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Well damn.
The attack on LJ has reached the mainstream media!
Money quote:
Makes me kinda proud. And worried.
Money quote:
"This kind of attack is something totally new," says Marina Litvinovich, a former government spin doctor who went on to create Russia's main aggregator of blog posts, BestToday.ru. "It is an attempt to uproot not one user but the entire LiveJournal community, which appears to have become too influential, too strong in setting the political agenda of the day."
Indeed, with around 5 million Russian accounts read by some 30 million people per month, LiveJournal has emerged as the country's last truly free and public space for political debate, a chaotic kind of intellectual clearinghouse and the source of not only gossip, conspiracy theories and pro-government propaganda, but also countless revelations of corruption and official incompetence. In terms of the sheer variety of opinions expressed and defended on LiveJournal, it has been leagues ahead of Russia's other media.
Makes me kinda proud. And worried.

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Most people in Russia has no idea who Navalny is, and a lot of those who know don't believe him. I would even say that most people in Russia don't care about LJ at all, even if they have the Internet. And for those who uses it - lj is far from the only - or last - platform.
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Note to self: Be more observant.
Still, this attack was much worse than those in spring.
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Oh, undoubtedly. Some sources also state that the attack was of a different nature than the ones in spring, this time attacking the service as a whole rather than the journals of a handful of bloggers. And that the magnitude of it this time must have cost approximately $15,000 to organize. (I have link&info roundups in my journal) Small fries probably look different...
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Mind you, the attack is ultimately coming out of Russia, at least per the BBC Russia story I read via Google Translate yesterday. It's probably — nay, indubitably — political in nature. And it needs to be noticed by the English-speaking world, damn it!
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Yeah, I realised that way too late... *facepalm*
And it needs to be noticed by the English-speaking world, damn it!
*nods a lot* Stupid politics. :(
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Ha, yes. I find it rather remarkable that they don't mention LJ as a site used by anyone except Russians. Either they think this goes without saying or they think no one remembers that anymore. I'd be curious to know how small a fraction the non-Russian users are at this point.
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I think it would actually benefit the Russian language users to move to a larger international platform like Facebook. Given the language barrier I don't know as the political conversation would gain any more exposure, but attacks on it certainly would. I think Twitter would be the best long-term platform because one could rope together conversations and topics through hashtags while the actual content could reside in multiple locations and platforms making it very difficult to take down everything. However Twitter is already so unstable just from growth that it's not much of an option for now.
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Lack of research?
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