leveling of human rights and freedoms for the sake of
technological effectiveness and efficiency, it is
necessary to form and improve Internet culture.
The fact that this new phenomenon already exists
is evidenced by the terminological variety of names:
digital culture, information and communication
culture, and electronic culture. This poly terminology
indicates the uncertainty of the concept, features, and
content of this phenomenon, first of all. Secondly, it
shows the multi-aspect content and diversity of
information forms and communication culture in
various Internet areas. Finally, this terminological
"plasticity" leads to a variety of scientific approaches
and requires an interdisciplinary methodology for its
study (Koptseva et al., 2015). Of course, the prospect
of studying information and communication culture
is undeniable and scientists belonging to different
scientific fields, schools, etc., have already begun to
study this phenomenon.
At the same time, the authors of the article set the
task of determining the fundamental question: what
role the state should play in the formation of an
information and communication culture. What
mechanisms can the state legal system offer to
improve the information and communication culture,
what ways for its growth should be developed by the
state and law? We believe that these issues are
extremely relevant and they are addressed mainly to
the state legal system. Since today it is generally
recognized that “the Russian state is the highest
objective form of social consciousness of the people
and their political and legal organization ... It was the
state that was and ... remains the main driver of
Russia's culture and progress, ... as well as an
indispensable condition for freedom and prosperity of
every person and people as a whole” (Ebzeev, 2017).
In this regard, it is natural that the state should be
an active participant in the Internet space, form
guidelines for improving and enhancing the
information and communication culture of users,
employing legal mechanisms to establish the criteria
for lawful-unlawful, legal-illegal in the Internet
environment, establish sanctions for violators of
electronic law and order. The state legal system
should offer not only adequate mechanisms of
organizational and regulatory impact on Internet
relations, as already mentioned above, but also offer
reliable ways of legal protection of users' rights, so
that legal regulators are not replaced by non-legal
ones.
The latter is extremely important, since
completely new regularities operate in the Internet
space - digital, virtual, informational, electronic-
technological, etc. (they may not coincide with the
usual traditional social regularities).
It should be noted that the information and
communication culture currently being formed is a
completely unique form of public consciousness that
did not exist before. This is a special area, it is not
material so along with the traditional subjects who
interact via the Internet, there are atypical phenomena
in it, the nature of which does not fit into the usual
classifications. In particular, “these technologies
(artificial intelligence, androids, robots, etc.)” are
hybrids that unite a person with non-human entities,
and the latter, when created, receive a certain
autonomy from a man” (Sinyukov, 2019). To
comprehend these phenomena and assess their
significance for society, determine their place in the
value system, it is necessary, firstly, to include
information technologies in the subject of legal
regulation, and, secondly, what needs to be done now,
to develop an appropriate worldview, and better - the
ideological basis for the formation and development
of the Internet space.
Internet ideology should become a part of
information and communication culture-a sphere that
has a complex multi-aspect structure, where various
subjects, principles, methods, forms, and regulators
of dialog communication operate, and the subjects of
the state-legal system directly participate in its
formation. And this means that the traditional legal
culture has come close to modifying its form. Along
with the state-legal system, it should be reflected in
the Internet space and used to comprehend the new
Internet relations, which are the subject of legal
regulation of so far preferential information law, new
virtual states, new network phenomena. The obvious
trend here is the evolution of human-centered law into
technocentrism, but the priority of the human over the
technical-material must be maintained.
In this regard, the nature of information and
communication culture should be considered hybrid.
Information and communication culture is formed
under the influence of various regulators, including
legal ones. To characterize the Internet culture, it is
important to take into account the scope of legal
regulation: if it does not expand (the subject of legal
regulation will not include technical processes,
technologies, etc.), then the traditional legal culture
will not fundamentally change in terms of principles,
structure, types, etc. But most likely the technological
Internet processes will enter the object-subject area of
legal Internet culture, the volume of legal regulation
will expand, and accordingly, the legal Internet
culture will qualitatively change (Fig. 1). These
forecasts can be made in connection with the fact that
Digital Future of the State Legal System and Information and Communication Culture in Russia: National Regional Component