Elisa Elamus Kanalite Nimekiri

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Elisa Elamus Kanalite Nimekiri ELISA ELAMUS KANALITE NIMEKIRI EESTI KANALID SUUR PAKETT VÄIKE PAKETT HD Elisa EE EE + ETV EE + + ETV� EE + + Kanal � EE + + TV� EE + + TV� EE + + Duo 4 EE + + Duo 5 EE + + Eesti kanal EE ETV+ RU + + �+ RU + + Duo � RU + SARJAD, FILMID Fox EN - RU EE + Fox Life EN - RU EE + Duo � EN - RU EE + + Duo � EN - RU EE + + TLC EN - RU EE + Dom Kino RU + CBS Reality EN - RU VIP Comedy EN - RU EE + Epic Drama EN - RU EE + FilmZone EN - RU EE + + FilmZone+ EN - RU EE + + AMC EN - RU Eurochannel EN EE + MUUSIKA KANALID MyHits EE + MTV ��’s EN MCM Top FR + Trace Urban EN + Mezzo FR MTV Europe EN Kanalid seisuga 10.08.2021 DOKUMENTAALID SUUR PAKETT VÄIKE PAKETT HD Discovery Channel EN - RU EE National Geographic EN - RU EE + History EN - RU EE + + BBC Earth EN + Investigation Discovery EN - RU EE + Animal Planet EN - RU + Viasat History EN - RU EE - FI + Viasat Explore EN - RU EE - FI + LASTE KANALID HD KidZone TV EE - RU + Nickelodeon EN - EE - RU KidZone+ EE - RU + Cartoon Network EN - RU UUDISED HD CNN EN BBC World News EN Euronews RU + SPORT HD Eurosport � EN - RU + Eurosport � EN - RU + Setanta Sports � EN - RU + VENE KANALID HD RTR-Planeta RU + PBK RU + REN TV Estonia RU + NTV Mir RU + TNT RU TNT� RU Pjatnitsa RU �+� RU ELUSTIIL HD HGTV EN EE + Travel Channel EN - RU + Food Network EN - RU + Kanalid seisuga 10.08.2021 TV� FILMI- JA SPORDIKANALID ESIMENE BALTI PAKETT TV� Film EN - RU EE PBK RU TV ���� EN - RU EE REN TV Estonia RU TV ���� Action EN - RU EE NTV Mir RU TV ���� Russkoe Kino RU Dom Kino RU TV� Sport EE Dom Kino Premium RU TV� Sport� EE Nashe Novoe Kino RU Indiskoe Kino RU Rodnoe Kino RU TV� FILMIKANALID Kinoseria RU Kinomiks RU TV� Film EN - RU EE Kinokomedia RU TV ���� EN - RU EE NTV Serial RU TV ���� Action EN - RU EE NTV Pravo RU RU TV ���� Russkoe Kino NTV Stil RU KVN TV RU TV� SPORDIKANALID Kuhnja TV RU Pojehali RU Life TV RU TV� Sport EE RU TV� Sport� EE Bobjor Vremja RU Telekafe RU DISNEY O! RU Karusel RU Muzõka Pervogo RU Disney Channel EN - FI FI Boks TV Pluss RU Disney Junior EN - FI FI M-� Global RU MUUSIKAKANALID EUROOPA JA UUDISED HD HD MTV ��’s EN BBC World News EN MCM Top FR + CNBC Europe EN Trace Urban EN + Bloomberg TV EN Mezzo FR RTL � DE MTV Europe EN Pro � DE MTV ��’s EN Arte FR - DE + MTV ��’s EN France � FR + MTV Hits EN France �� EN + Club MTV EN Canal �� Horas ES Stingray CMusic EN + TVEi ES Mezzo Live FRA + Rai � IT Stingray iContserts EN + Deutsche Welle EN + Kanalid seisuga 10.08.2021 VENE KANALID TV XXI RU Mir TV RU Kanal Ju RU Mir �� RU TVCi RU TBN RU �� Kanal UA Usadba RU Belarus �� RU TBN-Baltia RU RBK-TV RU Moja Planeta RU Ohota i rõbalka RU Nauka RU Futbol RU Life TV RU VALIKKANALID HD HD BBC Earth EN + Fight Sports EN + Travel Channel EN - RU + MTV ��’s EN Food Network EN - RU + MTV Live EN + Investigation Discovery EN - RU EE + Mezzo Live FR + DTX EN - RU + Stingray iConcerts FR + Discovery Science EN - RU YLE TV� FI FI Animal Planet EN - RU + YLE TV� FI FI Viasat Nature EN - RU EE RTL TV DE Nat Geo Wild EN - RU + RTL � DE FilmZone EN - RU EE + SAT � DE FilmZone+ EN - RU EE + Pro � DE Eurochannel EN EE + Arte FR - DE + KidZone+ EN - RU + France � FR + Deutsche Welle EN + France �� EN + Nick Jr. EN - RU TVEi ES NickToons EN - FI FI Rai � IT Setanta Sports � EN - RU + Fashion TV EN Kika DE TV� EE Bloomberg TV EN Dozhd RU Eurosport � EN - RU + - kanali heli - subtiitrite keel - DVB-T (antenniga nähtav) HD - kõrglahutusega televisioon elu on elamust väärt Kanalid seisuga 10.08.2021.
Recommended publications
  • Organisational Structure, Programme Production and Audience
    OBSERVATOIRE EUROPÉEN DE L'AUDIOVISUEL EUROPEAN AUDIOVISUAL OBSERVATORY EUROPÄISCHE AUDIOVISUELLE INFORMATIONSSTELLE http://www.obs.coe.int TELEVISION IN THE RUSSIAN FEDERATION: ORGANISATIONAL STRUCTURE, PROGRAMME PRODUCTION AND AUDIENCE March 2006 This report was prepared by Internews Russia for the European Audiovisual Observatory based on sources current as of December 2005. Authors: Anna Kachkaeva Ilya Kiriya Grigory Libergal Edited by Manana Aslamazyan and Gillian McCormack Media Law Consultant: Andrei Richter The analyses expressed in this report are the authors’ own opinions and cannot in any way be considered as representing the point of view of the European Audiovisual Observatory, its members and the Council of Europe. CONTENT INTRODUCTION ...........................................................................................................................................6 1. INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK........................................................................................................13 1.1. LEGISLATION ....................................................................................................................................13 1.1.1. Key Media Legislation and Its Problems .......................................................................... 13 1.1.2. Advertising ....................................................................................................................... 22 1.1.3. Copyright and Related Rights .........................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Legal Response to Propaganda Broadcasts Related to Crisis in and Around Ukraine, 2014–2015
    International Journal of Communication 9(2015), Feature 3125–3145 1932–8036/2015FEA0002 Legal Response to Propaganda Broadcasts Related to Crisis in and Around Ukraine, 2014–2015 ANDREI G. RICHTER1 Lomonosov Moscow State University, Russia Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) Keywords: freedom of expression, freedom of the media, propaganda for war, incitement to hatred, international standards, rule of law, national regulators, Russia, Ukraine, UK, Latvia, Lithuania, Moldova The conflict in and around Ukraine in 2014–2015 has brought about the spread of propaganda for war and hatred, especially on television and on the Internet. Research on the national laws and resolutions made by courts and independent media regulators that adjudicated complaints on Russian TV propaganda in Latvia, Lithuania, Moldova, the UK, and Ukraine shows that the national courts and regulators made few references to international norms, resting, rather, on domestically developed standards. As a result, there was a lack of solid grounds for stopping, blocking, and banning programs emanating from Russian media. In particular, there was no clear line between propaganda for war and hatred, proscribed under international norms, and legally protected Kremlin interpretation of the events in Ukraine. The comparative analysis of case law attempts to provide a modern rationale for regulation of propaganda for war and hatred and through it to offer relevant recommendations. Introduction The year 2014 marked the 100th anniversary of the beginning of World War I. It is worthwhile to recall that the Austro-Hungarian ultimatum to Serbia, which precipitated the start of the hostilities, included a major demand to stop nationalistic propaganda, as it flared the existing controversies.
    [Show full text]
  • U.S. Department of Justice FARA
    :U.S. Department of Justice National Securify Division Coun1,rinl1lligt"" om E.xpQrt Control & cliO/'I WasM~on, DC 2QSJO August 17, 2017 BY FEDEX Mikhail Solodovnikov General Manager T &R Productions 1325 G Stre~t, NW, Suite 250 Washington, DC. 20005 Re: Obligation ofT&R Productions, LLC, lo Register Under the Foreign Agents Registration Act Dear Mr. Solodovnikov: Based upon infonnation known to this Qffice, we have determined that T &R Productions, LLC ("T&R"), has an obligation to register pursuant to the Foreign Agents Registration Act of 1938, as amended, 22 ·u.s.C. §§ 611-621 (1995) ("FARA" or the "Act''). T&R' s obligalion to register arises from its political activities in the United States on behalf of RT and TV-Novosti, both foreign principals under the Act and proxies o f the Russian Government, and its related work within the United States as a publicity agent and infonnation-service employee of TV­ Novosti. FARA The purpose of FARA is to inform the American public of the activities of agents working for foreign principals to influence U.S. Government officials and/or the American public with reference to the domestic or foreign policies of the United States, or with reference to the political or public interests, policies, or relations of a foreign country or foreign political party. The term "foreign principal" includes "a government of a foreign country" and "a partnership, association, corporation, organization, or other comhination of persons organized under the Jaws of or having its principal place of business in a foreign country." 22 U.S.C.
    [Show full text]
  • (Stop a Douchebag) Vigilantes in Russia
    © Laboratorium: Russian Review of Social Research. 2019. 11(3):16–45 16 DOI: 10.25285/2078-1938-2019-11-3-16-45 EROES OR HOOLIGANS? HMEDIA PORTRAYAL OF STOPXAM (STOP A DOUCHEBAG) VIGILANTES IN RUSSIA Rashid Gabdulhakov Rashid Gabdulhakov, Department of Media and Communication, Erasmus University Rotterdam. Address for correspondence: Erasmus University Rotterdam, Postbus 1738, 3000 DR Rotterdam, Netherlands. [email protected]. The author expresses sincere gratitude to the informants for their contributions, as well as to peer reviewers and editors of this special issue for their valuable feed- back. This work was supported by the Dutch Research Council (NWO) project num- ber 276-45-004. Several state-supported digital vigilante groups emerged in Russia at the downturn of the pro-Kremlin youth group Nashi (Ours), when its former commissars formed issue- specific movements to counter perceived legal and moral offences through exposure of targets on social media. One of such groups is StopXam (Stop a Douchebag), specializ- ing in road-traffic and parking violations. StopXam participants confront the drivers and retaliate by placing stickers that read “I spit on everyone I drive where I want” on the targets’ windshields. The retaliation is often accompanied by verbal and physical fighting; the process is filmed, edited, and shared on YouTube, receiving millions of views. While digital media made such practices possible, traditional broadcasters maintain significance in rendering meaning to the phenomenon of vigilantism and in framing vigilantes, their targets, police, and other actors. As the existing literature on digital vigilantism is predominantly focused on digital media affordances, this article aims to address this gap through a qualitative analysis of traditional media coverage of StopXam.
    [Show full text]
  • Elisa Elamus Kanalipaketid Kanalid Seisuga 27.02.2019
    Elisa Elamus kanalipaketid kanalid seisuga 27.02.2019 XLR-pakett LR-pakett MR-pakett SR-pakett KANALI KANALI KANALI NIMI AUDIO SUBTIITRID KANALI NIMI AUDIO SUBTIITRID NR NR ETV HD 1 EST NTV Mir 63 RUS TV3 3 EST TV3+ 66 RUS ETV2 HD 4 EST Orsent TV 69 RUS TV6 5 EST TVN 70 RUS Tallinna TV HD 14 EST STS 71 RUS Cartoon Network 17 ENG; RUS Mir TV 80 RUS KidZone TV 20 EST; RUS Dom kino 87 RUS Euronews HD 21 ENG TNT4 90 RUS CNN 22 ENG TNT 93 RUS CNBC Europe 32 ENG Russki Illusion 99 RUS Deutsche Welle 56 ENG Pjatnitsa 117 RUS ETV+ HD 59 RUS TBN 300 EST PBK 60 RUS Meeleolukanal HD 300 EST RTR-Planeta 61 RUS Euronews 704 RUS REN TV Estonia 62 RUS Fox Life 8 ENG; RUS EST Alo TV 46 EST Fox 9 ENG; RUS EST MyHits HD 47 EST Sony Channel HD 10 ENG; RUS EST VH 1 48 ENG Eurosport 1 28 ENG; RUS TV7 57 EST Viasat History HD 33 ENG; RUS EST; FIN; LAT RTVi 65 RUS Discovery Channel 37 ENG; RUS EST TV XXI 67 RUS Animal Planet 38 ENG; RUS RTVi Nashe Kino 68 RUS Travel Channel 39 ENG; RUS EST; FIN Detski Mir 78 RUS Food Network 40 ENG; RUS EST Nostalgia 83 RUS Fine Living 43 ENG; RUS Sony Turbo HD 11 ENG; RUS Oruzie 97 RUS FilmZone HD 12 ENG; RUS AVTO 24 98 RUS FilmZone+ HD 13 ENG; RUS Mir 24 101 RUS TLC 15 ENG; RUS 1+1 International 103 UKR AMC 16 ENG; RUS Kto jest kto 106 RUS Nickelodeon 18 ENG; EST; RUS Shanson TV 108 RUS Pingviniukas 19 EST; RUS ZHARA 109 RUS Eurosport 2 29 ENG; RUS Kuhnja TV 110 RUS Setanta Sports 31 ENG; RUS Kinoseria 111 RUS Viasat Explore 34 ENG; RUS EST; FIN; LAT Voprosõ i Otvetõ 114 RUS National Geographic 36 ENG; RUS EST Psihologia 21 115 RUS ID Xtra 41 ENG; RUS EST Zdorovoe TV 119 RUS CBS Reality 42 ENG; RUS Domashnie zivotnõe 120 RUS Mezzo 45 FRA Zagorodnaja zhizn 121 RUS MTV Europe 51 ENG Usadba 122 RUS Eurochannel HD 52 ENG Illusion+ 123 RUS Life TV 58 RUS Inter+ 125 RUS TVCi 64 RUS Kinomedia 126 RUS Kanal Ju 73 RUS JCTV 127 ENG 24 Kanal 74 UKR TBN-Baltia HD 128 RUS Belarus 24 HD 75 RUS Tiji 131 RUS Nick Jr.
    [Show full text]
  • Russian Media in Teleological Perspective As a Methodological Challenge: Reconstructing Goals for Understanding Effects
    RUSSIAN MEDIA IN TELEOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVE AS A METHODOLOGICAL CHALLENGE: RECONSTRUCTING GOALS FOR UNDERSTANDING EFFECTS РОССИЙСКИЕ СМИ В ТЕЛЕОЛОГИЧЕСКОЙ ПЕРСПЕКТИВЕ КАК МЕТОДОЛОГИЧЕСКИЙ ВЫЗОВ: РЕКОНСТРУКЦИЯ ЦЕЛЕЙ ДЛЯ ПОНИМАНИЯ ЭФФЕКТОВ Viktor M. Khroul, PhD in Philology, Associate Professor, Chair of Sociology of Mass Communications, Faculty of Journalism, Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia [email protected] Виктор Михайлович Хруль, кандидат филологических наук, доцент, кафедра социологии массовых коммуникаций, факультет журналистики, Московский государственный университет имени М. В. Ломоносова, Москва, Россия [email protected] The media effects studies are more precise in a teleological perspective implying that the effects are analyzed in terms of goals. The teleological approach to journalism must be based on an analysis of the transparency and regularity of the goal formation process, the level of consistency and hierarchicality of goals and their compliance with the social mission of the media. The author considers it useful to engage in an interdisciplinary cooperation in the area of teleological studies of journalism and mass media with sociologists, linguists and psychologists. 191 Key words: journalism, goals, teleological model, social mission, intent analysis. Изучение эффектов деятельности СМИ корректно про- водить с учетом поставленных целей, то есть в телеологи- ческой перспективе. Телеологический подход к журналисти- ке подразумевает анализ степени прозрачности и систем- ности процесса целеполагания, уровня согласованности и иерархичности целей, а также их соответствие социальной миссии СМИ. Автор полагает, что плодотворность тако- го подхода во многом зависит от состояния междисципли- нарного сотрудничества в области исследований эффектов СМИ, взаимодействия исследователей медиа с социолога- ми, лингвистами и психологами, в частности, при развитии метода интент-анализа. Ключевые слова: журналистика, цели, телеологический подход, социальная миссия, интент-анализ.
    [Show full text]
  • TV News Channels in Europe: Offer, Establishment and Ownership European Audiovisual Observatory (Council of Europe), Strasbourg, 2018
    TV news channels in Europe: Offer, establishment and ownership TV news channels in Europe: Offer, establishment and ownership European Audiovisual Observatory (Council of Europe), Strasbourg, 2018 Director of publication Susanne Nikoltchev, Executive Director Editorial supervision Gilles Fontaine, Head of Department for Market Information Author Laura Ene, Analyst European Television and On-demand Audiovisual Market European Audiovisual Observatory Proofreading Anthony A. Mills Translations Sonja Schmidt, Marco Polo Sarl Press and Public Relations – Alison Hindhaugh, [email protected] European Audiovisual Observatory Publisher European Audiovisual Observatory 76 Allée de la Robertsau, 67000 Strasbourg, France Tel.: +33 (0)3 90 21 60 00 Fax. : +33 (0)3 90 21 60 19 [email protected] http://www.obs.coe.int Cover layout – ALTRAN, Neuilly-sur-Seine, France Please quote this publication as Ene L., TV news channels in Europe: Offer, establishment and ownership, European Audiovisual Observatory, Strasbourg, 2018 © European Audiovisual Observatory (Council of Europe), Strasbourg, July 2018 If you wish to reproduce tables or graphs contained in this publication please contact the European Audiovisual Observatory for prior approval. Opinions expressed in this publication are personal and do not necessarily represent the view of the European Audiovisual Observatory, its members or the Council of Europe. TV news channels in Europe: Offer, establishment and ownership Laura Ene Table of contents 1. Key findings ......................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Re-Evaluating the Public Sphere in Russia: Case Studies of Two Ngos
    Re-Evaluating the Public Sphere in Russia: Case Studies of Two NGOs THESIS Presented in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Master of Arts in the Graduate School of The Ohio State University By Alex Gregory Radsky Graduate Program in Slavic and East European Studies The Ohio State University 2013 Master's Examination Committee: Morgan Liu, Advisor Nick Breyfogle Copyright by Alex Radsky 2013 Abstract This thesis explores two Russian non-governmental organizations (NGOs), the Union of Committees of Soldiers’ Mothers (UCSMR) and the Interregional Association of Human Rights Organizations AGORA (Agora). These two case studies apply the public sphere as a theoretical lens in an innovative way in order to rethink Russian civil society. The interactions of these two NGOs with state institutions show that Russia’s NGOs are important social actors who are actively negotiating and contesting the borders between civil and political action. Operating on the border of state and society, these two NGOs’ depicts a blurry boundary between social actors and a non-unitary state. In order to challenge the boundaries between the political and the civic, Agora and UCSMR’s negotiate through a process of creating public spheres, or pluralizing the voices contesting a certain institution or idea. In these cases, the UCSMR has brought the discourse of human rights to the military and Agora has done the same within the legal system. This contested negotiation occurs in an overlapping field of state institutions, individuals, and social organizations through both cooperation and contestation. These public spheres encompass multiple layers of the state, and play an important role in negotiating the boundaries of political action in Russian society.
    [Show full text]
  • The Power and Limits of Russia's Strategic Narrative in Ukraine
    View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Royal Holloway - Pure This is the final pre-publication version of a manuscript accepted by Perspectives on Politics. Please cite the published version. All tables are in a separate file. The Power and Limits of Russia’s Strategic Narrative in Ukraine: The Role of Linkage Dr Joanna Szostek Marie Skłodowska-Curie Fellow, Royal Holloway, University of London ABSTRACT: Governments project strategic narratives about international affairs, hoping thereby to shape the perceptions and behaviour of foreign audiences. If individuals encounter incompatible narratives projected by different states, how can their acceptance of one narrative over another be explained? This article suggests that support for the strategic narrative of a foreign government is more likely when there is social and communicative linkage at the individual level, i.e. when an individual maintains personal and cultural connections to the foreign state through regular travel, media consumption, religious attendance and conversations with friends or relatives. The role of linkage is demonstrated in Ukraine, where a ‘pro-Russian, anti-Western’ narrative projected from Moscow has been competing against a ‘pro-Western, anti- Russian’ narrative projected from Kyiv. Previous accounts of international persuasion have been framed in terms of a state’s resources producing advantageous ‘soft power’. However, this article proposes a shift in focus: from the resources states have to what individuals do to maintain social and communicative ties via which ideas cross borders. Such linkage can in fact have mixed consequences for the states involved, as the Ukrainian case illustrates.
    [Show full text]
  • Computational Propaganda in Russia: the Origins of Digital Misinformation
    Working Paper No. 2017.3 Computational Propaganda in Russia: The Origins of Digital Misinformation Sergey Sanovich, New York University 1 Table of Contents Abstract ............................................................................................................................................................... 3 Introduction.......................................................................................................................................................... 3 Domestic Origins of Russian Foreign Digital Propaganda ......................................................................... 5 Identifying Russian Bots on Twitter .............................................................................................................. 13 Conclusion ......................................................................................................................................................... 15 Author Acknowledgements ............................................................................................................................ 17 About the Author ............................................................................................................................................. 17 References ........................................................................................................................................................ 18 Citation ............................................................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • 1.Russian Information Weapons; 2.Baltic Department of Defense, Or the US Defenses (Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania) Against Government
    Sponsor: USEUCOM Contract No.: W56KGU-17-C-0010 Project No.: 0719S120 The views expressed in this document are those of the author Three Discussions of Russian Concepts: and do not reflect the official policy or position of MITRE, the 1.Russian Information Weapons; 2.Baltic Department of Defense, or the US Defenses (Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania) against government. Russian Propaganda; and 3.Russia’s Development of Non-Lethal Weapons Author: Timothy Thomas March 2020 Approved for Public Release: Distribution Unlimited. Case Numbers 20-0235; 20-0050; 20-0051; 19-3194; and 20-0145. ©2020 The MITRE Corporation. All rights reserved. McClean, VA 1 FOREWORD Russia has long been captivated by the power of information as a weapon, most notably in a historical sense using propaganda to influence and persuade audiences. With the onset of the information age, the concept’s development and application increased dramatically. The power of information-technologies when applied to weaponry increased the latter’s capabilities due to increased reconnaissance and precision applications. The power of social media was used to influence populations both at home and abroad. Both developments fit perfectly into Russia’s information warfare concept, whose two aspects are information-technical and information-psychological capabilities. Information’s universality, covertness, variety of software and hardware forms and implementation, efficiency of use when choosing a time and place of employment, and, finally, cost effectiveness make it a formidable commodity when assessed as weaponry. Russian efforts to define and use IWes are well documented. In the 1990s there were efforts to define information weapons (IWes) at the United Nations, efforts that failed.
    [Show full text]
  • Countering Russian Social Media Influence
    Countering Russian Social Media Influence Elizabeth Bodine-Baron, Todd C. Helmus, Andrew Radin, Elina Treyger C O R P O R A T I O N For more information on this publication, visit www.rand.org/t/RR2740 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available for this publication. ISBN: 978-1-9774-0182-3 Published by the RAND Corporation, Santa Monica, Calif. © Copyright 2018 RAND Corporation R® is a registered trademark. Limited Print and Electronic Distribution Rights This document and trademark(s) contained herein are protected by law. This representation of RAND intellectual property is provided for noncommercial use only. Unauthorized posting of this publication online is prohibited. Permission is given to duplicate this document for personal use only, as long as it is unaltered and complete. Permission is required from RAND to reproduce, or reuse in another form, any of its research documents for commercial use. For information on reprint and linking permissions, please visit www.rand.org/pubs/permissions. The RAND Corporation is a research organization that develops solutions to public policy challenges to help make communities throughout the world safer and more secure, healthier and more prosperous. RAND is nonprofit, nonpartisan, and committed to the public interest. RAND’s publications do not necessarily reflect the opinions of its research clients and sponsors. Support RAND Make a tax-deductible charitable contribution at www.rand.org/giving/contribute www.rand.org Preface This report documents research and analysis conducted as part of a project entitled Combatting Russian Social Media Information Opera- tions in the United States. The purpose of this project was to formulate specific and actionable approaches and policies for countering Russian disinformation on social media inside the United States.
    [Show full text]