When, on March 6 of this year, TikTok announced that it was going to prohibit the publication of new content from Russia to protect the company and its users from the new “fake news” law instituted in the country, Natalia was surprised. . that the country’s social network had been filled with pro-war content literally overnight.
With the removal of all videos posted from foreign accounts and the ban on live broadcastsevery time this 25-year-old Russian opened the application, pro-Putin and pro-Kremlin content began to play, almost all the same, with the same songs, the same labels and the same arguments against Ukraine and the West.
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Source: Observadora