yousaytoo mobile: m.yousaytoo.com Top_logo_new
YouSayToo
    is an ad revenue sharing community that rewards you for socializing and sharing online.
How?
    Write your journal, upload games and buzz yourself out to make money online.
    The more people read your content, the more money you make.
    Participate in our Affiliate Program - invite your friends to make money!
Journal

Dangerous Blogging in Russia



LiveJournal, the vibrant Russian blogging community that accounts for nearly 50 per cent of blogging in Russia, may not be lively for much longer. The site, like most other forms of media and free expression in Russia, is in jeopardy as authorities are seeking to rein in independent voices.

Today, Savva Terentyev, a musician in Syktyvkar, 1,000 km northeast of Moscow, is being tried as an extremist for blowing off steam about the local police on another user’s LiveJournal blog.

It’s the first time Russia has prosecuted someone for blogging. Meanwhile, Moscow is trying to gain further control over free speech by expanding state access to all telecommunications and by proposing tight regulation of the Internet and its users.

Terentyev’s supposed crime was to speak about corruption in Russian law-enforcement, insulting police officers as low-lives in a blog posting about a newspaper being persecuted by the authorities. In his diatribe, he invoked images of Auschwitz to suggest burning bad cops twice-daily in the central square of every Russian city. The authorities charged Terentyev under Russia’s vague anti-extremism law with inciting violence, hatred, or enmity against a social group – policemen.

Contrary to a statement by the Syktyvkar investigator, arguing for Terentyev’s right to speak does not imply an endorsement of his views. Terentyev’s screed is repugnant, but appearing as it did on a blog with a small readership in an outlying region can’t be taken as a genuine call to violence. It certainly didn’t pose a severe danger to the public, as Russian law requires. It would be another story if he’d been screaming at an anti-police rally in the main city square, but hardly anyone read Terentyev’s post before it was deleted by the blog’s owner and no one found it worthy of comment. He was doing what people on blogs do – ranting.

It would be more palatable to defend free speech in Russia in a case without an offensive reference to Auschwitz, but that case might come too late. Terentyev’s case is a critical precedent that could allow widespread censorship in a country where free media are already dying a slow death.

This is the government’s initial try-out of the anti-extremism law to stifle speech on the Internet. The prosecution has gone out of its way to stretch an already vague law to target Terentyev. As required by law, the investigators commissioned an expert study to determine if “policemen” were a social group. The experts were, at first, unable to make a clear determination. Curiously, after several months and with the help of Wikipedia, they were able to determine that “policemen” are indeed a social group and that Terentyev’s comments were extremist in nature. But if a legal precedent is established that government officials deserve protected status from criticism, free speech will be really on its deathbed in Russia.

The Russian authorities have steadily increased their control over the media and their power to supervise and monitor private communications. A recent government decree revealed that the security services have the ability to monitor all internet, phone, and mobile communications, unbeknownst to the provider or the user, and require that expensive equipment be installed to facilitate access to such telecommunications from government offices, at the provider’s expense. There is no way to monitor the security services’ assurances that they access the data only with a judicial warrant. The Internet, believed to be one of the only open forums for voicing opinions and criticizing the authorities, is edging toward government control.

Recent alarming proposals floated by the government indicate where Russia may be going. One Duma deputy recently proposed regulating as mass media websites with more than 1,000 daily hits. This would require them to complete mounds of paperwork and submit to the same strict regulation which has helped bring broadcast and print media to heel. Another government proposal would isolate Russia’s Internet from the worldwide Internet, putting the Russian authorities in control of the bridge between the two networks. As is the case in China, the government could then monitor content, open or close the bridge at will, or even block specific sites located on the worldwide Internet.

In light of Russia’s shrinking space for the free exchange of information, Russians have flocked to the Internet. If Terentyev is convicted, bloggers will suffocate under self-censorship. At a recent news conference in Russia on Terentyev’s case, the question kept coming up: “Do bloggers need to watch what they say?” The answer seems to be yes.

Russia’s interlocutors should pressure the Russian government to make sure that the Internet in Russia flourishes and remains free of government interference. If the prosecutors in Syktyvkar have their way, Russians may again be relegated to the only remaining forum for open and frank discussion: the kitchen.

Source:

http://www.newstatesman.com/200804010001

Tagged as freedom blog blogging careful danger russia


Like it?
P1
6
M2
Clock Apr 1 03:36 pm

9 comments
Bookmark and Share

+journal  share  spam

nesher's journal


Одноклассники - Песня Александра Куликова

Я получил много положительных отзывов о подпорке поэтического наследия посвященного порталу Одноклассники. Один из читателей сослался на выложенное стихотворение Александра Куликова в первой публикации на эту тему, и упрекнул в том, что я не предоставил авторский видео клип.По просьбе читателя и ввиду несомненного интереса,

read more Rarr

Tagged as одноклассники.ру видео Куликов одноклассники песня шансон юмор


Not all the comments are born equal, or how to respect your customer

Continuing a topic of using comments to increase you blog exposure, started in my previous post http://blogging4good.blogspot.com/2008/03/comments-as-source-of-free-traffic-to.html , I want to look on that from other side. Comments, left by your readers on your blog, are even more valuable than the comments you are leaving on other blogs. Why? Very simple. You leave comments to improve your blog exposure, to get more rating and referring links. All that to get more potential visitors. But, reader of your blog, leaving you a comment, has already came. And not just came, but also read your post

read more Rarr

Tagged as theory blog comments customers respect

you might also like

Comments9 comments
Apr 1 10:02 pm

The Russian situation is very complicated.. I've seen some comments about being better in USSR times then now.

0
Dotz1Replycom
Apr 2 11:45 am

I have emigrated from the USSR in 1990, and was back just once in the business trip. I expected nightmare based on the Russian-American "yellow press". However, my personal experience was quite positive. People were nice and friendly. However, as I do not live there for long, I lost my rights to give generic judgements.

0
Dotz1Replycom
Apr 2 11:48 am

The post on the case in Russian in my blog:
http://nesher9.blogspot.com/2008/04/blog-post.html

0
Dotz1Replycom
Apr 3 02:48 am

just by looking at the photo of the guy makes me feel like he deserves to be jailed. He looks like a type of guy who is always looking for a fight. Then again, I could be wrong.

0
Dotz1Replycom
CommentsReply:
Apr 3 06:50 pm

I hate, what and how he said. But if you put in prison everybody expressing extreme views, jails will be full. I have an idea: for virtual offense he has to be sentenced to the virtual prison - no connection to Internet for 2 years. How that sounds?

0
Dotz1Replycom
CommentsReply:
Apr 7 08:20 am

There's a lot of room in Siberia for those with extreme views :)
How can you restrict someone from using the internet? People can always go into an internet cafe.

0
Dotz1Replycom
CommentsReply:
Apr 7 12:50 pm

It is true, I was just kidding.
But, we do not know the background of the case. Maybe, the Syktyvkar police is indeed corrupted from top to bottom? Maybe, it was just the stupid way to express the dissastisfaction from the official government? I agree that guy is ignorant prick, but he does not deserve to spend 2 years in the prison for his stupidity. You know Russian prisons.
I talked on weekend with my frined in Kharkov, Ukraine. His appartment has been robbed. My first question was: did you call to police. No, he said, police will extort everything left, and will not find the criminals anyway. No, he went to private mafia guys, and they got him everything back for 10% of recovered goods. My friend is afraid of police more than of criminals. Does not sound normal to me.

0
Dotz1Replycom
Apr 7 05:20 am

Freedom doesn't mean we can do anything we must abide by the rules of the Government.

0
Dotz1Replycom
Apr 7 12:52 pm

The problem is that the Internet communication is so new, that the Laws application to the online hate talks is still under a lot of questions.

0
Dotz1Replycom
CommentsLeave a comment
Guest:
RECENT