Russian web brigades: Difference between revisions

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=="LiveJournal fighters"==
=="LiveJournal fighters"==
A member of [[National Bolshevik Party]] Roman Sadykhov claimed that he secretly infiltrated pro-Kremlin organizations of "[[LiveJournal]] fighters", allegedly directed and paid from the Kremlin and instructions given to them by [[Vladislav Surkov]], a close aide of [[Vladimir Putin]] <ref>{{ru icon}} [http://www.grani.ru/Society/m.119861.html Interview with Roman Sadykhov], grani.ru, [[3 April]], [[2007]]</ref> Surkov allegedly called Livejournal "a very important sector of work" <ref name="Surkov">[http://www.newtimes.ru/index.php?page=journal&issue=6&article=231 Military wing of Kremlin (Russian)], ''[[The New Times]]'', [[19 March]], [[2007]]</ref> and said that people's brains must be "[[Nationalization|nationalized]]".
A member of [[National Bolshevik Party]] Roman Sadykhov claimed that he secretly infiltrated pro-Kremlin organizations of "[[LiveJournal]] fighters", allegedly directed and paid from the Kremlin and instructions given to them by [[Vladislav Surkov]], a close aide of [[Vladimir Putin]] <ref>{{ru icon}} [http://www.grani.ru/Society/m.119861.html Interview with Roman Sadykhov], grani.ru, [[3 April]], [[2007]]</ref> Surkov allegedly called Livejournal "a very important sector of work" <ref name="Surkov">[http://www.newtimes.ru/index.php?page=journal&issue=6&article=231 Military wing of Kremlin (Russian)], ''[[The New Times]]'', [[19 March]], [[2007]]</ref> and said that people's brains must be "[[Nationalization|nationalized]]".

== Presence on Wikipedia ==

The [[Wikipedia]]'s Arbitration Committee has unanimously found it to be a fact that some Wikipedia editors claim to be involved with security organs of the Russian state.<ref name='wp-arbcom-eed'>[[Wikipedia]] Arbitration Committee, final decision in re ''Eastern European disputes'' (formerly known as ''Piotrus 2'') [[22 December]] [[2008]] 23:59: ''[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Requests_for_arbitration/Eastern_European_disputes#Involvement_by_security_organs Involvement by security organs]''</ref> At the same time, the Committee did not find convincing evidence to verify their claims, but found them "disruptive and potentially intimidating to other editors".<ref name='wp-arbcom-eed'/>


==See also==
==See also==

Revision as of 20:16, 12 January 2009

The web brigades (Russian: Веб-бригады )[1] are allegedly, in the view of some Russian liberal intellectuals), online teams of commentators linked to security services that participate in political blogs and Internet forums to promote disinformation and prevent free discussions of undesirable subjects. Allegations of the existence of web brigades were made in a 2003 article "The Virtual Eye of the Big Brother"[1]

An article "Conspiracy theory" published in Russian journal in 2003 criticized the theory of web brigades as an attempt at creating myths by Russian liberal thinkers in a response to the massive sobering up of the Russian people. A point was made that the observed behaviour of forum participants may be explained without a theory of FSB-affiliated brigades.[2]

As mentioned in 2007 sociological research of large groups in Russian society by the RIO-Center, the belief in the existence of web-brigades is widespread in RuNet. Authors say "it's difficult to say whether hypothesis of existence of web-brigades corresponds to reality", but acknowledge that users professing views and methods ascribed to members of web-brigades may be found at all opposition forums of RuNet. [3]

The expression "red web-brigades" (Красные веб-бригады) used by Anna Polyanskaya as a title to her article is a pun with "Red Brigades".

Polyanskaya's article

This alleged phenomenon in RuNet was described in 2003 by journalist Anna Polyanskaya (a former assistant to assassinated Russian politician Galina Starovoitova[4]), historian Andrey Krivov and political activist Ivan Lomako. They described organized and professional "brigades", composed of ideologically and methodologically identical personalities, who were working in practically every popular liberal and pro-democracy Internet forums and Internet newspapers of RuNet.

The activity of Internet teams appeared in 1999 and were organized by the Russian state security service, according to Polyanskaya. [5][1] According to authors, about 70% of audience of Russian Internet were people of generally liberal views prior to 1998–1999, however sudden surge (about 60-80%) of "antidemocratic" posts suddenly occurred at many Russian forums in 2000.

According to Polyanskaya and her colleagues, the behavior of people from the web brigades has distinct features, some of which are the following:[1]

  • Any change in Moscow's agenda leads to immediate changes in the brigade's opinions.
  • Boundless loyalty to Vladimir Putin and his circle.
  • Respect and admiration for the KGB and FSB.
  • Nostalgia for the Soviet Union and propaganda of the Communist ideology, and constant attempts to present in a positive light the entire history of Russia and the Soviet Union, minimizing the number of people who died in repressions.[1]
  • Anti-liberal, anti-American, anti-Chechen, anti-Semitic and anti-western opinions. Xenophobia, racism, approval of skinheads and pogroms.[1]
  • Accusation of Russophobia against everyone who disagrees with them.
  • Hatred of dissidents and human rights organizations and activists, political prisoners and journalists, especially Anna Politkovskaya, Sergei Kovalev, Elena Bonner, Grigory Pasko, Victor Shenderovich, and Valeria Novodvorskaya.
  • Emigrants are accused of being traitors of the motherland. Some members will claim that they live in some Western country and tell stories about how much better life is in Putin's Russia.
  • Before the Iraq War, the brigade's anti-U.S. operations reached unseen scale. The original publication describes: "it sometimes seemed that the U.S. was not liberating the Iraqi people from Saddam Hussein, but at a minimum had actually launched an attack on Russia and was marching on the Kremlin." However, it fell silent suddenly after Putin announced that Russia was not opposed to the victory of the coalition forces in Iraq.[1]

Polyanskaya's article[1] describes the "tactics" of the alleged web brigades:

  • Frequent changes of pseudonyms.[1]
  • Round-the-clock presence on forums. At least one of the uniform members of the team can be found online at all times, always ready to repulse any “attack” by a liberal.[1]
  • Intentional diversion of pointed discussions. For instance, the brigade may claim that Pol Pot never had any connection with Communism or that not a single person was killed in Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia in 1968 by Soviet tanks.
  • Individual work on opponents. "As soon as an opposition-minded liberal arrives on a forum, expressing a position that makes them a clear "ideological enemy”, he is immediately cornered and subjected to “active measures” by the unified web-brigade. Without provocation, the opponent is piled on with abuse or vicious “arguments” of the sort that the average person cannot adequately react to. As a result, the liberal either answers sharply, causing a scandal and getting himself labeled a “boor” by the rest of the brigade, or else he starts to make arguments against the obvious absurdities, to which his opponents pay no attention, but simply ridicule him and put forth other similar arguments."[1]
  • Making personally offensive comments. Tendency to accuse their opponents of being insane during arguments.
  • Remarkable ability to reveal personal information about their opponents and their quotes from old postings, sometimes more than a year old.
  • Teamwork. "They unwaveringly support each other in discussions, ask each other leading questions, put fine points on each other’s answers, and even pretend not to know each other. If an opponent starts to be hounded, this hounding invariably becomes a team effort, involving all of the three to twenty nicknames that invariably are present on any political forum 24 hours a day."[1]
  • Appealing to the Administration. The members of teams often "write mass collective complaints about their opponents to the editors, site administrators, or the electronic “complaints book”, demanding that one or another posting or whole discussion thread they don’t like be removed, or calling for the banning of individuals they find problematic."[1]
  • Destruction of inconvenient forums. For example, on the site of the Moscow News, all critics of Putin and the FSB "were suddenly and without any explanation banned from all discussions, despite their having broken none of the site’s rules of conduct. All the postings of this group of readers, going back a year and a half, were erased by the site administrator."[1]

Criticism

Alexander Yusupovskiy, head of the analytical department of the Federation Council of Russia (Russian Parliament) published in 2003 an article "Conspiracy theory" in Russian Journal with criticism of theory of web brigades. [2]

Yusupovskiy's points included:

  • According to Yusupovskiy, an active forum participant, it's not the first time he's faced an unfair method of polemics, when a person with "liberal democratic views" accused one's opponent of being an FSB agent as a final argument. Yusupovskiy himself didn't take Web brigades theory seriously, "naively" considering that officers of GRU or FSB have more topical problems than "comparing virtual penises" with liberals and emigrants. His own experience at forums also did not give him a reason proving the theory.
  • Yusupovskiy considered Polyanskaya's article an interesting opportunity to draw a line of demarcation between analytics and its imitation. According to Yusupovskiy, authors of the article are obsessed with "a single but strong affection": to find a "Big Brother" beyond any phenomena not fitting their mindsets. Yusupovskiy called an article a classic illustration of reverted "masonic conspiracy".
  • Although Yusupovskiy himself has a list of claims against Russian security services and their presense in virtual world (as "according to statements of media every security service is busy in the Internet tracking terrorism, extremism, narcotic traffic, human trafficking and child pornography"), his claims are of different nature than those of Polyanskaya.
  • Criticising Polyanskaya's point that Russian forums after 9/11 show "outstanding level of malice and hatred of the USA, gloat, slander and inhumanity" as "undifferentiated assessment bordering lie and slander", Yusupovskiy noted that there is a difference between "dislike of hegemonic policy of the United States" at Russian forums and "quite friendly attitude towards usual Americans". Aggression and xenophobia don't characterize one side but are a common place of discussion (as Yusupovskiy suggested, illusion of anonymity and absence of censorship allows such stuff to be taken from subconsciousness that won't let to be spoken aloud by an internal censor otherwise). According to Yusupovskiy,

There's no lack of gloat of other kind — e.g. over Russian losses in Chechnya — or manifestations of brutal malice against "commies", "under men", Russians, Russia in posts of some our former compatriots from Israel, USA and other countries. And in a discussion of Palestineans or Arabs, "beasts", "not people", etc. are perhaps the most decent definitions given by many (not all) western participants of forums. It's specially touching to observe "briefings of hatred" (such things happen too), when Russian, Israeli and American patriots unanimously blame "Chechen-Palestinean-Islamic" terrorists...[2]

  • Commenting on the change of attitude of virtual masses in 1998-1999 authors evade any mention of the 1998 Russian financial collapse which "crowned liberal decade", preferring to blame "mysterious bad guys or Big Brother" for that change.

"About 80% of authors at all web forums very aggressively and uniformly blame the USA" as authors note, making a conclusion at the same time: "at a moment amount of totalitarian opinions at Russian forums became 60%-80%". Try to feel semantics of "extremal journalism" mindset and its logics of antithesises: either apology of Bush'es America while spitting on one's own country, either — totalitarian agentry. To illustrate "protective totalitarian" mindset, authors quote several malicious posts from masses of forum flapjaw: "Security services existed in all times, all democratic states of the West had, have and will be having them." Or: "FSB is the same security service like FBI in the USA or Mossad in Israel or Mi-6 in Great Britain". And etc. I understand that I risk of being called "totalitarian", but quite honestly I'm having difficulties to recognize signs of totalitarianism in the above quotes. As authors continue, "there are quite less real people with totalitarian views than one may consider after having a casual look on posts in any forum". Here one can only sigh: would they look on VCIOM or FOM opinion polls results, how Stalin's popularity doesn't diminish and even rises, how meaning and emotional connotations of the word "democrat" changed (from positive to negative), and would they seriously consider these tendencies of development of social consciousness...[2]

  • Authors exclude from their interpretation of events all other hypotheses, such as internet activity of a group of some "skinheads", nazbols or simply unliberal students; or hackers able to get IP addresses of their opponents.
  • According to Yusupovskiy, authors treat "independence of public opinion" in spirit of irreconcilable antagonism with "positive image of Russia".[2]

Yusupovskiy finally commented on Polyanskaya's article:

"We would never make our country's military organizations and security services work under the rule of law and legal control, if won't learn to recognize rationally and objectively their necessity and usefulness for the country, state, society and citizens. Sweeping defamation and intentional discreditation with the help of "arguments", which are obviously false, only contribute to the extrusion of security services outside of rule of law and instigates them to chaos".[2]

"LiveJournal fighters"

A member of National Bolshevik Party Roman Sadykhov claimed that he secretly infiltrated pro-Kremlin organizations of "LiveJournal fighters", allegedly directed and paid from the Kremlin and instructions given to them by Vladislav Surkov, a close aide of Vladimir Putin [6] Surkov allegedly called Livejournal "a very important sector of work" [7] and said that people's brains must be "nationalized".

Presence on Wikipedia

The Wikipedia's Arbitration Committee has unanimously found it to be a fact that some Wikipedia editors claim to be involved with security organs of the Russian state.[8] At the same time, the Committee did not find convincing evidence to verify their claims, but found them "disruptive and potentially intimidating to other editors".[8]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Virtual Eye of the Big Brother by Anna Polyanskaya, Andrei Krivov, and Ivan Lomko, Vestnik online, April 30, 2003
  2. ^ a b c d e f Conspiracy theory, by Alexander Yusupovskiy, Russian Journal, 25 April, 2003
  3. ^ Big groups in Russian society: analysis of prospects of organization of collective actions., by RIO-Center. (in Russian)
  4. ^ Template:Ru icon "They are killing Galina Starovoitova for the second time", by Anna Polyanskaya
  5. ^ Template:Ru icon Eye for an eye by Grigory Svirsky and Vladimur Bagryansky, publication of the Russian Center for Extreme Journalism [1]
  6. ^ Template:Ru icon Interview with Roman Sadykhov, grani.ru, 3 April, 2007
  7. ^ Military wing of Kremlin (Russian), The New Times, 19 March, 2007
  8. ^ a b Wikipedia Arbitration Committee, final decision in re Eastern European disputes (formerly known as Piotrus 2) 22 December 2008 23:59: Involvement by security organs