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Censorship

Finnish Newspaper Uses Secret Room In Counter-Strike To Bypass Russian Censorship (theguardian.com) 59

An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Guardian: A Finnish newspaper is circumventing Russian media restrictions by hiding news reports about the war in Ukraine in an online game popular among Russian gamers. "While Helsingin Sanomat and other foreign independent media are blocked in Russia, online games have not been banned so far," said Antero Mukka, the editor-in-chief of Helsingin Sanomat. The newspaper was bypassing Russia's censorship through the first-person shooter game Counter-Strike, where gamers battle against each other as terrorists and counter-terrorists in timed matches. While the majority of matches are played on about a dozen official levels or maps released by the publisher Valve, players can also create custom maps that anyone can download and use. The newspaper's initiative was unveiled on World Press Freedom Day on Wednesday. "To underline press freedom, [in the game] we have now built a Slavic city, called Voyna, meaning war in Russian," Mukka said.

In the basement of one of the apartment buildings that make up the Soviet-inspired cityscape, Helsingin Sanomat hid a room where players can find Russian-language reporting by the newspaper's war correspondents in Ukraine. "In the room, you will find our documentation of what the reality of the war in Ukraine is," Mukka said. The walls of the digital room, lit up by red lights, are plastered with news articles and pictures reporting on events such as the massacres in the Ukrainian towns of Bucha and Irpin. On one of the walls, players can find a map of Ukraine that details reported attacks on the civilian population, while a Russian-language recording reading Helsingin Sanomat articles aloud plays in the background. This was "information that is not available from Russian state propaganda sources", Mukka said.
The map has been downloaded more than 2,000 times since its release on Monday. According to Mukka, an estimated 4 million Russians have played Counter-Strike.
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Finnish Newspaper Uses Secret Room In Counter-Strike To Bypass Russian Censorship

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  • by rogoshen1 ( 2922505 ) on Wednesday May 03, 2023 @05:08PM (#63495456)

    until now. good work, publicizing this!

    • Actually not a bad idea. I'd actually find it amusing if Putin banned video games. I think that would be a great way towards pushing the populace further towards boredom in the name of their Fuhrer that they love so much. See how much they love him afterwards, in case deindustrialization isn't enough.

      • That's assuming his own people don't bomb his ass [reuters.com] first. Someone obvious already doesn't like the guy. Unless you really believe Ukraine was behind it (hah).

        • The Russians released a movie showing the attack, and assured the world that Putin was unscathed.

          I however think the movie and the news do raise an important question: what exactly was Putin doing on the roof of the Kremlin in the middle of the night? Fixing some tiles maybe?

          • Trying to catch some fresh air, and he knows from experience how dangerous standing close to windows can be for high-profile Russians.

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      Yep, somebody seems to be _really_ stupid.

  • Amateurs! (Score:4, Funny)

    by locater16 ( 2326718 ) on Wednesday May 03, 2023 @05:12PM (#63495466)
    Absolute amateurs I tell you. If they really wanted to affect the war they'd put in a map showing that the Kremlin is B.
  • by GregMmm ( 5115215 ) on Wednesday May 03, 2023 @05:13PM (#63495468)

    There's a secret place and I hid kewl stuff there. Just don't tell anyone or th......

  • by Lumpy ( 12016 )

    Meh. It's not used anymore now.

  • by knoledgesponge ( 808547 ) on Wednesday May 03, 2023 @05:16PM (#63495480)
    Why would anyone believe news articles they found in a video game?
    • Banned ideas can't be exchanged via normal channels

      • It is hard enough, and nearly impossible to verify information when it isn’t banned.
        • And it will inevitably be harder when it is banned, particularly given people trying to evade such a ban might end up with a price on their head, so they have to retain at least some kind of anonymity.

      • by Luckyo ( 1726890 ) on Thursday May 04, 2023 @03:46AM (#63496298)

        Telegram exists. Pretty much all Russian and Ukrainians who are online use it. And they talk to each other all the time on it. Stuff like evidence about Bucha-style massacres of civilians, or the cluster mining of Donbas cities are there if people want to read about it.

        Most people already picked their side and automatically assume other party's claims are lies, and images and videos are doctored in some way. Or the worst outcome: "it's true and other side deserved it". You'll find all these opinions on Telegram nowadays. The war has been going on long enough at this point.

    • by znrt ( 2424692 )

      why would anyone believe news articles at all?

      [insert "one does not simply believe news articles" meme]

      • by jwhyche ( 6192 )

        Why not?. Many parts of video game are nothing more than a medium of information exchange. I got my first Gulf War reports over IRC when that shit started. I talk to friends all over the world in games. We exchange information while they are dancing around my smoking carcass in team fortress 2. It is just another avenue for information to flow out of.

        • by znrt ( 2424692 )

          you probably wanted to reply to the parent. i have no problem with getting info from heterogeneous sources. my point was that *any* information from anywhere is to be taken with a generous dose of salt and healthy skepticism in everyday life. in war, however, *any* information is to be expected to be at least 90% propaganda, and professional news outlets in particular are professional propagandists and very accomplished doing exactly that. so there's that :-)

          tl;dr: whatever the information it is you're give

    • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

      by Entrope ( 68843 )

      Why would anyone believe news articles they found in a video game?

      I know, right? Everyone knows that in Soviet Russia, games play YOU!

    • Why do people.believe articles they find on the internet? The answer is because its better to be misinformed than uninformed. The reality of the war in Ukraine is there is nothing but propaganda available.So people just believe the facts and narratives that support their world view. Like all modern media, this room is designed to appeal to a targeted audience that is looking for facts to support their preferred narrative.
    • Russians will believe anything.
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        As will Americans. Witness weapons of mass destruction that didn't exist, were used as an excuse for an unprovoked invasion of Iraq and a war that resulted in hundreds of thousands of Iraqi civilian casualties.
        • by vivian ( 156520 )

          I still never quite understood why an attack by a terrorist organization based in Afghanistan and orchestrated by a Saudi national warranted an attack on Iraq, but in all fairness, Saddam Hussein did spend a hell of a lot of time pretending to have weapons of mass destruction as a deterrent to Iran. I guess he just did that too well.

          • Weapons of mass destruction were just an excuse. Even if Saddam had weapons of mass destruction the US invasion was unprovoked. It was a war of conquest to overthrow Saddam, just like Libya and Syria. And the prize in all cases was control of oil.
    • Why would anyone believe news articles they found in a video game?

      The biggest reason would be that people who can access external news sources are able to vouch for the content.

      But beyond that, it would be for the same reason that people end up believing any information source:

      - It sounds reasonable.
      - It's internally consistent.
      - It doesn't try to rewrite it's own history.
      - When it's possible to externally verify the information it reports the facts it reports hold up.

      Propaganda outlets can certainly try to replicate some of those qualities but it's actually pretty hard.

      F

      • by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

        >Certainly, Bucha is just one incident

        It's actually not. The main problem is that there have been a lot of massacres of civilians like Bucha, and they all have the same circumstances. Russians roll in expecting liberator's welcome. They get lots of Ukrainian flag waving protesters in the streets. Soldiers start thinking that these are "nazi collaborators". Interrogators with Russian mafia background get called, and you get Bucha style massacres of protesters after they go home for the evening over a few

    • by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

      Why would anyone bother downloading a shitty map that basically has no userbase and that no one is playing on?

      It's a PR stunt from our main newspaper that has been having financial problems for quite a while at this point. And one of its main selling points in recent years has been it being very pro-NATO, and now that we're in NATO that just doesn't attract attention as well.

      I guess this is the next move.

  • by gosso920 ( 6330142 ) on Wednesday May 03, 2023 @05:18PM (#63495490)
    Loose tweets sink fleets.
  • In the show Occupied (also imitated: russia invades its neighbor: https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]) one of the faction uses a video game to communicate secretly in-game. I think it looked like DayZ.

    It's difficult to detect if you don't already know about it being used, and looks just like any other gaming communication. Easier of course once it's discovered, but if they wanted to ban it, they'd have to ban the whole game which would get plenty of people mad.

  • If they can spread porn in Valve games [steamcommunity.com] then they can spread dissident news articles as well!

  • When games seem to already provide one.
  • If there were no more Russian players I might actually enjoy the game again.
  • Russians will simply Rush B and not find the secret room.

As you will see, I told them, in no uncertain terms, to see Figure one. -- Dave "First Strike" Pare

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