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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsRussia just made a ton of Internet memes illegal
In post-Soviet Russia, you dont make memes. Memes make (or unmake?) you.
That is, at least, the only conclusion we can draw from an announcement made this week by Russias three-year-old media agency/Internet censor Roskomnadzor, which made it illegal to publish any Internet meme that depicts a public figure in a way that has nothing to do with his personality.
Sad Keanu? Nope.
Sad Putin? Absolutely not.
These ways of using [celebrities images] violate the laws governing personal data and harm the honor, dignity and business of public figures, reads the policy announcement from Roskomnadzor.
To be clear, this isnt a new law passed by parliament or anything its just a (pretty startling) clarification of existing policy, published to the popular social network Vkontakte. According to Russian media, the announcement came in light of a lawsuit filed by the Russian singer Valeri Syutkin, who sued an irreverent Wikipedia-style culture site over an image macro that paired his picture with some less-than-tasteful lyrics from another artists song. On Tuesday, a Moscow judge ruled for Syutkin, prompting the Roskomnadzor to publish an update to its personal data laws.
Those laws now ban, per Roskomnadzors announcement, memes that picture public figures in a way that has no relation to [their] personality, parody accounts and parody Web sites. If a public figure believes such a site or meme has been made about him, the announcement continues, he can report them to the Roskomnadzor, which in addition to overseeing Russias Internet censorship program can file claims in court. Web sites are essentially given the choice of blocking the offending content in Russia, or seeing their whole sites get blocked across the country.
If that sounds crazy to U.S. readers, it probably should: U.S. law gives a very, very wide berth to Internet speech, even when it depicts private people or children and especially when it depicts public figures.
Russia, on the other hand, has taken a series of steps to increase government control of the Internet in recent months. Just last August, Russia enacted a law that forced all bloggers with more than 3,000 daily readers to register with the Roskomnadzor, basically outlawing anonymous blogs. Earlier in the year, Russia approved a law that lets Roskomnadzor unilaterally block Web sites without explanation; the sites of prominent Putin critics were among the first to go dark.
It is impossible to know, of course, exactly how much of the Russian Internet will be affected by the change and to what degree this new policy will be pursued or enforced. (It is worth noting that public figures have to take their complaints to the Roskomnadzor, which many presumably will not do.)
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Russia just made a ton of Internet memes illegal (Original Post)
FLPanhandle
Apr 2015
OP
BainsBane
(53,056 posts)1. Link?
Source?
FLPanhandle
(7,107 posts)3. Here you go...
Brickbat
(19,339 posts)2. Preved!
cyberswede
(26,117 posts)4. WTF?
llegal to publish any Internet meme that depicts a public figure in a way that has nothing to do with his personality.
Does Pooty-poot's personality like kitties?
dixiegrrrrl
(60,010 posts)5. He looks like he is strutting even when he is sitting down.
Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin
(108,170 posts)6. How long before the Putinbots show up?
5...4...3...2...1
Initech
(100,100 posts)7. I've got the butter and the beer!
Cha
(297,574 posts)8. This needs more play.. mahalo FLPanhndle. We've have some posters who really must think this
internet censoring is okay. The way they protect putin at all costs. But, always quick to throw cheap pot shots at President Obama.
Putin should be shown with a halo over his head.