Saturday, February 4, 2023
Weekly Feeds
  • Home
  • Health & Fitness
  • Technology
  • Business and Finance
  • Beauty & Fashion
  • Crypto and Stocks
  • Travel & Tourism
No Result
View All Result
Weekly Feeds
  • Home
  • Health & Fitness
  • Technology
  • Business and Finance
  • Beauty & Fashion
  • Crypto and Stocks
  • Travel & Tourism
No Result
View All Result
Weekly Feeds
No Result
View All Result
Home Technology

US news company takes on the Kremlin in a battle of messages and technology

admin by admin
March 19, 2022
in Technology
0
US news company takes on the Kremlin in a battle of messages and technology
585
SHARES
3.2k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


Vladimir PutinVladimir Vladimirovich PutinFormer national security adviser Gen. Jones: Putin ‘miscalculated’ when it comes to Ukraine invasion Defense & National Security​ — Biden sends new warning to China Energy & Environment — Interior to continue oil leasing plans MORE’s campaign to eliminate free media has forced a U.S. news company financed by Congress to suspend its operations inside Russia. Its challenge now is to leverage its news gathering and technology to keep serving its Russian audience.

For nearly seven decades, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty has brought Russian citizens news and information free of Kremlin censorship. With Putin’s unrelenting pressure on Russia’s own news outlets, the American company — with more than 200 contributors across Russia — became perhaps the biggest independent source for Russians about events in their own country.

In recent weeks Putin has blocked the websites of RFE/RL’s main Russian service and of Current Time, its 24/7 television network. The network’s other sites with local news for specific parts of Russia also were blocked, along with its accounts on Russian social networks.

The immediate pretext was the company’s violation of Russian censorship about the Ukraine invasion. But Russian anger with RFE/RL had long been mounting over its focus on democracy and human rights, and its refusal to knuckle under to Kremlin demands. RFE/RL rebuffed a Russian order in February to delete articles about Alexei Navalny’s corruption investigations. It had also refused for more than a year to pay more than $13 million in fines for not complying with government demands that it brand every page of content with warnings that RFE/RL was a “foreign agent.”

RFE/RL was finally forced to suspend its operations inside Russia on March 6 after authorities threatened to seize its assets over the unpaid fines — and following passage of a new law that threatens 15 years imprisonment for any reporting that authorities consider “fake news.” Many other foreign news organizations, including the BBC and Germany’s Deutsche Welle, have been forced to close or curtail their Russian operations, citing the danger to their employees.

RFE/RL has vowed to continue serving its Russian audience, which it estimates at 7 million, from its headquarters in Prague. The challenges are daunting:

  • It must continue gathering news from inside Russia. Unlike Washington-based Voice of America, whose mandate is to cover news from the United States, RFE/RL’s mission is to report on internal events in Russia, as well as in the two dozen other countries it serves. Covering Russia from afar will require heavy monitoring of social networks, with the burden of verifying news and videos in an environment rife with false content. The company will also likely have to adopt techniques it used in Soviet times, such as interviewing travelers arriving from Russia and working through Russians’ relatives abroad. Additional funding expected from Congress will help the network put more correspondents around Russia’s periphery. The network is opening offices now in Latvia and Lithuania.
  • RFE/RL is in a continuing arms race with Russia’s blocking technology. It has learned much from years of serving audiences in Iran and other nations that have tried to suppress its content. Anticipating the Russian action, the company had advertised for months how people could continue to access its news via VPNs, “dark web” browsers, mirror sites, and newsletters that can still get through by email. (RFE/RL no longer uses shortwave radio to Russia because few people still have the needed receivers.)

Despite all of Russia’s efforts, its information system is still porous.

Putin cannot seal the country off entirely from the rest of the world when so many Russians have relatives and other connections abroad. There is also a limit to which modern-day Russians, used to three decades of open communication with the world, will accept total Soviet-style isolation.

So far, according to RFE/RL figures, its audiences have actually increased as audience members use the techniques it has promoted. Civil society activists and family members overseas are making their own efforts to get real information into the country. Last week the hacking group Anonymous briefly managed to insert Current Time video from Ukraine into the streams of several Russian TV channels.

RFE/RL’s credibility lies in its tradition of accurate reporting, and in avoiding a propagandistic tone. The most important audience now is Russians who were initially taken in by state media justifications of the invasion, but now are starting to recognize the horror of what Russia’s unprovoked attack has unleashed. For these citizens, dispassionate, fact-based reporting will be the most effective tactic.

Beyond RFE/RL, other U.S. and allied efforts to reach Russian citizens are long overdue. These should include new outlets that function openly as official U.S. government channels. (RFE/RL and the Voice of America are organized as independent news companies with their own editorial policies; U.S. officials cannot take them over to broadcast specific messages.) Governments, foundations and individual donors should also increase their support for penetrating Russia with content by civil society groups and individuals, including well-known Russian public figures and journalists who have spoken out against the war.

America is not likely to determine Russia’s future solely by communication to its population — but Russia’s people must not think the United States cares so little about them that it is content to leave them exclusively in the hands of Putin’s propagandists.

Thomas Kent, president of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty until 2018, is a consultant on Russian information tactics. He is a senior fellow of the Jamestown Foundation and teaches at Columbia University. His book, “Striking Back: Overt and Covert Options to Combat Russian Disinformation,” was published by Jamestown in 2020.





Source link

You might also like

Technology can help achieve goal of ease of living: Adityanath – Republic World

Why 911 dispatchers hate Apple Watches – The Indian Express

Tech that Turns Households into Touch Sensors Closer to Reality – Mirage News

Tags: Broadcastingdemocracy promotionMass mediaRadio Free Europe/Radio LibertyRFERussian invasion of UkraineRussian opinionRussian peopleRussian propagandaState mediavladimir putin
Previous Post

What’s in Store for XRP in April?

Next Post

“Fashioning Masculinities,” the V&A’s New Show, Proves That Gender Has Always Been a Construct

admin

admin

Related Posts

45th Gasparilla Distance Classic will bring thousands of runners to downtown Tampa – thatssotampa.com
Technology

Technology can help achieve goal of ease of living: Adityanath – Republic World

by admin
February 4, 2023
45th Gasparilla Distance Classic will bring thousands of runners to downtown Tampa – thatssotampa.com
Technology

Why 911 dispatchers hate Apple Watches – The Indian Express

by admin
February 4, 2023
45th Gasparilla Distance Classic will bring thousands of runners to downtown Tampa – thatssotampa.com
Technology

Tech that Turns Households into Touch Sensors Closer to Reality – Mirage News

by admin
February 4, 2023
45th Gasparilla Distance Classic will bring thousands of runners to downtown Tampa – thatssotampa.com
Technology

AP Top Technology News at 6:50 p.m. EST – The Philadelphia Inquirer

by admin
February 4, 2023
45th Gasparilla Distance Classic will bring thousands of runners to downtown Tampa – thatssotampa.com
Technology

AP Top Technology News at 4:27 p.m. EST – The Philadelphia Inquirer

by admin
February 3, 2023
Next Post
“Fashioning Masculinities,” the V&A’s New Show, Proves That Gender Has Always Been a Construct

“Fashioning Masculinities,” the V&A’s New Show, Proves That Gender Has Always Been a Construct

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recommended

Rouble steadies near 104 vs dollar, volatile OFZ bonds resume trading

Rouble steadies near 104 vs dollar, volatile OFZ bonds resume trading

March 21, 2022
Zenas Technology unveils intelligent fitness devices for tech-savvy health enthusiasts

Zenas Technology unveils intelligent fitness devices for tech-savvy health enthusiasts

October 4, 2022

Categories

  • Beauty & Fashion
  • Business and Finance
  • Crypto and Stocks
  • Health & Fitness
  • Technology
  • Travel & Tourism

Don't miss it

45th Gasparilla Distance Classic will bring thousands of runners to downtown Tampa – thatssotampa.com
Business and Finance

Indian watchdog tells investors markets stable despite Adani rout – Reuters India

February 4, 2023
45th Gasparilla Distance Classic will bring thousands of runners to downtown Tampa – thatssotampa.com
Crypto and Stocks

Can Bitcoin Reach $100,000? – The Motley Fool

February 4, 2023
45th Gasparilla Distance Classic will bring thousands of runners to downtown Tampa – thatssotampa.com
Beauty & Fashion

Healthy beauty swaps, from face massages and natural exfoliants to fragrance-free products – The National

February 4, 2023
45th Gasparilla Distance Classic will bring thousands of runners to downtown Tampa – thatssotampa.com
Travel & Tourism

Tourism actors can foray into global market through Travex: Official – ANTARA English

February 4, 2023
45th Gasparilla Distance Classic will bring thousands of runners to downtown Tampa – thatssotampa.com
Technology

Technology can help achieve goal of ease of living: Adityanath – Republic World

February 4, 2023
45th Gasparilla Distance Classic will bring thousands of runners to downtown Tampa – thatssotampa.com
Health & Fitness

This girl gets a 'new hand' after 13-hour surgery in Mumbai hospital – mid-day.com

February 4, 2023
  • Indian watchdog tells investors markets stable despite Adani rout – Reuters India
  • Can Bitcoin Reach $100,000? – The Motley Fool
  • Healthy beauty swaps, from face massages and natural exfoliants to fragrance-free products – The National
  • Tourism actors can foray into global market through Travex: Official – ANTARA English
  • Technology can help achieve goal of ease of living: Adityanath – Republic World

Categories

  • Beauty & Fashion (2,290)
  • Business and Finance (2,294)
  • Crypto and Stocks (2,292)
  • Health & Fitness (2,287)
  • Technology (2,291)
  • Travel & Tourism (2,231)

AMERS apmediaapi ASIA ASXPAC BACT BISV BISV08 BNKS BNKS1 BSVC business CEEU CEN CMPNY coronavirus covid-19 pandemic dcc diseases and conditions EMRG EUROP FIN FINS FINS08 GEN general news government and politics health infectious diseases INVBIS INVS08 lung disease MCE NAMER NEWS1 POL PUBL public health social affairs social issues Technology TOPNWS travel US WEU wire

© 2022 Weekly Feeds - All right reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Health & Fitness
  • Technology
  • Business and Finance
  • Beauty & Fashion
  • Crypto and Stocks
  • Travel & Tourism

© 2022 Weekly Feeds - All right reserved.