On 31 March 2013,
The New York Times reported that Russia was "selectively blocking [the] Internet". In 2014, during the
annexation of Crimea by the Russian Federation,
Roskomnadzor had a number of websites criticising Russian policy in
Ukraine blocked, including the blog of
Alexei Navalny,
Kasparov.ru and . Also, on 22 June 2016
Amazon Web Services was entirely blocked for a couple of hours because of a poker app. As of April 2024, 200,000 websites related to the Russian invasion of Ukraine are blocked.
Roskomnadzor is blocking around 150
virtual private network (VPN) services and 700 websites involved in advertising VPNs. which caused major tensions among Russian software developers. It was unblocked on 4 December 2014 and GitHub had set up a special page dedicated to
Roskomnadzor-related issues. All content was and remains available for non-Russian networks.
Russian Wikipedia On 5 April 2013, it was confirmed by a spokesperson for
Roskomnadzor that
Wikipedia had been blacklisted over the article "
Cannabis smoking" (
Курение каннабиса) on the Russian Wikipedia. On 18 August 2015, an article in
Russian Wikipedia about
charas (
Чарас (наркотическое вещество) ) was blacklisted by
Roskomnadzor as containing propaganda on narcotics. The article was then rewritten from scratch using UN materials and textbooks, but on 24 August it was included in the list of forbidden materials sent to
Internet providers of Russia. As Wikipedia uses the
HTTPS protocol to encrypt traffic, effectively all of the site with all language versions of Wikipedia was blocked in Russia on the night of August 25. On 1 March 2022,
Roskomnadzor threatened to block access to
Russian Wikipedia over the article "
Вторжение России на Украину (2022)" ("Russia's invasion of Ukraine (2022)"), claiming that the article contained "illegally distributed information" including "reports about numerous casualties among service personnel of the Russian Federation and also the civilian population of Ukraine, including children".
Roskomnadzor made similar threats on 31 March, demanding that Wikipedia remove any information about the invasion that is "misinforming" Russians or it could face a fine of up to 4 million
rubles (approximately
US$49,000).
The Daily Stormer In 2017, the
neo-Nazi website
The Daily Stormer was briefly moved to a Russian
domain name, but
Roskomnazdor subsequently acted to remove its access, and the site moved to the
dark web.
Telegram On 16 April 2018,
Roskomnadzor ordered Russian
ISPs to block access to the instant messenger
Telegram, as the company refused to hand over the
encryption keys for users' chats to Russian authorities.
Roskomnadzor had to abandon this approach, but failed to implement any other means to stop Russian users from accessing Telegram. In the end,
Roskomnadzor and other government structures set up their own channels in the "outlawed" app. In mid-2020 Roskomnadzor officially gave up on trying to block Telegram. This action occasionally caused Russia's key websites, including
Roskomnadzor itself, to stop working. It also led to malfunctions of major commercial services, such as
Qiwi payment system, and blocked some users from accessing Yandex, Google, and YouTube. In addition, along with Twitter,
Roskomnadzor throttled access to numerous websites with domain names ending in "t.co" (t.co being among the Twitter domain), thus affecting no fewer than 48 thousand hosts, including
GitHub,
Russia Today,
Reddit,
Microsoft,
Google,
Dropbox,
Steam. On 26 February 2022, following the
Russian invasion of Ukraine, Twitter said that access to the platform was being restricted to some users in Russia. On 1 March,
Roskomnadzor again slowed access to Twitter, accusing the company of failing to remove what it called "fake posts" about the "special operation". On 28 April 2022, Twitter was fined 3 million rubles (US$41,000) after being sued by
Roskomnadzor for not removing content that included instructions for how to prepare and use
molotov cocktails against Russian armored vehicles.
Meta On 4 March 2022,
Roskomnadzor said it was blocking access to
Facebook over restrictions that were imposed on Russian state media outlets. On 21 March, further action was taken after a court ruled that
Meta Platforms was guilty of "extremist activity", affecting access to Facebook and
Instagram but not
WhatsApp. The ruling came after a
Reuters report stated that Meta would allow its users to post messages supporting violence against Russian soldiers and Russian president Vladimir Putin following the invasion of Ukraine; however, Meta later narrowed its moderation policy to prohibit calls for the death of a head of state.
Google In April 2022,
Roskomnadzor fined Google more than 7 billion rubles (US$94 million), for not removing what it claimed was illegal content from YouTube.
TikTok In April 2022,
Roskomnadzor drew up a protocol and a court in Moscow fined TikTok two million rubles (US$27,000) for not removing content related to the
LGBT community.
Chess.com On 23 April 2022,
Roskomnadzor blocked the
online chess website
Chess.com in Russia because of two articles that were critical of the
Russian invasion of Ukraine and links to those articles replacing the flags of all Russian users on the website. The general prosecutor's office only wanted the two aforementioned anti-war articles banned, but because Chess.com uses the
HTTPS protocol, this blocked the entire website. ==See also==