Anton Nosik

Anton Borisovich Nosik (Russian: Анто́н Бори́сович Но́сик; born July 4, 1966, Moscow) is a start-up manager, journalist, social activist and popular blogger (10th place in RuNet according to Yandex[1]). Sometimes it is called one of the fathers of the Russian Internet.[2] He was editor of the largest online news publications Vesti.ru, Lenta.ru,[3] Gazeta.ru and NEWSru.com. One of the former managers of Rambler and blogging service holding company SUP Media (participated in this capacity in the LiveJournal service completions), the founder of Pomogi.org Charitable Foundation.[4] Since mid-October 2009 he was appointed Deputy General Director of United Media and, concurrently, the position of chief editor Bfm.ru. From 16 November 2011 to 29 November 2012 was the media director Anton Nosik SUP Media, which owns LiveJournal service. Since the middle of 2014 is a co-founder of Shaggy cheese, market research and public opinion.[5]

Biography

Born in the family of the writer Boris Nosik and philologist-polonist Victoria Mochalova.[6] His father in 2011, he was elected an honorary member of the Russian Academy of Arts. Stepfather - artist Ilya Kabakov. He has a sister Sandra, who teaches sociolinguistics at the French University of Franche-Comte.[5]

Activism

In March 2013 he took part in a series of pickets for the liberation of the participating Pussy Riot - Maria Alyokhina and Nadezhda Tolokonnikova.[7]

He took part in the congress Ukraine - Russia: Dialogue, which took place April 24–25, 2014 in Kiev.[8]

A member of the public council of the Russian Jewish Congress.[9]

The accusation of extremism

At the end of 2015 in relation to Anton Nosik was a criminal case under part 1 of article 282 the Russian Criminal Code (incitement of hatred or enmity) for an article about Syria. According to the investigation October 1, 2015 Spout published online an article titled Erase Syria from the face of the earth, in which, according to linguistic expertise, were found signs of inciting hatred against the Syrians, allocated on the national-territorial principle.[10]

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/15/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.