith My DNS provider is dns0.eu by the way. On all my connections. Solidly based in the EU.
I can confirm it’s resolving rt.com. I’ve tested on two ISPs here in Denmark and both block the domain. I’m wondering if there are regional differences in the legislation or edicts.
@JasSmith From what I can tell it seems to be company, by company and not by legislation. At least here in NL. Tried it on five different providers now and only my home ISP is blocking it. And skillfully so, making it look like there is something wrong with the certificate of RT.
But in the end… no, I don’t want to hear what Russia has to say right now. They have been known for false propaganda for decades and they are as good at it now as they ever were.