Продолжаем принимать заявки на NEC.Сны — ещё три дня!
Готовьте тезисы в свободной форме (достаточно краткого описания того, о чем вы планируете говорить), отправляйте нам и обязательно приходите 29 ноября - 1 декабря рассказывать о снах и сновидениях, пить чай и кофе, смотреть лосей, слушать драгоценных коллег — мы вас очень ждем на новой тематической Never Ending Conference.
Читайте подробности на сайте. Оставляйте заявки в формедо конца пятницы 8 ноября.
Продолжаем принимать заявки на NEC.Сны — ещё три дня!
Готовьте тезисы в свободной форме (достаточно краткого описания того, о чем вы планируете говорить), отправляйте нам и обязательно приходите 29 ноября - 1 декабря рассказывать о снах и сновидениях, пить чай и кофе, смотреть лосей, слушать драгоценных коллег — мы вас очень ждем на новой тематической Never Ending Conference.
Читайте подробности на сайте. Оставляйте заявки в формедо конца пятницы 8 ноября.
Pavel Durov, Telegram's CEO, is known as "the Russian Mark Zuckerberg," for co-founding VKontakte, which is Russian for "in touch," a Facebook imitator that became the country's most popular social networking site. The company maintains that it cannot act against individual or group chats, which are “private amongst their participants,” but it will respond to requests in relation to sticker sets, channels and bots which are publicly available. During the invasion of Ukraine, Pavel Durov has wrestled with this issue a lot more prominently than he has before. Channels like Donbass Insider and Bellum Acta, as reported by Foreign Policy, started pumping out pro-Russian propaganda as the invasion began. So much so that the Ukrainian National Security and Defense Council issued a statement labeling which accounts are Russian-backed. Ukrainian officials, in potential violation of the Geneva Convention, have shared imagery of dead and captured Russian soldiers on the platform. Telegram was founded in 2013 by two Russian brothers, Nikolai and Pavel Durov. The account, "War on Fakes," was created on February 24, the same day Russian President Vladimir Putin announced a "special military operation" and troops began invading Ukraine. The page is rife with disinformation, according to The Atlantic Council's Digital Forensic Research Lab, which studies digital extremism and published a report examining the channel. The War on Fakes channel has repeatedly attempted to push conspiracies that footage from Ukraine is somehow being falsified. One post on the channel from February 24 claimed without evidence that a widely viewed photo of a Ukrainian woman injured in an airstrike in the city of Chuhuiv was doctored and that the woman was seen in a different photo days later without injuries. The post, which has over 600,000 views, also baselessly claimed that the woman's blood was actually makeup or grape juice.
from sa