An ultimatum
After Russia’s media regulator Roskomnadzor blocked access to the site for users in Russia on 12 July, Ficbook announced that there had been a “misunderstanding” and that they were working to resolve it.
Ficbook had attracted the unwanted attention of Russia’s unofficial censor thanks to its substantial “slash” and “fem-slash” content, stories that depict male and female same-sex relationships respectively. Three days before blocking the site, Roskomnadzor had warned the owners of the Latvian-based platform that it would do so unless content “promoting non-traditional sexual relations” was removed. Ficbook declined to discuss the situation when approached by Novaya Europe for comment.
Though Ficbook’s administrators initially set up a mirror site to temporarily circumvent the ban, within days, the site’s founder, who posts under the name Entrery, announced that Ficbook would comply with Roskomnadzor’s demands to restrict access to stories featuring same-sex couplings.
“As difficult as it was, we have decided to shut down some of the fanfics and sections on Ficbook in the Russian Federation in order to get the ban on the main content lifted,” Entrery said.
In a Telegram post on 30 July, Ficbook said that it had met all of Roskomnadzor’s requirements, but warned that it could take some time for the regulator to confirm that to be the case and to order the site’s unblocking.
Community building
Fanfiction, normally abbreviated to “fanfic”, refers to stories written by fans about existing characters from books, film and television, as well as real-life celebrities and public figures. Ficbook, in turn, is a Russian-language site that was created in 2009 as an alternative to other, predominantly English-language fanfiction platforms.