“Between two Big Brothers.” The description of Central Asia that Ruslan Dairbekov, director of the Digital Rights Center in Almaty, Kazakhstan, recently gave The Post is an apt one. In recent years, the region has been undergoing a digitization heavily reliant on imported goods: the technology from China and the rules from Russia. This is a model that democracies should be banding together to forestall, both in Central Asia and other areas of the world. The former Soviet republics of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan came relatively late to the Internet, and their geopolitical power-player neighbors have ushered them...