Roskomnadzor
The Federal Service for Supervision of Communications, Information Technology, and Mass Media (Roskomnadzor) is a Russian federal executive body charged with overseeing compliance with legislation in mass media, telecommunications, information technologies, and personal data protection.[1][2] Established on 3 December 2008 via Presidential Decree No. 1715, which reorganized predecessor agencies focused on communications supervision, Roskomnadzor holds powers to license media outlets, monitor radio frequencies, and restrict access to online content deemed to violate federal laws such as No. 149-FZ on information protection.[3][4] Its mandate includes maintaining the Unified Register of domain names and network addresses containing prohibited information, enabling swift blocking of websites, applications, and services propagating extremism, illegal content, or threats to national security.[5] Roskomnadzor's operations emphasize state control over information flows to ensure societal stability, as articulated in its statutory goals, encompassing both technical regulation—like spectrum allocation—and content moderation, including personal data operator oversight under Federal Law No. 152-FZ.[2][6] Notable for enforcing the 2019 "sovereign internet" provisions, it can isolate Russia's network during perceived threats and has compelled foreign platforms to comply with data localization and content removal requirements, leading to blocks on non-compliant entities like Twitter and portions of Google services.[7] Defining characteristics include its dual role in administrative enforcement and surveillance facilitation, with capabilities to demand user data from providers and audit compliance, reflecting Russia's prioritization of informational sovereignty amid geopolitical tensions.[8][6] While official functions stress protection against harmful content such as child exploitation materials and terrorist propaganda, its expansive interpretation of "prohibited information" has positioned it as a central instrument in managing domestic narratives and countering external influences.[2]History
Formation and Predecessors
Roskomnadzor, officially the Federal Service for Supervision of Communications, Information Technology, and Mass Media, was established on December 3, 2008, by Presidential Decree No. 1715 as part of Russia's administrative reforms to consolidate oversight functions across related sectors.[9] The decree integrated supervisory responsibilities previously dispersed among multiple entities, creating a single federal executive body under the government to handle licensing, control, and enforcement in telecommunications, information technologies, and mass communications. In the domain of mass media supervision, Roskomnadzor's direct predecessor was the General Directorate for the Protection of State Secrets in the Press, which managed censorship and content control mechanisms inherited from Soviet-era practices.[9] This directorate's functions were adapted post-1991 to the Russian Federation's framework, with regional media inspection departments formalized in 1994 via an order from the State Press Committee (formerly the Ministry of the Press and Mass Media).[9] These structures focused on protecting state interests in publications while transitioning toward regulatory roles in a market-oriented media environment. Telecommunications and information technology oversight prior to 2008 fell under fragmented agencies, including elements of the Ministry of Information Technologies and Communications and earlier federal services for communications supervision established in the early 2000s. The 2008 unification under Roskomnadzor aimed to streamline enforcement amid growing internet penetration and digital media expansion in Russia, enabling coordinated responses to emerging challenges in content dissemination and network management.[4]Expansion in the 2010s
In 2012, Roskomnadzor assumed responsibility for maintaining the Unified Register of Prohibited Information under Federal Law No. 139-FZ, enacted on July 27, enabling the agency to demand blocking of websites hosting content related to child pornography, suicide methods, and drug promotion without a court order in initial cases.[10] This marked a shift toward proactive internet oversight, with the register expanding to include over 60,000 entries by mid-decade as enforcement intensified.[11] Subsequent amendments broadened the agency's mandate: in 2013, legislation permitted extrajudicial blocks on sites distributing pirated content, targeting intellectual property violations.[12] By 2014, laws authorized restrictions on media inciting mass riots, extremism, or unsanctioned protests, alongside blocks for non-compliance with data localization requirements, compelling firms to store Russian users' data domestically.[13] [14] These measures facilitated thousands of site blocks annually, including opposition resources and foreign platforms, amid growing state concerns over online dissent.[11] The decade culminated in the 2019 "sovereign internet" law (Federal Law No. 90-FZ, signed April 7 and effective November 1), which empowered Roskomnadzor to install equipment for traffic routing, deep packet inspection, and potential isolation of Russia's network segment from the global internet during perceived threats.[15] This infrastructure expansion, including centralized DNS controls, aimed to enhance resilience but enabled granular content filtering and VPN restrictions, exemplified by the 2018 attempt to block Telegram, which inadvertently disrupted services like Google and Twitter due to IP overblocking.[16] By 2019, Roskomnadzor's annual blocks exceeded 100,000 domains, reflecting its evolution into a primary enforcer of digital sovereignty.[17]Post-2022 Developments
In response to the Russian invasion of Ukraine on February 24, 2022, Roskomnadzor accelerated its censorship measures, throttling Twitter access on March 1, 2022, for disseminating what it termed false information about Ukraine, and fully blocking the platform on March 4.[18] On the same day, it blocked Facebook after prior partial restrictions and designated Meta an extremist organization; Instagram followed on March 11 due to Meta's temporary policy allowing certain violent speech against Russian forces.[18] [19] By late 2022, Roskomnadzor had restricted over 247,000 web pages, including thousands under military censorship laws prohibiting "false information" on the armed forces, targeting Ukrainian outlets like Ukrayinska Pravda, foreign media such as the BBC, and independent Russian sites like Meduza.[19] Roskomnadzor extended blocks to additional platforms and content, including Human Rights Watch's website in April 2022 and Chess.com later that month for articles criticizing the invasion.[18] To counter circumvention, it began blocking VPN services in March 2022, targeting providers like NordVPN and ExpressVPN, followed by ProtonVPN in June 2022, the OpenVPN protocol in May 2023, and WireGuard alongside OpenVPN on mobile networks in August 2023.[19] March 2024 legislation banned dissemination of information on bypassing blocks, leading to restrictions on 8,700 websites promoting VPNs by April 2025; by October 2024, 197 VPNs had been blocked outright.[18] Throttling emerged as a key tactic, with YouTube speeds reduced starting July 2024—intensifying through year-end—for alleged legal violations, alongside demands that ISPs prevent TSPU (Technical Measures to Combat Threats) circumvention.[18] In August 2024, Roskomnadzor blocked non-compliant apps like Viber and Signal, and by December, it classified 11 messaging services—including WhatsApp and Skype—as "information dissemination organizers" requiring Russian data storage.[18] July 2022 amendments imposed fines up to 5 million rubles on ISPs failing TSPU compliance, with mandatory installations completed by August 2023.[18] In September 2024, Roskomnadzor announced a 60 billion ruble ($660 million) modernization of the TSPU system from 2025 to 2030, aiming for 96% efficacy in blocking VPNs and enhancing deep packet inspection for unlisted content.[20] By mid-2025, partial restrictions on Telegram and WhatsApp calls were imposed in August, citing non-compliance, expanding to 34 regions by October 22, 2025, for "criminal activity" including refusal to block illicit content.[21] [22]Mandate and Organizational Structure
Legal Basis and Responsibilities
Roskomnadzor was established on July 1, 2008, through the merger of the Federal Service for Supervision of Mass Media and Protection of the Cultural Heritage (Rosokhranknadzor) and the Federal Service for Supervision of Communications (Rossvyaznadzor), pursuant to Government Decree No. 419 of June 2, 2008, which approved its founding regulations as a federal executive authority responsible for oversight in communications, information technology, and mass media.[23] The agency operates under the direct subordination of the Ministry of Digital Development, Communications and Mass Media, with its activities guided by the Constitution of the Russian Federation, federal constitutional laws, federal laws, and acts of the President and Government of Russia. Its core legal mandate derives from Federal Law No. 149-FZ of July 27, 2006, "On Information, Information Technologies and Information Protection," which authorizes restrictions on access to information deemed harmful to minors, inciting extremism, or violating other specified prohibitions, as well as maintenance of a unified register of prohibited websites. Additional authority stems from Federal Law No. 152-FZ of July 27, 2006, "On Personal Data," designating Roskomnadzor as the supervisory body for compliance in personal data processing, including inspections and enforcement against violations.[6] Responsibilities encompass federal state control and supervision over adherence to legislation on mass media, including registration of media outlets and websites, issuance of warnings for violations, and suspension or termination of media activities through judicial proceedings.[24] In telecommunications, it conducts oversight of licensing, radio frequency allocation, and compliance with technical standards for networks and equipment. For information technologies, duties include blocking access to prohibited content via internet service providers, maintaining domain name registries, and monitoring for illegal information dissemination, with powers to demand data from operators under anti-terrorism and extremism laws.[9] Roskomnadzor also enforces data localization requirements for personal information of Russian citizens and coordinates with security agencies like the FSB for surveillance-related mandates.[8]Leadership and Internal Operations
The head of Roskomnadzor is appointed and dismissed by the Prime Minister of the Russian Federation.[25] As of October 2025, Andrey Yurievich Lipov serves as director, having been appointed on 29 March 2020 by Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin to succeed Alexander Zharov, who moved to Gazprom-Media.[26][27] Prior to his appointment, Lipov headed the Presidential Directorate for the Development of the Information and Communication Technologies and Media Industry.[19] Roskomnadzor is permitted up to four deputy heads to assist in operations.[2] Organizationally, Roskomnadzor functions as a federal executive body under the nominal oversight of the Ministry of Digital Development, Communications and Mass Media, though it operates with significant alignment to directives from the Presidential Administration and Government of Russia.[28] The central apparatus includes approximately 10 specialized departments handling core functions such as licensing of communications and media, supervision of mass media compliance, organization development and information technology, and enforcement of data protection laws, staffed by around 215 personnel.[4] These departments coordinate monitoring, regulatory inspections, and policy implementation, often employing IT specialists, analysts, and legal experts for tasks including content review and technical blocking protocols.[29] Complementing the central structure, Roskomnadzor maintains 71 territorial offices across Russia's federal subjects to conduct localized supervision, licensing, and enforcement actions, with a total staff of approximately 3,000 as of recent estimates.[4] Key internal units include the Main Radio Frequency Center (GRFC), originally established in 2000 for spectrum management but later expanded to support internet monitoring and censorship infrastructure.[29] Operations emphasize compliance enforcement through administrative oversight, with regional bodies reporting to the central leadership for unified decision-making on high-profile cases.[28] The agency's budget for 2016 was reported at 8.5 billion rubles (approximately US$127 million), supporting these distributed activities.Coordination with Other Agencies
Roskomnadzor coordinates extensively with the Federal Security Service (FSB) to enforce content restrictions related to national security threats, including terrorism and extremism, by acting on directives from prosecutors' offices that often originate from FSB identifications of prohibited materials.[17] This collaboration extends to the System for Operative Investigative Activities (SORM), where Roskomnadzor oversees compliance by telecommunications providers in installing FSB-mandated surveillance equipment, enabling real-time access to communications data without prior notification to users.[30] SORM-3, expanded for internet traffic monitoring, integrates Roskomnadzor's regulatory authority with FSB operational needs, requiring operators to retain data for up to 30 days for agency queries.[8][31] The agency also partners with the Ministry of Internal Affairs (MVD) in identifying and pursuing violators of information laws, particularly in cybercrime investigations, as authorized under legislation that empowers law enforcement to flag illegal content for blocking.[17] Joint efforts include multi-agency plans, such as the August 20, 2025, approved concept for countering cyber threats, which mandates coordination among Roskomnadzor, the MVD, FSB, Ministry of Digital Development, and Ministry of Economic Development to enhance detection and response capabilities by the third quarter of 2027.[32] In implementing the 2019 sovereign internet law, Roskomnadzor collaborates with the FSB to install and test technical infrastructure at key network points, allowing for potential isolation of Russia's internet segment from global traffic in response to external threats, though full operational isolation has not been publicly demonstrated.[33][15] This framework positions Roskomnadzor as the executor of blocking orders, often prompted by security services, while the FSB provides threat assessments and leverages the resulting data for intelligence purposes.[34]Core Functions
Media Licensing and Supervision
Roskomnadzor serves as the primary federal authority for registering mass media outlets in Russia, operating under the Federal Law "On Mass Media" No. 2124-1 of December 27, 1991, which mandates registration for legal operation of print, television, radio, and online media entities. Founders submit applications detailing the outlet's name, theme, language, and territorial scope, with Roskomnadzor required to process and grant or deny registration within one month; denials occur for reasons such as false information, duplicate names, or violations of legal prohibitions on content themes like extremism or state secrets. The agency maintains a unified national register of registered mass media, which as of recent updates includes thousands of entries and serves as the basis for official recognition and operational legitimacy.[35][25] In addition to registration, Roskomnadzor issues licenses for television and radio broadcasting, including the allocation of radio frequencies to ensure technical compliance and prevent interference. These licenses are granted following competitive tenders or direct allocation processes outlined in the same Federal Law on Mass Media (Article 31), with conditions tied to content standards, ownership limits, and operational continuity; for instance, licenses can be revoked if broadcasting ceases for more than three months without justification or if repeated violations of content regulations occur. The agency coordinates frequency management through its subordinate bodies, prioritizing state-aligned broadcasters in spectrum distribution.[25] Supervision entails ongoing monitoring of registered media for adherence to Russian laws on information dissemination, including prohibitions on "fake news," discrediting the armed forces, or promoting extremism, with Roskomnadzor empowered to issue warnings, impose administrative fines up to several million rubles, suspend operations, or initiate court proceedings for license revocation. Enforcement actions have included the 2022 revocation of Novaya Gazeta's license after multiple citations for noncompliance, such as inadequate labeling of "foreign agent" materials, and denials of registration to outlets like Open Media in 2019 on grounds of thematic duplication. While the agency's mandate emphasizes legal uniformity, critics from independent media sectors argue that supervisory practices disproportionately target non-state-aligned outlets, though Roskomnadzor maintains decisions stem from statutory violations.[36][37][25]Telecommunications Regulation
Roskomnadzor oversees the licensing of telecommunications services in Russia, granting permits to operators for activities such as fixed-line telephony, mobile communications, and internet access provision.[38] Licences are issued following an application process that evaluates technical capabilities, financial stability, and compliance with federal laws, with Roskomnadzor maintaining a public register of all licensed entities.[38] The agency also handles permissions for radio frequency spectrum use and monitors the allocation of communication channels to prevent interference and ensure efficient utilization.[39] In supervision, Roskomnadzor conducts state control over communication networks, verifying operators' adherence to standards for service quality, data protection, and infrastructure reliability.[25] Operators must register with Roskomnadzor if they hold significant market positions, defined by thresholds such as subscriber numbers or revenue shares, enabling the agency to track dominant players and enforce anti-monopoly measures in coordination with other bodies.[2] For internet service providers, licensing rules updated on February 15, 2024, mandate the installation of technical means to detect and counter cyber threats, including unauthorized access and illegal content dissemination.[40] Telecom operators face ongoing obligations, including subscriber identification via biometrics and documentation, tightened in August 2024 to include enhanced procedures for foreigners.[41] Roskomnadzor enforces these through inspections and can impose restrictions or revocations for non-compliance, such as failing to block prohibited resources as required under federal law.[42] The agency also contributes to Runet stability by monitoring networks for vulnerabilities and coordinating threat responses, though primary spectrum policy implementation involves the Ministry of Digital Development.[4]Internet Content Oversight
Roskomnadzor oversees internet content primarily through the maintenance of the Unified Register of Prohibited Information, which catalogs websites, pages, and resources disseminating material deemed illegal under Russian federal laws, including extremism, child pornography, narcotic promotion, and suicide incitement.[5] The agency receives notifications of violations from courts, prosecutors, or public complaints, evaluates compliance, and directs internet service providers to restrict access, often without prior judicial review for urgent cases like threats to public order.[43] This register, accessible via electronic signature for operators, ensures nationwide enforcement by mandating blocks within specified timelines, typically 24 hours.[44] In addition to outright blocking, Roskomnadzor employs throttling techniques to degrade service speeds for platforms failing to remove prohibited content promptly, as seen in March 2021 when Twitter's mobile web access was slowed to 50% capacity over 100 undeleted posts on child abuse and extremism.[45] The agency also curates the Register of Extremist Materials, prohibiting over 5,000 entries by 2023 that incite hatred based on race, religion, or nationality, with additions requiring judicial confirmation but enforcement via the unified register.[29] These mechanisms extend to search engine delistings, where links to registered prohibited content are suppressed from results.[29] Post-February 2022, oversight intensified with blocks on content "discrediting" Russian armed forces or spreading "military fakes," adding over 247,000 URLs in 2022 alone and reaching a wartime record of 15,000 sites by early 2023, per monitoring by anti-censorship groups cross-verified against official data.[46][47] From March 1, 2024, Roskomnadzor gained authority for extrajudicial access restrictions to web content advertising or popularizing unauthorized data access tools, bypassing traditional complaint processes.[48] Critics, including international observers, argue this framework enables suppression of dissent under broad legal pretexts, though Russian authorities maintain it safeguards national security and public morals.[43][49]Enforcement Mechanisms
Blocking and Throttling Techniques
Roskomnadzor enforces internet restrictions primarily through the Unified Register of Prohibited Information, which lists domain names, page URLs, and network addresses containing banned content such as materials deemed extremist or promoting illegal activities.[5] Upon inclusion in the register, Roskomnadzor notifies hosting providers and site owners to remove prohibited content; failure to comply triggers orders to internet service providers (ISPs) to block access nationwide.[50] This process operates under Federal Law No. 149-FZ, enabling rapid implementation without prior court rulings in certain cases.[51] Basic blocking techniques include DNS blocking, where ISPs redirect queries for prohibited domains to non-existent addresses, and IP address blocking, which severs connections to specific servers hosting banned sites.[18] URL filtering targets individual pages rather than entire domains, allowing granular control but requiring more precise ISP configurations. These methods often result in overblocking, affecting unrelated services sharing the same infrastructure, as seen in early enforcement efforts.[18] For advanced enforcement, Roskomnadzor leverages deep packet inspection (DPI) technology integrated into the Technical System for Countering Threats to the RuNet (TSPU), mandated by the 2019 Sovereign Internet Law. DPI analyzes packet contents beyond headers, enabling content-based filtering, protocol detection, and selective blocking of encrypted traffic patterns associated with prohibited resources.[18][52] This system, deployed across ISP networks, supports the RuNet's partial isolation from global internet routing while facilitating real-time threat mitigation.[53] Throttling techniques involve deliberately reducing bandwidth or imposing data caps on targeted traffic to render services impractical without outright disconnection. Roskomnadzor directs ISPs to slow foreign platforms, such as capping Cloudflare-protected sites at 16 kilobytes per second since June 2025, disrupting access to numerous websites.[54] Similar measures have targeted YouTube by hindering caching server infrastructure and Twitter through network-level slowdowns near user endpoints.[55][56] Protocol-specific throttling, including against VPNs like WireGuard and OpenVPN, further limits circumvention tools by degrading their performance.[57] These approaches escalated post-2022, prioritizing usability degradation over complete bans to minimize public backlash while achieving de facto censorship.[18]Administrative Fines and Judicial Actions
Roskomnadzor enforces compliance through administrative fines for violations of Russian laws on information dissemination, personal data protection, and content moderation, often initiating proceedings by compiling protocols of offenses that are adjudicated by district courts. Fines are codified in the Code of Administrative Offenses, with penalties escalating for repeated infractions; for instance, failures to remove prohibited content can result in fines up to 10% of a company's annual revenue in Russia, as applied in cases against foreign platforms.[58] Data localization breaches under Federal Law No. 152-FZ carry maximum administrative penalties of 18 million rubles for entities after repeated violations.[59] In high-profile actions against Western technology firms, Roskomnadzor has secured substantial judicial penalties. On December 24, 2021, Moscow's Tagansky District Court fined Google 7.2 billion rubles (approximately $98.4 million at the time) and Meta Platforms 1.9 billion rubles (approximately $27 million) for repeatedly failing to delete content deemed illegal, such as posts criticizing state authorities.[60] [61] Earlier, in May 2021, the same court imposed a 19 million ruble fine on Twitter for non-compliance with content removal requests, following prior penalties totaling 8.9 million rubles in April 2021.[62] [63] These rulings stemmed from Roskomnadzor's petitions under Article 13.41 of the Code, which penalizes non-execution of blocking directives. Judicial actions extend to blocking orders and shutdowns, where Roskomnadzor applies to courts for injunctions against non-compliant entities. For example, in June 2022, Roskomnadzor filed additional protocols against Google for ongoing violations, leading to further court-imposed restrictions and fines, including 15 million rubles for data localization failures.[64] [19] Courts have also upheld fines on domestic actors, such as up to 5 million rubles for internet service providers failing to implement blocks under 2022 amendments to the Administrative Code, tied to wartime information controls.[18] Roskomnadzor coordinates with prosecutors to escalate cases involving foreign agents or disinformation, resulting in media outlet suspensions or entity liquidations via arbitration courts.[65]Surveillance and Data Access Powers
Roskomnadzor enforces the installation and operation of the System for Operative Investigative Activities (SORM), a technical framework requiring telecommunications operators and internet service providers to equip their networks with hardware and software for real-time access to user communications data by security services such as the Federal Security Service (FSB). This includes interception of telephony metadata, internet protocol addresses, and content traffic under SORM-3 provisions, often without prior judicial oversight for national security matters.[8][30] Roskomnadzor conducts audits and imposes administrative fines for non-compliance, as in the April 2017 case where it penalized the systems developer Intehsvyaz 3,000 rubles (approximately €50) for failing to implement SORM interfaces.[66] Amendments to the Federal Law on Communications via the 2016 Yarovaya package (Federal Law No. 374-FZ, effective July 2018) compel operators to retain metadata for up to six months and communication content for 30 days, while providing decryption keys and direct access points to investigative authorities upon request. Roskomnadzor oversees operator adherence to these retention mandates, certifying compliant equipment and infrastructure, though enforcement has faced logistical hurdles including high costs estimated at billions of rubles annually for providers.[67][68] This regime integrates with SORM to enable comprehensive traffic analysis, positioning Roskomnadzor as an infrastructural enabler of state surveillance rather than a direct interceptor. As the designated authority under Federal Law No. 152-FZ on Personal Data (as amended), Roskomnadzor registers all personal data operators and performs unscheduled inspections, granting it statutory access to stored datasets, processing logs, and security protocols to verify compliance with localization and protection standards. From September 1, 2022, operators must notify Roskomnadzor within 24 hours of breaches impacting personal data rights, with the agency empowered to demand remedial actions or data disclosures during probes.[6] The 2014 data localization amendments further require storage of Russian users' data on domestic servers, facilitating agency access while Roskomnadzor maintains the operator registry and enforces violations through warnings or revocations.[8] Via its Main Radio Frequency Center (GRFC), Roskomnadzor operates the Operational Interactive Office (OIR) platform, deployed in 2019 and expanded by 2021, to monitor social networks, messaging apps, and websites for content deemed threatening, using keyword searches, image recognition, and bot networks infiltrating closed groups. Augmented by the AI-based Oculus system (procured for 57 million rubles in 2022), it scans for prohibited materials like government criticism or disinformation, generating daily reports on "protest moods" from thousands of monitored accounts and sharing dossiers with the FSB and Interior Ministry.[29][69] Leaked internal documents from 2022 reveal routine tracking of over 1,000 weekly instances of war-related dissent, including memes and regional grievances, contributing to targeted enforcement against individuals and platforms.[8] These capabilities, bolstered by the 2019 Sovereign Internet Law's infrastructure controls, allow Roskomnadzor to aggregate online behavioral data into intelligence feeds for preemptive state responses.[43]Notable Enforcement Cases
Telegram Confrontation (2018)
In October 2017, Telegram was fined 800,000 rubles (approximately $14,000) by a Moscow court for refusing to provide the Federal Security Service (FSB) with access to user accounts linked to suspected extremists, in violation of Russia's Yarovaya laws requiring messaging services to register and share encryption keys.[70] Telegram founder Pavel Durov publicly appealed the fine and sought legal representation, emphasizing the company's commitment to user privacy over compliance with demands for decryption capabilities.[71] On April 6, 2018, Roskomnadzor petitioned the Tagansky District Court in Moscow to restrict access to Telegram nationwide, citing the app's ongoing non-compliance with federal requirements to disclose encryption protocols for monitoring terrorist activities.[72] The court approved the block on April 13, 2018, ruling that Telegram had failed to provide the FSB with necessary technical means to access user messages, as mandated by anti-terrorism legislation enacted in 2016.[73] Russian authorities justified the action by claiming Telegram facilitated the spread of extremist propaganda and was used by groups like ISIS for coordination, though Telegram maintained that handing over keys would compromise global user security.[74] Blocking efforts commenced on April 16, 2018, with Roskomnadzor directing internet service providers to sever access to Telegram's IP addresses and domains, initially targeting around 20 million addresses associated with the service's cloud infrastructure.[75] The attempt triggered widespread disruptions, as Telegram rapidly shifted to new IP ranges via domain fronting on platforms like Google Cloud and Amazon Web Services, forcing regulators to expand blocks that inadvertently affected unrelated services including Google, Apple, Twitter, and Visual Studio Code repositories.[76] By April 18, over 1.8 million IP addresses were collateral casualties, leading to temporary outages for millions of Russian users and prompting complaints from tech firms like Microsoft and Google.[77] Durov responded by promoting built-in proxy features and third-party VPNs to bypass restrictions, declaring that "privacy is not for sale" and estimating that 98% of Russian users retained access within days.[78] Public backlash included a protest rally in Moscow on April 30, 2018, drawing thousands opposed to the block as an overreach on digital freedoms, amid reports of Roskomnadzor's "whack-a-mole" tactics failing to suppress the app's 200 million global users.[79] The confrontation highlighted technical limitations in Russia's internet control infrastructure, with the ban persisting ineffectively until its formal lifting in June 2020 after Telegram pledged limited anti-terrorism cooperation without surrendering encryption keys.[80]Conflicts with Western Platforms (Twitter, Meta, Google)
Roskomnadzor initiated throttling of Twitter's traffic in March 2021 after the platform failed to promptly remove content deemed illegal under Russian law, such as calls for minors to participate in unauthorized protests; the slowdown was extended until May 15, 2021, with speeds reduced to 50-60% of normal levels to pressure compliance.[81] By December 2021, a Moscow court fined Twitter up to 8.92 million rubles for repeated violations of content removal requirements.[82] Following Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, Roskomnadzor fully blocked access to Twitter on March 4, 2022, citing the platform's refusal to delete content classified as "fake news" about the military operation and its facilitation of "disinformation" campaigns.[83][18] Conflicts with Meta Platforms escalated in late 2021 when Roskomnadzor accused Facebook of discriminating against Russian media by restricting access to state-backed outlets; a Moscow court fined Meta 2 billion rubles ($27 million) on December 24, 2021, for failing to remove prohibited content, marking one of Russia's first revenue-based penalties under laws mandating swift deletion of illegal material.[84][60] In response to Meta's temporary policy shift post-invasion allowing users to express "forms of political violence" against Russian invaders—reversing prior prohibitions on violence advocacy—Roskomnadzor labeled Meta an "extremist" entity on March 21, 2022, leading to nationwide blocks of Facebook and Instagram while exempting WhatsApp.[85][86] These measures enforced Russia's data localization laws and content moderation mandates, with Meta's non-compliance attributed to its U.S.-based operations resisting local oversight.[58] Roskomnadzor targeted Google, particularly YouTube, with demands to restore access to restricted Russian state media channels amid the Ukraine conflict; on February 27, 2022, it required unblocking channels like RBC and TV Zvezda, which had been demonetized or limited by Google's algorithms for policy violations.[87] Courts imposed escalating fines, including 7.2 billion rubles ($98 million) on December 24, 2021, and 21.1 billion rubles ($360 million) on July 18, 2022, for Google's repeated failure to excise content Russia classified as illegal, such as narratives contradicting official accounts of the "special military operation."[88][89] By March 2022, Roskomnadzor accused YouTube of amplifying "threats" via videos criticizing the invasion, threatening further penalties and partial throttling that degraded video loading speeds.[90][91] In July 2024, authorities reiterated demands to reinstate over 200 pro-government channels blocked since 2022, underscoring ongoing tensions over content curation and algorithmic restrictions.[92] These disputes reflect Roskomnadzor's broader enforcement of Federal Law No. 149-FZ on information protection and subsequent legislation like the 2019 sovereign internet law, requiring platforms to store user data in Russia and comply with removal orders within 24 hours; non-adherence triggered administrative blocks, with Western firms' extraterritorial status complicating enforcement but prompting retaliatory measures like asset seizures.[93][94] Platforms countered by citing free speech principles, though Russian authorities maintained the actions countered foreign interference and protected against "extremist" narratives.[95]Actions Against TikTok and Other Services
In response to Russia's 2022 legislation criminalizing dissemination of "false information" about its military actions, TikTok suspended uploads of new videos and live streaming for users in Russia on March 6, 2022, while allowing existing content to remain viewable.[96] This self-imposed restriction followed demands from Roskomnadzor to censor content related to the Ukraine conflict, amid accusations that the platform had removed videos from state media outlet RIA Novosti, violating Russian laws on information dissemination.[97] Roskomnadzor has imposed multiple administrative fines on TikTok for non-compliance with content removal orders. On December 16, 2021, a Moscow court fined TikTok an unspecified amount as part of broader penalties against social platforms for failing to delete material deemed illegal, including calls for unsanctioned protests.[98] In April 2022, the Tagansky District Court fined TikTok 2 million rubles (about $27,000 at the time) for disseminating "LGBT propaganda" and refusing to excise such content, pursuant to Federal Law No. 135-FZ prohibiting promotion of non-traditional sexual relations to minors.[99] Further penalties included an October 2022 fine for inadequate deletion of LGBTQ-related material.[100] Enforcement escalated in subsequent years. On August 19, 2022, Roskomnadzor penalized TikTok alongside Telegram and other entities for persistent failure to remove prohibited content, such as information on military mobilization.[101] By July 31, 2024, the Tagansky District Court levied a 4 million ruble fine (approximately $58,000 equivalent) on TikTok for not deploying algorithms to detect and block banned material as mandated, reflecting ongoing requirements under Russia's sovereign internet laws.[102] Similar regulatory actions targeted other foreign services resisting full compliance. Roskomnadzor fined Alphabet's Google (encompassing YouTube) 5 million rubles in the same July 2024 ruling for comparable lapses in content moderation.[102] Platforms like Twitch and Discord faced throttling and partial blocks in 2022 for hosting uncensored Ukraine-related discussions, though enforcement emphasized fines over outright bans to coerce data localization and algorithmic filtering.[18] These measures align with broader 2024-2025 policies, including a September 2025 ban on advertising via blocked or "undesirable" foreign apps to deter circumvention.[103]VPN and Messenger Restrictions
In July 2017, Russian legislation required virtual private network (VPN) providers operating in the country to register with authorities and configure their services to block access to websites prohibited by Roskomnadzor.[104] Non-compliant VPNs faced potential blocking, with enforcement intensifying after the 2022 invasion of Ukraine to prevent circumvention of restrictions on foreign platforms and information deemed harmful to national security.[43] Roskomnadzor escalated actions against unregistered or non-compliant VPNs through Federal Law No. 406-FZ enacted in 2023, which authorizes blocking of VPN services and websites advertising them if they enable access to restricted content.[105] In October 2024, the agency blocked 197 VPN services for facilitating access to prohibited sites, while in August and September 2023, it targeted additional providers, leading Apple to remove 25 VPN apps from the Russian App Store in July 2024.[106][107] A March 2024 law further prohibited websites from disseminating information on circumvention tools, including VPNs, or promoting their use.[43] By July 2025, new amendments introduced fines for individuals using VPNs to access blocked materials and for searching prohibited content even via such tools, with penalties up to 5,000 rubles for citizens.[108] [109] Enforcement included blocking access to 12,600 materials promoting VPN services from January to April 2025, doubling prior efforts, and a September 2025 ban on advertising VPNs that bypass state blocks.[110] [111] These measures aim to close loopholes in Russia's internet controls but have prompted VPN providers to adapt protocols, maintaining partial circumvention capabilities despite regulatory pressure.[112] Regarding messaging applications, Roskomnadzor attempted to block Telegram in April 2018 after the service refused to provide encryption keys for user communications, leading to widespread but ineffective throttling that disrupted third-party services like cloud providers.[110] The block was lifted in June 2020 following Telegram's agreement to restrict channels promoting terrorism, extremism, or drug trafficking, though full decryption access was not granted.[110] In August 2025, Roskomnadzor imposed partial restrictions on voice and video calls in Telegram and WhatsApp, citing the platforms' failure to share user data with Russian authorities for combating fraud and extremism as required by law.[113] [22] These measures, affecting mobile operators' traffic, were confirmed as ongoing in October 2025, with messaging functions remaining operational but calls disrupted to enforce compliance.[114] [115] Similar pressures have targeted other encrypted messengers like Signal, though without full-scale blocks, as part of broader efforts to ensure data access for surveillance.[43]Russian Government Rationale
Protecting National Security
The Russian government maintains that Roskomnadzor's mandate includes safeguarding national security by curtailing the dissemination of information that endangers the constitutional order, public safety, or defense capabilities. Under Federal Law No. 149-FZ of July 27, 2006, "On Information, Information Technologies and Information Protection," the agency is authorized to restrict access to content promoting terrorism, extremism, or incitement to mass unrest, which officials argue prevents threats to state stability and citizen security.[116] This framework positions information control as a proactive defense against ideological subversion and violent radicalization, with Roskomnadzor maintaining a unified register of prohibited sites exceeding 120,000 entries by mid-2022, many categorized for security-related violations.[51] In response to perceived external cyber and informational aggressions, the 2019 Sovereign Internet Law (Federal Law No. 90-FZ) empowers Roskomnadzor to oversee technical measures ensuring the Russian segment of the internet (RuNet) remains operational amid disruptions, such as potential foreign-induced blackouts or attacks on critical infrastructure. Lawmakers justified this legislation as essential for resilience against scenarios like those outlined in U.S. cybersecurity strategies, which Russia views as enabling adversarial network isolation tactics.[117] The law facilitates centralized traffic routing and monitoring to detect and mitigate threats, thereby preserving command-and-control communications during crises, including military operations.[118] During the 2022 special military operation in Ukraine, Roskomnadzor intensified blocks on platforms disseminating what authorities term "disinformation" about Russian forces, contending that unchecked narratives could aid enemy intelligence, erode troop morale, or provoke domestic unrest—actions framed as vital to operational secrecy and national defense. By early 2024, the agency had issued orders for the removal of over 1,000 items of alleged extremist material from social networks, underscoring enforcement against content deemed to facilitate terrorist recruitment or propaganda.[119] These measures align with broader statutes like the 2002 Extremist Activity Law, where Roskomnadzor's role in content suppression is presented as a bulwark against non-state actors exploiting digital channels for subversion.[14]Countering Disinformation and Extremism
Roskomnadzor enforces Russia's Federal Law No. 114-FZ "On Countering Extremist Activity," enacted July 25, 2002, which defines extremism as including the organization, planning, and conduct of activities aimed at forcibly changing the constitutional order, inciting social, racial, national, or religious discord, or propagating exclusivity or superiority on such grounds. The agency identifies, registers, and blocks internet resources disseminating extremist materials, maintaining a federal list of over 5,000 prohibited items as of recent updates to prevent propagation of ideologies linked to terrorism or intergroup hatred. This mandate stems from the government's assessment that unchecked online extremism contributes to real-world violence, as evidenced by Russia's history of domestic terrorist incidents, including those tied to radical Islamist groups.[120] To address disinformation, Roskomnadzor applies provisions from the 2006 Federal Law on Information, amended in 2019 to penalize "fake news" endangering public health, safety, or order, with fines up to 1.5 million rubles for organizations. The agency has ordered blocks on sites spreading unverified claims, such as during the COVID-19 outbreak in March 2020, when it targeted multiple media outlets and restricted over 120 instances of false coronavirus information to avert public panic and health risks. Officials argue these measures counter deliberate manipulation by foreign actors or domestic agitators, which could escalate to extremist mobilization, prioritizing empirical containment of causal pathways from misinformation to societal disruption over unrestricted information flows.[121][122] Amendments signed April 7, 2025, explicitly ban internet usage for extremist purposes, expanding Roskomnadzor's toolkit to include immediate throttling of networks facilitating prohibited content. In 2023, Russian law enforcement documented 2,000 terrorist offenses, including 998 by internal affairs, reinforcing the rationale that proactive blocking disrupts recruitment and propaganda pipelines for groups like ISIS affiliates active in the North Caucasus. While critics, often from Western outlets, highlight overreach, Russian authorities maintain the framework's necessity for causal realism in linking online incitement to offline threats, citing prevented attacks as validation despite limited public disclosure of granular outcomes.[123][124]Promoting Digital Sovereignty
Roskomnadzor advances Russia's digital sovereignty by enforcing laws that fortify the autonomy of the national internet segment, or RuNet, against foreign technological dependencies and potential disruptions. Central to this effort is the agency's oversight of Federal Law No. 90-FZ, known as the Sovereign Runet Law, enacted on May 1, 2019, and operational from November 1, 2019, which mandates the installation of equipment enabling traffic filtering, monitoring, and isolation from global networks during threats to stability.[125][15] This infrastructure, including state-managed Domain Name System (DNS) alternatives and routing protocols, allows RuNet to function independently, as demonstrated in government-mandated tests that verified domestic connectivity without international backbones.[126][117] The agency requires internet service providers to deploy Technical Means of Countering Threats (TSPU) devices, certified and supplied through Roskomnadzor-approved channels, to centralize control over data flows and block unauthorized foreign ingress. By 2020, compliance had extended to over 90% of major providers, enhancing the capacity for self-reliant operation amid geopolitical tensions, such as those following the 2022 Ukraine conflict, where accelerated infrastructure builds reduced vulnerability to sanctions-induced service cuts.[17][19] These measures prioritize causal resilience by substituting imported hardware with domestic equivalents, including Russian-developed firewalls and encryption tools, thereby mitigating risks from supply chain interruptions.[127] Complementing network isolation, Roskomnadzor implements data sovereignty mandates under Federal Law No. 242-FZ, amended in July 2014 and effective September 1, 2015, compelling operators to store Russian users' personal data locally and blocking non-compliant platforms, such as LinkedIn in 2016 after it refused localization.[128] This has driven a shift toward indigenous services; for instance, by 2023, domestic platforms like Yandex and VK handled over 80% of search and social networking traffic, fostering economic independence in IT sectors previously dominated by U.S. and European firms.[126][19] Enforcement actions, including fines exceeding 100 million rubles against violators in 2022, underscore the agency's role in compelling technological self-sufficiency.[129]Criticisms and Counterarguments
Allegations of Political Censorship
Roskomnadzor has been accused by human rights organizations and opposition groups of systematically blocking websites to suppress political dissent, particularly those affiliated with Kremlin critics. In December 2017, the agency added sites linked to Mikhail Khodorkovsky's Open Russia movement to its blacklist for allegedly "calling for disorder," a move critics described as targeting pro-democracy initiatives ahead of the 2018 presidential election.[130] A prominent case occurred in July 2021, when Roskomnadzor restricted access to navalny.com and 48 other websites connected to imprisoned opposition leader Alexei Navalny, following a request from the Prosecutor General's Office. This action preceded Russia's parliamentary elections, prompting Navalny's allies to claim it aimed to hinder coordination of anti-government protests and limit voter information on opposition candidates. The blocks were justified officially as violations of extremism laws, though international observers highlighted the timing as evidence of electoral interference.[131][132][133] Following Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine on February 24, 2022, allegations intensified as Roskomnadzor blocked access to independent media outlets and platforms disseminating anti-war content. On February 27, 2022, the agency notified Current Time of a block for publishing "false information" about Russian military actions, part of a broader effort that saw over 247,000 web pages restricted in 2022 alone, according to digital rights group Roskomsvoboda. Human Rights Watch documented these measures as reaching "new heights" of censorship, enabling the state to control narratives on the conflict while designating critical outlets as "foreign agents" or extremists. Critics argue this pattern prioritizes regime stability over legal justifications like countering disinformation.[134][19] Further claims point to selective enforcement, such as Roskomnadzor's 2021 demand for YouTube to remove Navalny's live channel, which was framed as compliance with anti-extremism rules but seen by advocates as an attempt to throttle a key opposition communication tool. These incidents, reported across outlets like Reuters and Radio Free Europe, underscore persistent accusations that Roskomnadzor's mandate serves political consolidation rather than neutral regulation, though the agency maintains actions align with federal laws on information protection.[135][133]Impacts on Free Speech and Access
Roskomnadzor's enforcement of content blocking has significantly curtailed internet users' access to diverse information sources in Russia, with the agency restricting a record 417,000 websites in 2024 alone, surpassing previous years' figures amid escalating demands for information control following the 2022 invasion of Ukraine.[136] This included over 200,000 sites related to the conflict by April 2024, alongside blocks on independent media, opposition resources, and foreign platforms deemed to host prohibited content.[43] The unblocking rate declined sharply to 106,800 sites in 2024 from higher numbers in prior years, indicating a net expansion of the restricted digital ecosystem.[136] Access to major Western social media platforms has been severely limited since early 2022, with Roskomnadzor throttling or fully blocking services like Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter (now X) in response to their moderation of Russian state media, forcing users to rely on virtual private networks (VPNs) for circumvention.[18] By April 2025, the agency had blocked at least 8,700 websites providing tools or information on bypassing censorship, complicating users' efforts to evade restrictions and resulting in slower connections, intermittent outages, and heightened risks of detection.[18] These measures have isolated Russian internet users from global discourse, particularly on sensitive topics like the Ukraine conflict, where alternative viewpoints are systematically filtered out under laws labeling dissent as "disinformation" or "extremism."[43] The cumulative effect on free speech manifests in a chilling environment where self-censorship prevails among journalists, activists, and ordinary citizens fearing administrative or criminal penalties for sharing unapproved content, as evidenced by Russia's Freedom on the Net score of 20 out of 100 in 2024, reflecting "not free" status and a continued decline in digital liberties.[43] Independent journalism has been stifled through preemptive blocks and warnings, reducing the diversity of available narratives and fostering reliance on state-approved channels like VKontakte or Telegram, which themselves face periodic throttling during periods of unrest.[137] Empirical outcomes include widespread user frustration with fragmented access and an erosion of public debate, as throttled platforms hinder real-time information flow and amplify government narratives.[138]International Responses and Sanctions
The European Union imposed sanctions on Roskomnadzor on December 16, 2022, under its Ukraine-related regime, designating the agency for its role in implementing state policy of censorship, blocking independent media, and restricting access to information critical of the Russian government's actions in Ukraine.[139] These measures include asset freezes and travel bans on designated entities, aimed at countering efforts to suppress dissenting voices and propagate official narratives during the conflict. Canada listed Roskomnadzor under the Special Economic Measures Act (SEMA) in response to Russia's invasion of Ukraine, citing the agency's involvement in surveillance, control, and censorship that undermine democratic principles and international norms on information access.[140] The sanctions prohibit Canadian persons from dealing with the agency, reflecting broader efforts to isolate entities facilitating propaganda and restricting foreign media outlets. Ukraine enacted sanctions against Roskomnadzor following the 2022 invasion, targeting the agency for blocking Ukrainian websites, promoting separatist narratives in Donbas and Crimea, and enabling information operations that supported military aggression.[141] This included restrictions on assets and prohibitions on economic ties, as part of Ukraine's countermeasures against Russian state organs involved in hybrid warfare tactics. Leaders of Roskomnadzor, such as Andrey Yurevich Lipov, faced individual sanctions from the EU and others for directing blocks on over 10,000 resources deemed "unreliable" post-invasion, including sites reporting on war casualties and atrocities, which EU assessments linked to systematic suppression of facts contradicting Kremlin claims.[141] Similarly, deputy head Oleg Aleksandrovich Terliakov was sanctioned for enforcing policies that closed independent outlets and throttled platforms like Twitter and Facebook, contributing to an estimated 89,000 web pages blocked in Q3 2022 alone.[142] These targeted measures highlight international concerns over Roskomnadzor's causal role in isolating Russian citizens from external verification of events, though enforcement relies on compliance by global financial systems rather than direct operational disruption of the agency.[18]Broader Impact
Effects on Russian Internet Infrastructure
Roskomnadzor's enforcement of website blocks has frequently caused collateral disruptions to broader internet services due to the agency's reliance on IP address blacklisting rather than precise domain filtering. In April 2018, an attempt to block the Telegram messaging app resulted in the restriction of over 19 million IP addresses associated with Amazon Web Services and Google Cloud, inadvertently affecting unrelated sites including banking services and cloud-dependent applications, leading to widespread outages across Russia.[17] This incident highlighted the limitations of Russia's blocking infrastructure, which lacks sophisticated tools for targeted censorship without broader fallout. The 2019 Sovereign Internet Law mandated the installation of Technical Means to Counter Threats (TSPU) on ISP networks, enabling centralized traffic routing and monitoring by Roskomnadzor through state-approved gateways. This infrastructure upgrade, completed by 2021, allows for potential partitioning of the Russian segment (RuNet) from the global internet but has imposed substantial costs on providers, requiring investments in deep packet inspection (DPI) equipment and compliance hardware estimated in billions of rubles.[15] [117] Operational tests in 2020 and 2021 demonstrated partial isolation capabilities but revealed vulnerabilities, such as dependency on international DNS and undersea cables, underscoring incomplete sovereignty.[17] Data localization requirements under Federal Law No. 242-FZ, enforced by Roskomnadzor since 2015, compel operators handling Russian personal data to maintain databases within the country, spurring construction of domestic data centers and straining ISP resources with additional storage and redundancy mandates. Non-compliance has led to site blocks, as seen with LinkedIn in 2016, forcing foreign firms to either localize or exit, thereby reshaping traffic patterns towards Russian-hosted alternatives like VKontakte.[143] [144] Throttling of foreign platforms has degraded overall connection quality; for instance, measures against Twitter in March 2021 caused intermittent nationwide blackouts as ISPs struggled with partial blocks, while ongoing YouTube speed reductions—reaching 80% drops by late 2024—have prompted blocks on speed-testing tools like Ookla's Speedtest to obscure performance metrics.[145] [146] [147] These actions, while aimed at control, have empirically increased latency and reduced bandwidth availability, with reports indicating sustained infrastructure stress from escalated blocking volumes—19% higher in 2024 than 2023.[48]Influence on Global Tech Relations
Roskomnadzor's enforcement of Russia's data localization requirements, mandated under Federal Law No. 242-FZ effective September 1, 2015, has compelled global tech firms to store personal data of Russian citizens on domestic servers or face operational restrictions, leading to notable market withdrawals and compliance disputes. LinkedIn became the first major platform blocked in November 2016 after refusing localization, setting a precedent that pressured companies like Apple and Microsoft to adjust practices, with the latter partially complying by 2021 to avoid similar fates.[148] Non-adherence has resulted in administrative cases and fines, such as Google's repeated penalties exceeding $164,000 in 2023 for persistent refusal, exacerbating tensions by framing foreign firms as non-cooperative with national sovereignty mandates.[149][6] Post-February 2022 invasion of Ukraine, Roskomnadzor intensified blocks on foreign social media platforms for failing to curb content deemed "fake news" or calls for violence, including full restrictions on Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter (now X) by March 2022, which prompted Meta and Twitter to suspend services in Russia amid broader Western sanctions. These actions, coupled with demands for 13 U.S.-centric firms—including Apple, Google, and Microsoft—to establish local legal entities by late 2021, underscored Moscow's leverage through market access threats, resulting in partial throttling (e.g., Twitter speeds reduced to 128 kbps in 2021) and symbolic mega-fines, such as Google's 2 undecillion rubles in October 2024 for delisting state media.[150][151][152] Such measures have driven a exodus of foreign tech presence, with firms like those in the "Leave Russia" initiatives curtailing operations, fostering mutual distrust and accelerating Russia's pivot toward domestic alternatives like VKontakte.[153] Efforts to curb circumvention tools have further globalized frictions, as seen in the 2018 Telegram blockade attempt—which inadvertently disrupted services like Google and FireFox due to IP overblocking—and subsequent VPN prohibitions under Federal Law 276-FZ, blocking providers like ExpressVPN in 2021 for enabling access to restricted sites. Apple faced direct pressure to delist Telegram from its Russian App Store in April 2018, delaying GDPR updates and highlighting cross-border regulatory spillovers. By 2025, partial throttling of WhatsApp and Telegram signaled ongoing escalation, compelling even resistant platforms toward selective compliance or reduced functionality in Russia. These dynamics have contributed to a broader tech isolationism, where foreign firms weigh ethical stances against revenue losses—estimated in billions for giants like Google—while Russia advances "sovereign internet" infrastructure to minimize external dependencies.[154][155][114][156]Empirical Outcomes and Data
In 2024, Roskomnadzor restricted access to 523,000 online resources, including websites and pages, though 106,000 were later unblocked, resulting in a net blockage of approximately 417,000 items—a record high compared to prior years.[157][136] This marked a doubling from 2023's net restrictions, when over 558,000 sites and pages were initially blocked, with varying restoration rates.[43] Blocking volumes have escalated since 2022, driven by laws targeting content deemed extremist, illegal, or critical of state actions, including over 200,000 resources related to the Ukraine conflict by mid-2024.[136] Network measurements by the Open Observatory of Network Interference (OONI) confirm the technical efficacy of many blocks, detecting interference on at least 279 independent news media domains as of late 2024, often via DNS tampering or IP blocking.[57] From January 2022 to February 2023, OONI data identified 494 newly blocked domains amid heightened wartime restrictions, with persistent blocking of platforms like Telegram alternatives (e.g., Signal, Discord) enforced since August 2024.[158][18] However, circumvention remains widespread; despite blocking over 150 VPN services by April 2024, VPN usage surged, enabling access to restricted content for millions, as evidenced by sustained traffic to blocked sites via proxies.[43]| Year | Initial Restrictions | Net Blocked (After Unblocks) | Key Categories Blocked |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2022 | ~100,000 (estimated) | Lower restoration rate | Extremism, Ukraine-related |
| 2023 | 558,000+ | ~374,000 | Political dissent, foreign media |
| 2024 | 523,000 | 417,000 | Messaging apps, independent news |