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The Military The Internet

Founder of Russia's Largest Internet Company Slams 'Barbaric' Invasion of Ukraine (cnn.com) 93

An anonymous reader quotes a report from CNN: The founder and former CEO of Russia's largest internet company, Arkady Volozh, has slammed Vladimir Putin's "barbaric" war in Ukraine, becoming one of the most prominent Russian businessmen to express criticism of what Russia still calls euphemistically its "special military operation." "I've been asked a lot of questions over the past year, and especially a lot of them came up this week. I would like to clarify my position," he said in a statement released to the media. "I am totally against Russia's barbaric invasion of Ukraine, where I, like many, have friends and relatives. I am horrified by the fact that every day bombs fly into the homes of Ukrainians," said Volozh, describing himself "as a "Kazakhstan-born, Israeli tech entrepreneur, computer scientist, investor, and philanthropist." "Despite the fact that I have not lived in Russia since 2014, I understand that I also have a share of responsibility for the actions of the country," he added. "There were many reasons why I had to remain silent. You can argue about the timeliness of my statement, but not about its substance. I am against war."

In June 2022, Volozh quit as CEO of Yandex (YNDX), which also operates Russia's most popular search engine, after he was sanctioned by the European Union over Russia's actions in Ukraine. "Volozh is a leading businessperson involved in economic sectors providing a substantial source of revenue to the Government of the Russian Federation, which is responsible for the annexation of Crimea and the destabilization of Ukraine," the EU said. "Yandex is also responsible for promoting State media and narratives in its search results, and de-ranking and removing content critical of the Kremlin, such as content related to Russia's war of aggression against Ukraine." In his statement, Volozh said after moving to Israel in 2014, he has been working on developing Yandex's international projects. "But in February 2022, the world changed, and I realized that my story with Yandex was over."

"After the outbreak of the war, I focused on supporting talented Russian engineers who decided to leave the country and start a new life. It turned out to be a difficult task that required a lot of effort, attention and caution," he said. "Now these people are outside of Russia and can start doing something new in the most advanced areas of technology. They will be of great benefit to the countries where they remain," he added. Volozh went on to say that when Yandex was created, "We believed that we were building a new Russia -- an open, progressive, integrated into the global economy, known in the world not only for its raw materials." However, "over time, it became clear that Russia was in no hurry to become part of the global world. At the same time, the pressure on the company grew," he said. "But we did not give up, we did our best despite the external conditions. Has it always been possible to find the right balance? Now, looking back, it is clear that something could have been done differently."

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Founder of Russia's Largest Internet Company Slams 'Barbaric' Invasion of Ukraine

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday August 11, 2023 @10:53PM (#63761270)

    someone's going to fall out a window, eh?

    • they have poisons that can look like an heart attract

      • by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Friday August 11, 2023 @11:46PM (#63761324)

        they have poisons that can look like an heart attract

        I don't think the Little Spymaster likes his agents using those sorts of poisons. He prefers stuff like Polonium, where it's bloody obvious to everyone that the person was targeted and killed. He wants people to know he's responsible for someone's death - even if he officially denies it in a wink, wink, nudge, nudge sort of way.

        • by sg_oneill ( 159032 ) on Saturday August 12, 2023 @12:24AM (#63761370)

          Yeah more effective. Its one thing to silence one person, when theres near infinite voices to replace them. But if you can intimidate 140mil other russians from speaking up, well thats real power isn't it?

          • The real power isn't intimidating 140 million Russians from speaking up, the power is in getting the 140 million Russians intimidating each other from speaking up! Stalin would be proud of his mafia protege.

            • The real power isn't intimidating 140 million Russians from speaking up, the power is in getting the 140 million Russians intimidating each other from speaking up! Stalin would be proud of his mafia protege.

              REAL power is getting them to intimidate themselves.

              Sociologist Michelle Foucaults second most famous idea (after "Death of the author") is The Panopticon, and its somewhat misunderstood. People take the metaphor to just mean "If you surveil everyone then everyone will obey you out of fear". But its much

        • they have poisons that can look like an heart attract

          I don't think the Little Spymaster likes his agents using those sorts of poisons. He prefers stuff like Polonium, where it's bloody obvious to everyone that the person was targeted and killed. He wants people to know he's responsible for someone's death - even if he officially denies it in a wink, wink, nudge, nudge sort of way.

          5 years ago he might have, but famous Russians speaking out has become a lot more common. At this point I think trying to knock one off as an example breeds more public outrage.

          Of course, the fact that it's becoming safe for famous Russians, particularly overseas ones to show dissident, hasn't stopped certain famous Putin sycophants living in the US from publicly showing their support [wikipedia.org].

        • Yup, you want the entire world to know that you did it but they can't prove it. Plus it has to be painful, frightening, and a deterrent to all other former cronies. Polonium is perfect.

      • He will be missed.

      • they have poisons that can look like an heart attract

        Why would Putin want a death to look natural? What sort of a message does that send?

        • by fazig ( 2909523 )
          Off the top of my head, given how Russia seems to become a diarchy of the state and the Eastern Orthodox Church, the message could be: "Allmight God kills all my enemies".
          • by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Saturday August 12, 2023 @02:40AM (#63761540)

            And the Lord answered "I'm not your bitch, do your own dirty work!"

          • by hawk ( 1151 )

            >a diarchy of the state and the Eastern Orthodox Church,

            1) Not the Eastern Orthodox Church, but the Russian Orthodox Church. there are a dozen or so canonical Orthodox Churches, of which the ROC is by far the largest.

            2) not a diarchy at all. The ROC was effectively absorbed as part of the bureaucracy of the Russian Empire for centuries before the revolutions of the early 20th century, remained captive to the bolsheviks, and now to the blackheart who fancies himself the new tsar.

    • He had the sense to get out of Russia before speaking up, so he should be more concerned about novichok in his underpants.
    • Putin already stole his company. No real need to kill him now.

  • by Mal-2 ( 675116 ) on Friday August 11, 2023 @11:50PM (#63761328) Homepage Journal

    Usually I'd say "oh that's great, over 500 days into the war, to come out against it now", but seeing that he was busy trying to smuggle all his hackers out of the country under the radar, I think this can be forgiven.

    • Because he thinks he has enough popular support that Putin won't kill him outright. Putin is old and his grip on Power is slipping. He needs to do a draft to get the people he needs to fight in Ukraine but the ruble just hit a penny so that's a really risky thing to do.

      Dictators suck. It's all fun and games when you're dictator is Young and hurting the people you want hurt. But sooner or later they get old and in this day and age they don't die of a heart attack or cancer before their brains go.
      • by Mal-2 ( 675116 )

        They've widened the ages of mobilization: what was 21-37 is now 18-40.

        I honestly think that right now, Mossad stands a better chance of getting Putie-Pie than the Kremlin has of reaching into Israel. This hasn't been about Volozh's personal safety for quite a while, probably a year. But I can understand just keeping his mouth shut because he wasn't the only person that would face backlash if he opened it.

    • This right there. I can feel that it wasn't easy for him to keep his mouth shut, but he had to to get the people out before being able to say what needed to be said.

  • Shshsjshe
  • Wow, I am already feeling nostalgic. Read that news three days ago and here I am re-reading it again.

  • "Now these people are outside of Russia and can start doing something new in the most advanced areas of technology. They will be of great benefit to the countries where they remain,"

    This war well end. Probably by Putin's regime collapsing - somehow.

    I'm sort of expecting that Ukraine will see quite a bit of aid in rebuilding the country. And a good portion of people who fled, will return.

    Russia, not so much. As a nation, it doesn't have many friends left. Economy is going down the drain, and (temporary?) high prices for its oil & gas exports won't last, volumes will go down. That income not enough to compensate for all other factors that will be hurting Russia's economy. Foreig

    • The situation in Russia reminds me a lot of what the situation was like in Austria-Hungary a century ago during WW1. An ancient regime that is trying to cling to a form of government that simply isn't sustainable anymore in a changed time, a country of many different ethnic groups held together by force and eventually an external conflict with a weak enemy to distract from the internal dissolution tendencies that should glue it together but turned out to be the final straw, with the enemy being far stronger

      • by Mal-2 ( 675116 )

        I don't think you even need to go back that far. The war in Ukraine is the same kind of disaster for Russia that Afghanistan was for the Soviet Union -- only happening at breakneck speed.

        • Re:Brain drain (Score:4, Interesting)

          by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Saturday August 12, 2023 @03:21AM (#63761588)

          Afghanistan was not a single point of failure, and not the eventual reason for the fall of the Soviet Union. Afghanistan contributed, no doubt about that, but it was only a puzzle piece in the whole tapestry of a long lingering collapse. If there was a single catalyst that pushed the SU down the grave was when Gorbachev wanted to modernize what could not be modernized, and by removing the iron grip that held the Union of failed states together, it fell apart.

          This is what probably would have happened if Franz Ferdinand had not been shot in Sarajevo and had ascended to the throne in Austria-Hungary, since he had a very similar plan for his collapsing empire.

          Russia in its current form will not survive this war. There will be change, one way or another. What that change is like will also depend on what the rest of the world does with Russia after the war. If we treat it like we treated Germany after WW2, we're probably looking at a country that will even surpass German after WW2 in economic growth, with a big population, used to hard and long work and very likely very willing to rebuild this country, because the love for the motherland is pretty strong in Russia. And unlike Germany, they also have insanely vast resources to deal with, if that's how it turns out, China will get a run for its money. Literally so.

          A far more likely scenario, though, is that we will end up with a Germany after WW1. A country, humiliated by a defeat that should have been an easy victory, with a crippling reparation payment debt weighing it down, a world that, not unlike Clemenceau after WW1, wants to make sure that this country is being so bled dry that it will NEVER pose a threat to international peace again... And we know how that ended.

          We're allowed to learn from history. Why we don't take the opportunity is one of the great mysteries to me.

          • by Mal-2 ( 675116 )

            There's a big difference between making sure this particular government can't get up off the floor, and pinning the whole country down. If replaced by someone sane, Russia will be allowed to get up off the floor. Most "reparations" are going to come out of the pockets of oligarchs.

            • I sure hope so, but given the extent of animosity already in the air, I don't know if this will be followed through.

          • Having the Soviet Union fall apart was a good thing. All those Soviet states were essentially vassal states. Even more so the non-USSR states in the Soviet bloc. This was the distinct difference between international communism under Stalin in the early days versus other communists around the world - Stalin always insisted that Russia be in charge. Some of the dropout states rebelled because they were treated like shit, and only a small spark got the people to favor leaving.

            The problem is that Putin sees i

            • I don't say that the SU falling apart was bad, actually, it was necessary. The key problem is that it didn't reach a conclusion. There are still peoples in Russia that still strive for independence, and they will have a considerably negative impact on the stability of the country.

              And independent of how this war ends. Actually, if they "win" this war, it will have a considerably worse outcome for Russia than if they lose it.

      • Your comment made me think of a fantastic film, The Grand Illusion. It’s about how WW1 was the end of the old world aristocracy. https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0... [imdb.com]

    • Currently it looks like the war will end with Russia getting the slice of Ukraine it currently controls, with no other costs. Ukraine will end up deprived of its oil-rich regions and become an impoverished country, with inadequate aid to rebuild. Biden will declare mission accomplished, and the US will lose interest, as its "leaders" turn their attention to finding some windmills to tilt at to fix the weather. Germany will start buying Russian gas again, and eventually will be allied with Russia, as will

    • The history of Russia makes depressing reading - centuries of terrible rulers and a downtrodden population trying to make the best of it. It's no surprise that Russian humour is pretty dark!
  • I have a hunch a special defenestration operation is brewing.

  • The new generation needs to search for new solutions. With this generation's technology, humans can’t risk things like war. Of course, we might have to experiment, but let’s go forward, not backward.
    • We're currently at the point where war changes its face again. Tanks were the masters of the (open) battlefield, but they turned out to be quite toothless, the anti-tank weaponry currently available simply outclasses a tank's ability to withstand. Reactive armor is a rather weak counter and in the end, a cheap drone can take out a multi-million tank quite effectively by flying that anti-tank warhead precisely into the weak spots. I wouldn't go as far as saying we're looking at something like the invention o

      • It's kind of like elections: it's not about winning party confirming they've won, but about convincing losing side they've lost.

        In war, this used to be done on the battlefield, by inflicting a decisive defeat onto the enemy. These days... let's just say there are other methods. The battlefield has moved from tanks, planes & artillery to political / economic pressure, cyber warfare, muffling free press, influencing social media to sway public opinion, etc. Military might may still work, but is oldfash

      • Formal war between organized units on the battlefield is going away. Unfortunately, it's going to be replaced with guerrilla warfare / terrorism.

        Once anybody with a few hundred bucks and a soldering iron can take out a tank... that will be used to justify a police state, and honestly we'll be begging for it because that crazy guy down the street can now do a lot more than just poison your flower garden.

  • "Slams" it, because he's now a citizen of some Israel or other, has exited successfully and needs a clean slate.

    Typical rosyan oligarch level hypocrisy, would profit more if option available.

    Not much different from the rest of the whole international lot of his kind.

  • never heard an american apologize for iraq, or a french person apologize for libya. really impressive how russians are constantly forced to disavow. and discrimination against russia born athletes are common place, even when they don't represent their country.
  • So many people have gone to prison for standing up, or had gone missing altogether.

If all the world's economists were laid end to end, we wouldn't reach a conclusion. -- William Baumol

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