The Russian Invasion of Ukraine
To Generations Zās and Millennials born after the Cold War like myself, Russiaās invasion of Ukraine looks like an ancient relic from a dark and chilling past in human history. Considering the prosperity that I and everyone I know personally was born into, it seems absurd to sacrifice human lives for a country to extend its land borders. With the globalization, the ubiquitous internet, and the digital opportunities that exist today, the very idea of land borders is insignificant.
However, against all anticipation, the world is now witnessing a new WW2 scenario close at hand. It is playing out in my East European backyard. The NATO countries are prevented from interfering too much in the conflict due to Russiaās largest-in-the-world nuclear arsenal.[1]Ā The slightest risk of a nuclear battle between East and West compels countries to err on the side of caution. As a result, principles of public international law are difficult to enforce ā even when we are witnessing a crime against humanity taking place.
Beyond imposing financial sanctions on Russia, and providing humanitarian support and military equipment to Ukraine, there are massive efforts from the global civilization to support Ukraine against the attack. Wars of the past have been broadcasted on radio transmissions and flow- tv, but web 2.0 and web 3.0 provide a two-way street communication channel with a global reach.
Global society seems to agree that Russiaās military aggression against Ukraine is based on an antiquated, black-and-white world view that belongs nowhere in the 21st Century. On the other hand, Ukraine is considered to be one of the most tech-savvy nations in the world. And while Russian media outlets are changing facts about the war, and shielding their citizens from Facebook, Twitter, and international news portals[2], Ukraine is backed by the global community thanks to modern-day IT.
In this post, I will run through some of the ways that IT is being leveraged in support of Ukraine. This post was in part inspired by a tweet fromĀ Whitney Merrill
How Information Technology Is Leveraged to Support Ukraine
First of all, social media providers and users are helping to silence and expose Russiaās propaganda apparatus. While Russian television channels are showing chat shows, old movies, and debates with experts that down-play or deny that an invasion is taking place[3], the global information ecosystem helps to spread reliable information from trusted news sources.
State-owned media outlets like RT (Russia Today) and Sputnik areĀ blockedĀ from various social media sites such as Facebook, YouTube, and TikTok to avoid the spread of fake news.
Facebook and Twitter areĀ increasing their focusĀ on systematic misinformation campaigns whereĀ fake accounts with GAN-generated photosĀ post misleading content to sway public opinion.
Google follows in the footsteps of Twitter and Snapchat andĀ pausesĀ all advertisement in Russia.
The censorship of intentionally misleading information ensures a more factful news flow. But the true power that social media holds over printed magazines and other one-sided communication channels is the reach, scope, and depth of how a message can spread.
Just think of Ukraineās president, Volodymyr Zelenskyyās, powerfulĀ speech to the Russian people. Or hisĀ request on TwitterĀ for civilians to defend the country. Thanks to the global communication networks, these messages can reach tens of millions of people within hours.
Other prominent examples of important messages that are spread are the Ukrainian leadersāĀ attempt to gather digital talentsĀ for an IT army, theirĀ official invitationĀ for foreigners to join the Ukrainian defense forces, theirĀ call for donationsĀ in Bitcoin, Ethereum, and USTD, andĀ plea to private companies for help.
Among many others, Elon Musk has answered the calls by providing Ukraine withĀ access to Starlink, the worldās fastest satellite internet system, within 12 hours afterĀ he was asked toĀ by the Ukrainian Vice Prime Minister.
Never have a war been so well-documented, from hour to hour and minute to minute. Almost everything is being tracked in full publicity. Like theĀ amount of crypto donationsĀ to Ukraine,Ā military incidentsĀ on a crowd-funded online map, and the whereabouts ofĀ Russian oligarchsā private jets.
The appĀ StandWithUkraineĀ is a platform that gathers all kinds of resources to support Ukraine, including funds, medical supplies, shelter, asylum requests, journalism efforts, technology, legal advice, and information about local peaceful protests.[4]
Similarly,Ā TechforUkraineĀ is helping to connect humans in tech with humans in need. OnĀ LeaveUkraine.comĀ the non-for-profit organization offers border info, a map of available locations for food and shelter, missile alerts, and more.
There are so many initiatives going on. Volunteer editorsĀ use WikipediaĀ to cover events as they unfold. LA TimesĀ makes TikTok videosĀ on how to prepare Molotov cocktails. Airbnb isĀ aiming to hostĀ up to 100.00 Ukrainian refugees for free.Ā Spotify playlistsĀ with support music for Ukraine are being made. Russian soldiers areĀ looking for love on Tinder, and OnlyFans modelĀ gives out discountsĀ to Ukrainian clients.
Memes, GIFs, tweets, videos, images, live streams are flooding the web to bring every personās attention to the crisis. And people are helping however they can. The so-called āattention economyā may finally serve a noble, humanitarian purpose.
Private messaging apps like WhatsApp, Signal, and Telegram are widely used for secure end-to-end encrypted communication for people in Ukraine (although Telegram is not end-to-end encrypted by default[5]). Also, the use of privacy-preserving tools such asĀ Tor ProjectĀ that helps with online anonymity has recently seen aĀ spike in Ukraine.
And then we have the blockchain and Web 3.0 initiatives.
As Jesus said:[6]
āDo not lay up for yourselves treasures on earth, where moth and rust destroy and where thieves break in and steal, but lay up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where neither moth nor rust destroys and where thieves do not break in and steal.ā
Bitcoin and other digital currencies are intangible assets that circumvent the banks. They cannot be destroyed by moths and rust or stolen by thieves. This tweet illustrates what I mean:
Huge efforts from the web 3.0 community are made to raise funds for Ukrainian organizations and people. Prominent examples of initiatives areĀ UkraineDAO,Ā RELI3F, andĀ unchain.fund.
Conclusion
In conclusion, Ukraine is supported financially, humanitarianly, and with equipment from countries, companies, and civilians. They are attracting some of the best freedom fighters of the world and have the full moral support of the international communication system.
On the other side, Russia as a nation is being ācancelledā. No democratic country wants to have anything to do with them. I donāt think itās much different from how āthe woke movementā has cance led predatory celebrities, offensive comedians, and certain historical figures of the past. The phenomenon of ācancel cultureā is now taking on an entire country. As a result, I believe that Russia will be ostracized and its past great achievement will be overshadowed by dread and distaste from the international community, perhaps for decades to come.
[1]Ā Zack Beauchamp (Feb 25, 2022) Why the US wonāt send troops to Ukraine ->Ā https://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2022/2/25/22949351/ukraine-russia-us-troops-no-fly-zone-nuclear-weaponsĀ (27ā02ā2022).
[2]Ā https://indianexpress.com/article/technology/tech-news-technology/russia-ukraine-crisis-russia-blocks-access-to-twitter-facebook-news-portals-7800423/Ā (Twitter) (28ā02ā2022).
[3]Ā Andrew Roth (The Guardian 26. Feb), āDonāt call it a warā ā propaganda filters the truth about Ukraine on Russian media ->Ā https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/feb/26/propaganda-filters-truth-ukraine-war-russian-media
[4]Ā Daria Kulish (March 2022), Tech Stands with Ukraine: Top 15 Companies Supporting Ukraine Following Russiaās invasionĀ https://hackernoon.com/tech-stands-with-ukraine-top-15-companies-supporting-ukraine-following-russias-invasion
[5]Ā https://mashable.com/article/russia-telegram-encryptionĀ (05ā03ā2022).
[6]Ā Matthew 6:19ā21.