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The Russian Internet (), or Runet (Рунет), is the part of the that uses the , including the Russian-language community on the Internet and websites. Geographically, it reaches all continents, including (due to Russian scientists living at Bellingshausen Station LiveJournal: Discover global communities of friends who share your unique passions and interests . Livejournal.ru.), but mostly it is based in .

The term Runet is a of (code for both the Russian language and Russia's top-level domain) and internet. The term was coined in 1997 by the -Israeli blogger Raffi Aslanbekov (Раффи Асланбеков), known as "Great Uncle" in Russia, on his Russian-language column Great Uncle's Thoughts. Что Великий Дядя думал 11-го июня 1997 года (the first known usage of the word Runet) The term was popularized by early Internet users and was included in several dictionaries, including the spelling dictionary of the Russian Academy of Sciences, edited by V. V. Lopatin, as soon as in 2001. Similar, "local to Runet" sub-cultures of and later emerged along with alike entities of (), () and others.


Use
For ordinary users, the term Runet means that the content of is available for Russian users without foreign language skills, or that have an office in Russia (for example, Russian search engines, e-mail services, anti-viruses, dictionaries, Russian-language websites occupying niches similar to those of , Amazon, , , , Foursquare, etc. for usage in all post-Soviet states). Being on the Runet gives a company some advantages, as many local IT companies are more successful than foreign services on the Russian market. The term can describe the situation of the 1990s to the early 2000s: foreign companies didn't want to operate in the Russian market and localize their products, so Russia-based were more attractive to Russian speaking users. Nowadays, some Russian users are not interested in usage of such services as or because local services have more Russian-specific features and local community (VK.com, , etc.), though many international websites have very high quality Russian localization and Google search has had full support of Russian morphology. This is also more or less applicable to most post-Soviet states, who use the Runet and are forming a common community like English on the Internet.

Many officials of the Russian government actively use this term as a for Internet in the territory of Russia, i.e. for Internet infrastructure, which is subject to (including Russian censorship laws, copyright, corporate, advertisement laws, etc.), but the Russian doesn't support this use of the term as millions of users use the Russian language on the Internet while living outside Russia; Russian is spoken in large parts of eastern Europe that do not fall under Russian territory. Some Russian officials automatically believe that the Russian Wikipedia is based in Russia as a and try to control the content of the website or establish a Russia-based .


Domains
According to reports conducted by , Russian is the primary language of 91% of Russian websites (in Yandex's list). In the autumn of 2009, Runet contained about 15 million sites (estimated to be about 6.5% of the entire Internet). Контент Рунета. Company.yandex.ru.

Domains with a high proportion of the Russian language include .su, .ru, .рф, .ua, .by, .kz.

Russian is used on 89.8% of .ru sites and on 88.7% of the former Soviet Union domain, .su. Russian is the most used language of websites of several countries that were part of the former Soviet Union: 79.0% in Ukraine, 86.9% in Belarus, 84.0% in Kazakhstan, 79.6% in Uzbekistan, 75.9% in , and 81.8% in . Russian is now the second most used language on the web. W3techs.com.


Statistics
As of 2013, there were approximately 59.7 million Russian-speaking Internet users, representing about 3% of the global online population. In April 2012, Russia ranked ninth worldwide by number of Internet users and fourth by share of Russian-language online content, accounting for 4.8% of the total. Usage Statistics of Content Languages for Websites, April 2012. W3techs.com. In September 2011, Russia surpassed Germany to become the largest Internet market in Europe, with 50.8 million users. Russian internet biggest in Europe; will earnings follow? | beyondbrics. Blogs.ft.com (14 November 2011). By March 2013, Russian was the second most widely used language on the web.


Historical overview
Historically the term Runet has been described in several ways.

  • In 2009, a report stated that the Runet can include sites written in , Ukrainian, Belarusian and languages, as well as sites in any language published in the 12 national domains of the original CIS nations: .am, .az, .by, .ge, .kg, .kz, .md, .ru, .su, .tj, .ua or .uz.
  • Russian-language Internet. According to the definition in Yandex slovari dictionary published in 2001, the "Runet is the Russian Internet. The borders of Internet are usually not based on the "geographical borders", but rather on "languages", and therefore the term Runet is usually considered to be not only websites in .ru domain, but also all Russian-language and/or Russian-oriented websites". "Economic dictionary" of 2009 says "Runet is Russian-language part of the Internet". This is a common meaning of Runet. Practically, this definition makes it the Russian-language online community of post-Soviet states and their diasporas.
  • .ru domain. Runet is the part of Internet, whose websites are in the .ru domain. This definition would exclude Russian (language) or Russian (country) sites intentionally using other domains. Highly popular alternative domains include ".net" for humorous impact or strength of statement (as this means "no" in Russian), popular havens for illegal activities like ".me" (piracy) or ".cz" (to avoid prosecution for facilitation of prostitution), or ".com" for international expansion – the latter being home to Russia's #2 site by Alexa rank, domestic-owned and based international social network Vk.com. Runet Day is a semi-official term for April, 7, when .ru domain was created back in 1994.
  • Internet in the Russian Federation. According to the definitions found in some early Yandex dictionaries, "Runet is the part of the Internet". Also, Russian officials strongly suggest that Runet is the Internet in Russia.


Research
Harvard University's conducts regular researches of the Russian-language Web, identified by Cyrillic encoding, and, in particular, has papers named "Mapping RuNet Politics and Mobilization" and "RuNet Echo". The prominent Public Opinion Foundation (FOM) regular Internet measurements are titled Runet.fom.ru. There are Russian internet-reviewing newspapers called TheRunet, Runetologia and others.


See also


External links

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