Piracy & Social Change| Russian Media Piracy in the Context of Censoring Practices

Authors

  • Ilya Kiriya National Research University Higher School of Economics - Media Communications, Myasnitskaya Ulitsa, 20 , Moscow 101000, Russian Federation
  • Elena Sherstoboeva Assistant Professor, National Research University Higher School of Economics - Media Communications, Myasnitskaya Ulitsa, 20 , Moscow 101000, Russian Federation

Keywords:

media piracy, Russian media, censorship, regulation, antipiracy law

Abstract

This article suggests that media piracy in Russia is a cultural phenomenon caused largely by long-standing state ideological pressures. It also questions the common approach that considers the issue of piracy in economic or legal terms. In Russia, piracy historically concerned not only copyright issues but also censoring practices, and the sharing of pirated content is a socially acceptable remnant of Soviet times. This article uses an institutional approach to show how state anticopyright policy was used in the Soviet era to curtail freedom of speech. Analysis of the new antipiracy law reveals that current state policy intended to protect copyright may also be used to control content; moreover, this analysis concludes that the new policy is not likely to curb piracy.

Author Biographies

Ilya Kiriya, National Research University Higher School of Economics - Media Communications, Myasnitskaya Ulitsa, 20 , Moscow 101000, Russian Federation

Professor, National Research University Higher School of Economics - Media Communications

Elena Sherstoboeva, Assistant Professor, National Research University Higher School of Economics - Media Communications, Myasnitskaya Ulitsa, 20 , Moscow 101000, Russian Federation

Assistant Professor, National Research University Higher School of Economics - Media Communications

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Published

2015-03-26

Issue

Section

Special Sections