1. AGORA International (2018). Internet freedom 2017: Creeping Criminalisation.
http://en.agora.legal/articles/Report-of-Agora-International-%E2%80%98Internet-Freedom-2017-Creeping-Criminalisation%E2%80%99/8
. Accessed 15 Mar 2018.
2. Asen, R. (2000). Seeking the “counter” in counterpublics. Communication Theory, 10(4), 424–446.
3. BBC (2015). The publisher of Forbes has sold the Russian business.
https://www.bbc.com/russian/rolling_news/2015/09/150917_rn_alex_springer_russia
. Accessed 15 Mar 2018.
4. Bodrunova, S., & Litvinenko, A. (2013). New media and the political protest: The formation of a public counter-sphere in Russia of 2008–2012. In A. Makarychev & A. Mommen (Eds.), Russia’s changing economic and political regimes (pp. 29–65). London: Routledge.
5. Breese, E. B. (2011). Mapping the variety of public spheres. Communication Theory, 21(2), 130–149.