Friday, 29 March 2013

Deadly content: Facebook may be banned in Russia over suicide group

Russian media and communications watchdog, Roskomnadzor, has for the first time added one of Facebook pages to its blacklist of web sources with offensive content. This Russian language group called ‘Suicide school’ published placards, cartoons and “mainly humorous” advice on suicide, reported Izvestia daily.
Roskomnadzor confirmed to RT that it ruled that the social network should ban access to a page “on suicide.” The decision was based on expert conclusions, the regulator’s spokesperson Vladimir Pikov said.
Asked whether access to Facebook may be banned if it fails to fulfil the requirement, he added that Roskomnadzor will “bend every effort” to make sure that “interests of decent web users” in Russia are not damaged.
Under the law, the watchdog has to notify the internet service provider, which in turn informs the content provider of the problem.
The content provider has three days to delete the illegal information. Otherwise, the entire web source will be banned and all Russian providers will be obliged to block access to it.
When it comes to popular international web services, though, such problems normally do not arise, Russian Deputy Communications Minister Aleksey Volin told Izvestia newspaper.
Not a single foreign company that values its reputation would want anything in common with pornography, suicides and drugs,” he added.
The so-called Russian ‘internet blacklist’ went on-line on November 1 last year. It is a unified register of websites with content that cannot be distributed in Russia: child pornography, suicide instructions and promoting drugs. The “blacklist” is run by Roskomnadzor. Anyone can use the source to report on content they believe to be illegal and the watchdog is obliged to examine the information and decide whether it should be blocked.

The creation of the blacklist followed the signing of the law “On the Protection of Children from Information that is Harmful to their Health and Development,” in July 2012. The document stirred up a wave of bitter criticism among rights advocates, popular Russian websites and users, who feared that it would lead to censorship on the web.

Along with Roskomnadzor, the Interior Ministry, Federal Drug Control Service and Russia’s consumer rights watchdog (Rospotrebnadzor) can also rule on closing access to internet sources. As for other kinds of content, only a court can order it to be censored. 

Rospotrebnadzor is responsible for the protection of children from information about suicide. So far, it has recommended blocking about 1200 such websites or pages out of over 1600 it has examined.

YouTube, owned by Google, remains the leader of web sources that spread “banned information on committing suicide,” Rospotrebnadzor stated on Thursday. Given the popularity of the source, “it poses a serious threat to the health of children and teenagers,” the body added.

Earlier in March, the watchdog stated that around 40 % of all banned videos “were posted on YouTube video hosting.