Lower Internet
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Lower Internet (Russian: Нижний Интернет, romanized: Nizhny Internet) is an informal term for the Russian-language (Runet) segment of the Internet, whose content differs significantly from standard online content and often contradicts generally accepted norms of behavior. Representatives of the lower Internet are usually immoral individuals, mentally ill people, former prisoners, and people with alcohol or drug addictions.[1][2][3]
History
[edit | edit source]In the Russian-speaking world, no one has analyzed and systematized the conditional division of the Internet among young people into "upper" and "lower" and further classification. At the same time, there is the world-famous concept of carnival-laughter culture by Mikhail Bakhtin.[4]
Common features
[edit | edit source]The lower Internet consists of media resources that attract smaller numbers of contributors and audiences than the mainstream Internet. Its authors are primarily focused on creating products that interest them, without paying attention to audience size, number of views, or potential monetization.[4] It includes the demonstration of actions that are unacceptable to a wide audience.[5]
Specific audience: As a rule, these are people who do not share the values of the "upper" internet. They may be united by their dislike of the mainstream, their search for alternative views, their desire to shock, or simply their desire to find "their own kind".
Content: Often provocative; black humor, trash, profanity, conspiracy theories, marginal topics. The author of the content can afford to make caustic statements and other things that are not typical of the "mainstream" internet.[6]
Platforms: closed groups, forums, anonymous imageboards, YouTube channels, Telegram channels.
See also
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References
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Further reading
[edit | edit source]- Lapatin, V. A. (2025). Humiliation or entertainment? Trash streams as the sinful pleasure of the “lower Internet.” Industries of Experience. Technologies of Sociocultural Research (EISCRT), 1 (10), 279–308. https://doi.org/10.34680/EISCRT-2025-1(10)-279-308