ÎÚÑ»´«Ã½

Skip to main content
You have permission to edit this article.
Edit

How Russia reins in the internet by blocking websites and isolating it from the rest of the world

Going online in Russia can be frustrating, complicated and even dangerous.

Updated
4 min read
How Russia reins in the internet by blocking websites and isolating it from the rest of the world

An activist holds a poster reading “For Russia without censorship. Orwell wrote a dystopia, not an instruction manual” during a picket against internet limitations in front of The State Duma, the lower house of the Russian Parliament, prior to consider the third and final reading of a bill, criminalising the search of “extremist materials” in Moscow, Russia, Tuesday, July 22, 2025. 


TALLINN, Estonia (AP) — YouTube videos that won’t load. A visit to a popular independent media website that produces only a blank page. Cellphone internet connections that are down for hours or days.

Going online in Russia can be frustrating, complicated and even dangerous.

ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW

More from The Star & partners