In 2014,
Galina Timchenko was fired from her job as chief editor at
Lenta.ru by oligarch
Alexander Mamut, a supporter of
Vladimir Putin, after she had interviewed
Right Sector leader
Dmytro Yarosh. She launched the new webpage
Meduza on 25 October 2014. Timchenko told
Forbes that the decision to base
Meduza in
Latvia was made since "right now, establishing an independent Russian language publishing house in Latvia is possible, while in Russia it is not". Moreover, Timchenko stated: "We understood that in Russia, most likely, they would not let us work." Russian businessman and former
oligarch Mikhail Khodorkovsky and telecommunications magnate
Boris Zimin had been considered as passive investors, but they parted ways "for strategic and operational reasons". In February 2015, the website also launched an English-language version. In January 2016, Timchenko handed over the role of chief editor to her deputy
Ivan Kolpakov. In August 2017,
Meduza started a partnership with the American news website
BuzzFeed News. The partnership included publishing each other's materials, sharing experiences, and carrying out and publishing joint investigations. On 20 October 2018, at the outlet's annual celebration,
Meduza chief editor and co-founder Ivan Kolpakov reportedly groped an employee's wife, saying, "You're the only one at this party I can harass and get away with it." Kolpakov was temporarily suspended until
Meduza publicly censured and reinstated him. The incident triggered a social media backlash. On 9 November Kolpakov announced his resignation saying that "it is the only way to stop the crisis engulfing the website and minimize the damage to its reputation". He was reinstated as chief editor on 11 March 2019. In May 2022,
Helsingin Sanomat started publishing individual
Meduza articles translated in Finnish. In February 2023, Timchenko's iPhone was targeted with
Pegasus spyware. The attack occurred a day before a conference of exiled independent Russian media that was held in Berlin and which Timchenko attended; her phone could have been used to eavesdrop on the journalists' conversations during the conference. This attack is the first confirmed instance of Pegasus being used against a Russian journalist. It is unclear which state carried out the attack. Several employees of other independent Russian outlets,
Current Time TV and
Novaya Gazeta, received notifications from Apple that "state-sponsored attackers" may have attacked their phones as well. with support from
Helsingin Sanomat Foundation,
Fritt Ord Foundation, Stichting Editors Choice, JX Fund, Network of Exiled Media Outlets, and
Committee to Protect Journalists. ==Funding==