Little moderation, huge audiences and biddable owners make porn and gambling sites a safe haven from censors

Six weeks into the invasion of her country, Anastasiya Baydachenko made an emotional plea. She wanted money: not for weapons, not for clothes, but for adverts.

Vladimir Putin had been aggressively turning Russia’s internet into a fortress and, as a CEO at a Ukrainian digital marketing company, Baydachenko knew a way to infiltrate it. The plan was simple: buy ad space across websites in Russia and Belarus and use them to link to independent news on the war in Ukraine. The adverts could be direct, or they could be oblique, even titillating, to conceal their true nature and evade the censors.

Jemimah Steinfeld is editor-in-chief of Index on Censorship

Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a letter of up to 300 words to be considered for publication, email it to us at [email protected]

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.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

You May Also Like

Drug-spiking reports rise fivefold but proportion leading to charges fall

FoI requests reveal number of reports resulting in prosecution fell from 1…

The 10 best TV dramas coming this autumn

From the return of Happy Valley and The Crown to new shows…

Are Fancy Cocktails Worth the Fuss? A Guide to the WFH Happy Hour

For the recurring series, That’s Debatable, we take on a contentious issue…

Ruth Bader Ginsburg remembered by Lisa Beattie Frelinghuysen

15 March 1933 – 18 September 2020 The revered US supreme court…