Inside Russia's cartoonish propaganda website made for kids
source link: https://www.fastcompany.com/90780446/inside-russias-cartoonish-propaganda-website-made-for-kids
Go to the source link to view the article. You can view the picture content, updated content and better typesetting reading experience. If the link is broken, please click the button below to view the snapshot at that time.
Inside Russia’s cartoonish propaganda website made for kids
Aptly named kids.kremlin.ru, the presidential website uses illustrations, gamification, and a heavy dose of fearmongering to indoctrinate young Russians.
It has been almost six months since the world watched in horror as Russia invaded Ukraine, under the false pretext of protecting Russia from potential aggression. But Russia’s very own presidential website may have been laying the groundwork for years.
Aptly named kids.kremlin.ru, the website is a frightening example of internet propaganda designed to indoctrinate children. Dripping with cartoonish illustrations, gamification, and nationalist information about the country’s constitution—or about who protects the citizens’ rights “when the president is sleeping“—it is seemingly designed to prep children for war from their earliest days.
[Screenshot: kremlin.ru]The website is split into several self-aggrandizing sections, including a sensationalized crash course on WWII that unfolds like a story on a film roll. “For four years our country lived a harsh and terrible military life,” one of the chapters reads when I toggle Google Translate. “Imagine that strangers, armed to the teeth, speaking an incomprehensible language, impudent soldiers suddenly burst into your city or your village, enter your house, do what they want, and there is no one to protect you,” says another.
[Screenshot: kremlin.ru]This messaging is packaged to look like a board game with action figures and animations. Its logo consists of a castle painted in primary colors, and even the loading bar resembles colorful candy. It almost feels like a video game at times, as evidenced by the character you choose on the homepage to “guide” you through the site. “It looks a bit like Minecraft; it’s meant to be a game for kids,” says Woolley.
[Screenshot: kremlin.ru]Judging from the Wayback Machine, the website has been live since at least 2009, but the first mention of the Army segment dates back to 2018. For Woolley, the timing isn’t coincidental: He points out that by 2018, Russia had built up a large military presence in Crimea and was facing international pressure to withdraw.
“Russian citizens were being exposed to a great deal of anti-Russian sentiment online, despite the Kremlin’s attempts to control access to foreign information and news,” says Woolley. Perhaps the government added the section to legitimize Russia’s military aggression and convince children that the occupation of Crimea—and now Ukraine—is valid.
[Screenshot: kremlin.ru]Russia (and before that, the Soviet Union) has a long history of swaying young people under the guise of education, cultivating them to be part of the country’s propaganda efforts—or as Woolley calls it, “part of the machine of Russia against the world.” These include youth army training camps, nationalist summer camps, and even “camps where [Russia] brings in kids to learn how to code or how to use social media in ways that are oriented toward manipulating public opinion and spreading their own form of propaganda,” adds Woolley.Ultimately, these efforts are all about standing by and preparing young Russians to fight, whether that is in the traditional warfare sense, or through social media and spreading misinformation on the internet. The latter could have particularly terrible ramifications.
“If it’s the government that’s spreading the propaganda directly, that gets caught by Facebook, Twitter, or YouTube very quickly,” says Woolley. “But if it’s kids who are spreading governmental content on their own, then that’s much more potent, and much more difficult to delete because it might be considered to be free speech.”
Recommend
About Joyk
Aggregate valuable and interesting links.
Joyk means Joy of geeK