Ukraine vice prime minister Twitter-shaming firms to action over invasion
Ukraine's vice prime minister has been calling out big tech
companies by name on Twitter to push them to penalise Russia over its invasion
- and it's having an impact.
Marshalling his government's social media savvy and a deep
international well of sympathy, Mykhailo Fedorov's feed has become a list of firms
willing to oppose Moscow or come to Ukraine's aid.
"We need your support - in 2022 modern technology is
perhaps the best answer to tanks, multiple rocket launchers and missiles,"
he wrote in a letter he tweeted out Friday to Apple chief Tim Cook.
By Tuesday the iPhone maker had announced sales were halted
in Russia, and Apple Pay services were limited.
The 31-year-old minister had also paid Cook a visit in the
United States last year with the two discussing topics from training opportunities
to Apple stores in Ukraine.
Fedorov's callouts only gathered pace after his tweet
seeking Cook's support, with subsequent ones noting Ukraine's government had
asked Google, Netflix, YouTube and Facebook to cut off Russia.
While those companies have not severed ties completely, all
have announced actions ranging from restrictions on the spread of Russian
state-owned media to resisting Kremlin requirements.
"You hold them accountable this way," Larissa
Doroshenko, a postdoctoral researcher at Boston's Northeastern University said
of the impact of calling out companies on Twitter.
"It's a very savvy, very strategic way of social media
because you can do it behind closed doors or ... you can make it public,"
she added.
Fedorov, who is responsible for Ukraine's digital matters,
is part of a government that has built social media into its communication
strategy from the start.
Doroshenko said Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy's
campaign engaged with people on social media during the 2019 election, and his
government has kept doing so once in power.
Ukraine invasion: Live updates - Russian attacks continue;
probe into possible war crimes opens
'GRATITUDE FROM PEOPLE OF UKRAINE '
Since Russia's invasion last week, the 44-year-old president
has used his eye for modern image management and the skills honed as an actor
to deliver stirring messages on social media.
"It has been adapted to these war times,"
Doroshenko added.
Moscow's invasion of Ukraine is one of the most dangerous
global moments in decades, with spiking tensions as the West imposes
unprecedented economic sanctions on Russia.
At the same time, support has poured in for embattled
Ukraine and has ranged from kind words to flows of money, supplies and weapons.
"There are literally millions of people on the internet
wanting to try and do something," said Omar Wasow, an assistant professor
of politics at Pomona College in California.
"So if he (Fedorov) does this callout of a particular
company, and then thousands of people like and retweet what he's doing that's
going to get the attention of those companies' social media managers and
ultimately CEOs," he added.
Fedorov's tweet with the appeal letter to Cook has gotten
over 10,600 likes and retweets combined to date.
The tweet to Tesla boss Elon Musk asking for Starlink
satellite internet service got over 200,000 likes and retweets.
"While you try to colonize Mars? Russia try to occupy
Ukraine!" the message began, with another more than 588,000 likes and
retweets on Fedorov's tweet showing the Starlink terminals had arrived.
"In Ukraine, being the image of a younger democracy, we
see social media used very similarly by regular people and by people in
power," Doroshenko added.
Fedorov has kept up his stream of callouts, urging video
game developers like Riot Games to close any Russia operations. The company did
not immediately reply to a request for comment.
He also tweeted letters sent to German software firm SAP and
US tech giant Oracle urging them to cut any ties with Russia, noting "more
sanctions imposed - faster peace restored in Ukraine!"
"Oracle Corporation has already suspended all
operations in the Russian Federation", the company replied, drawing this
message from Fedorov: "With gratitude from all the free people of
Ukraine!"
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