Kresinet is the colloquial name for the Divine Republic of Kresimiria’s regulated domestic internet — a walled digital environment operated through state telecom monopolies and policed by the Media Licensing Authority (MLA). Unlike the open global web accessible in Kaskiv or Kruhlstutt, Kresinet routes most traffic through licensed domestic servers and filters foreign content deemed contrary to Kresimirian moral guidance codes.
Development
Early dial-up networks in the 1990s connected universities and Maj Holdings industrial sites. The 2015 State Security Act (“Digital Vigilance Act”) formalised mass surveillance and accelerated integration with YakaSys identity wallets. The consumer streaming platform KresiX largely superseded Kresinet for entertainment, but MLA censors still refer to the broader domestic network as Kresinet when issuing takedown orders against outlets such as Northfocus and the Early Bird Chronicle.
Censorship and opposition
Under Councillor Danijel Skvorac, the MLA treats Kresinet as a strategic border: independent journalists smuggle material through Porta Franca into Kaskivian hosts, while Digital Front hacktivists periodically breach domestic gateways — triggering harsh prosecutions under Kresimirovic IV’s security regime.