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In March, editor Marina Ovsyannikova interrupted Russia’s Channel One evening news with a sign saying: ‘No War. Stop the war. Don't believe the propaganda. You are being lied to here.’ Photograph: DSK/EPA
Sat 2 Jul 2022 12.00 BST Last modified on Sat 2 Jul 2022 14.47 BST
Russia blocks Google News after ad ban on content condoning Ukraine invasion
Original reporting and incisive analysis, direct from the Guardian every morning
© 2022 Guardian News & Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. (modern)
Little moderation, huge audiences and biddable owners make porn and gambling sites a safe haven from censors
Six weeks into the invasion of her country, Anastasiya Baydachenko made an emotional plea . She wanted money: not for weapons, not for clothes, but for adverts.
Vladimir Putin had been aggressively turning Russia’s internet into a fortress and, as a CEO at a Ukrainian digital marketing company, Baydachenko knew a way to infiltrate it. The plan was simple: buy ad space across websites in Russia and Belarus and use them to link to independent news on the war in Ukraine. The adverts could be direct, or they could be oblique, even titillating, to conceal their true nature and evade the censors.
At first Baydachenko targeted the usual suspects – Google, YouTube, Facebook and other sites with high traffic. But with each passing day the task became harder. The introduction of Russia’s “fake news” law catapulted the country’s internet into a darker realm. And so Baydachenko moved into a darker one too: the world of online gambling and pornography. These sites were perfect – little moderation, huge audiences and people behind them whose allegiances were with the highest bidder. If all else failed she’d try to take on Putin through porn.
Baydachenko wasn’t a lone ranger. Instead she was part of a bigger network and through this network money began to come in . The operation expanded. Baydachenko reckons that their ads have reached hundreds of millions of Russian internet users. “Informational resistance works,” Baydachenko says with confidence, adding that she believes pushback to the war from mothers of Russian soldiers is partly because of the campaign.
This is just one example in a growing list of people and organisations exploiting digital loopholes in Russia to challenge Putin’s control. Last month alone, hackers have turned the mobile version of news radio station Kommersant FM into a jukebox of Ukrainian anthems and have placed an appeal to end the war on smotrim.ru, the main website for accessing state-run TV channels and radio stations.
Rob Blackie is one of the directors of Free Russia, a campaign to bring independent news about the war to Russians through ads. He spearheaded the campaign (first doing so in 2014 when Crimea was invaded) and now works with Baydachenko. He jokes that from Putin’s perspective he’s running “a criminal spam operation”.
What he and the other people in this space actually operate is a modern-day samizdat network. Samizdat, the Russian word for clandestine material, was highly influential in the USSR, helping spread a mass of protests, banned work and documents. The method was the typewriter, the means people’s hands – now upgraded to the internet and its offshoot of tools such as virtual private networks (VPNs) and the encrypted apps Telegram and Signal.
Even TikTok was recently used by US-backed news organisation RFE/RL to track the movements of troops across the country as they made their way to the front. RFE/RL – which has suspended operations in Russia after pressure from police and politicians – is still working with journalists there and breaking important stories. Its message is clear: we’ll find ways to get information in and out.
Some are fighting the information war by merging the modern with the old, such as the team behind Zvezda, an independent digital publication. When their site was blocked in early March they began publishing a weekly text edition on their Telegram channel in an A4 format that could be easily printed out. Stepan Khlopov, the editor-in-chief, said he hoped people would leave the newspaper lying around for passersby to pick up.
Resistance isn’t always in the form of hard-hitting news. The Kopilka Project, an online repository of anti-war poetry from over 100 Russian speakers, was launched a few months ago in the form of a live Googledoc to which readers can request access. Kopilka translates from Russian as “piggy bank”, and Julia Nemrovskaya, one of the organisers, told me they consider their efforts to be “throwing a tiny copper coin into a bigger kopilka : the collective effort to defeat Putin”. Kopilka’s aims are twofold: to challenge Putin’s propaganda and to keep the poems safe from the Kremlin’s destructive arms.
At Index on Censorship, where I am editor-in-chief, bad-news stories are our bread and butter. When I stumble on positive stories I embrace them. And even in the middle of this awful war, there is some good. Protest still exists in Russia. It exists in headline-grabbing instances of journalists brandishing anti-war signs on the evening news and thousands taking to Russia’s streets. But it also exists in large-scale, high-impact digital operations, meticulously planned and involving, of course, a hefty dose of bravery.
Putin can ban journalists all he wants – as he did in mid-June when he banned 29 UK journalists from entering Russia, including correspondents from the Guardian. He can saddle protesters with hefty prison terms and fines. He can block independent, critical sites. Yet people are finding ingenious ways to get the non-airbrushed truth out and to pass the message on.
Yes, it’s important not to overstate their role. Today’s dissidents play a high-stakes game. Putin isn’t a man to mess with. His punishment is swift and harsh, and while he might not run as well-oiled an online censorship machine as, say, Xi Jinping does in China, he’s fast catching up. But allow us a moment to rejoice in the image of people in Russia visiting porn sites only to be served the naked truth about the Ukraine war. If anything deserves to be called a “special operation”, it’s surely that.
Jemimah Steinfeld is editor-in-chief of Index on Censorship
Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a letter of up to 300 words to be considered for publication, email it to us at guardian.letters@theguardian.com


Comcon, Russian research agency, analyzed Web traffic patterns for Russia's most popular sites. 8.

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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Overview of Internet censorship in the Russian Federation
Federal Law No. 2121-1, "On Mass Media"
On Amending Federal Law "On the Protection of Children from Information Harmful to Their Health and Development and Other Legislative Acts of the Russian Federation"
On Amending Federal Law "On Information, Information Technologies and Information Protection"
On Amending Federal Law "On Information, Information Technologies and Information Protection"
For a more comprehensive list, see List of websites blocked in Russia .


^ Individuals may face fines as much as $23,000 and (or) up to 15 days in jails. [4] [5] [6] [7]

^ [9] [10] [11] [12] [13] [14] [15] [16] [17]




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^ Jump up to: a b "Examples of forbidden content" . Zapretno.info. 2014. Archived from the original on 2014-10-30 . Retrieved 2014-10-29 .

^ "Russia's Putin signs law banning fake news, insulting the state online" . Reuters . 2019-03-18 . Retrieved 2019-07-06 .

^ Times, The Moscow (2019-03-18). "Putin Signs 'Fake News,' 'Internet Insults' Bills Into Law" . The Moscow Times . Retrieved 2019-07-06 .

^ "Insulting Putin May Now Land You in Jail Under a New Russian Law" . 2019-03-18 . Retrieved 2019-07-06 .

^ Sant, Shannon Van (18 March 2019). "Russia Criminalizes The Spread Of Online News Which 'Disrespects' The Government" . NPR.org . Retrieved 2019-07-06 .

^ "European Rights Court Faults Russia Over Website Blocking" . Barron's . Agence France Presse . 23 June 2020 . Retrieved 6 September 2020 .

^ "Russia" , Freedom on the Net 2009 , Freedom House, 2009. Retrieved 26 October 2015.

^ "Russia" , Freedom on the Net 2011 , Freedom House, 2011. Retrieved 26 October 2015.

^ "Russia" , Freedom on the Net 2012 , Freedom House, 2012. Retrieved 26 October 2015.

^ "Russia" , Freedom on the Net 2013 , Freedom House, 2013. Retrieved 26 October 2015.

^ "Russia" . Freedom on the Net 2014 . Freedom House. Archived from the original on 24 April 2019 . Retrieved 26 October 2015 .

^ "Russia" . Freedom on the Net 2015 . Freedom House . Retrieved 3 January 2016 .

^ "Russia" . Freedom on the Net 2016 . Freedom House. Archived from the original on 24 January 2020 . Retrieved 26 March 2018 .

^ "Russia" . Freedom on the Net 2017 . Freedom House . Retrieved 26 March 2018 .

^ "Russia" . Freedom on the Net 2018 . Freedom House . Retrieved 22 July 2019 .

^ Internet Enemies Archived 2012-03-23 at the Wayback Machine , Reporters Without Borders (Paris), 12 March 2012

^ "Internet Enemies" , Enemies of the Internet 2014: Entities at the heart of censorship and surveillance , Reporters Without Borders (Paris), 11 March 2014. Retrieved 24 June 2014.

^ "ONI Country Profiles" , Research section at the OpenNet Initiative web site, a collaborative partnership of the Citizen Lab at the Munk School of Global Affairs, University of Toronto; the Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard University; and the SecDev Group, Ottawa

^ Soldatov, Andrei; Borogan, Irina (2016-11-29). "Putin brings China's Great Firewall to Russia in cybersecurity pact" . The Guardian . ISSN 0261-3077 . Retrieved 2017-07-04 .

^ "China: The architect of Putin's firewall" . Eurozine . 2017-02-21 . Retrieved 2019-12-10 .

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^ Tests scheduled: Law on Runet autonomy to come into force soon

^ Jump up to: a b "Twitter and Facebook restricted in Russia amid conflict with Ukraine" . NetBlocks . 2022-02-26.

^ Jump up to: a b Fischer, Sara (2022-02-26). "Russia restricts Twitter, Facebook during Ukraine attack" . Axios .

^ Brandom, Russell (2022-02-26). "Russia blocks Twitter as Ukraine invasion escalates" . The Verge .

^ "Russia Is Now Blocking Twitter" . VICE News . 2022-02-26.

^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g Maréchal, Nathalie (2017-03-22). "Networked Authoritarianism and the Geopolitics of Information: Understanding Russian Internet Policy" . Media and Communication . 5 (1): 29–41. doi : 10.17645/mac.v5i1.808 . ISSN 2183-2439 . Retrieved 2017-07-03 .

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^ Jump up to: a b c "Путин подписал закон о блокировке сайтов за экстремизм" . Retrieved 2015-08-23 .

^ Service, Forum 18 News. "Forum 18 Archive: RUSSIA: Bans on more literature, website and video – 3 December 2014" . www.forum18.org . Retrieved 2015-08-23 .

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^ "Совбез РФ будет бороться с "размыванием духовных ценностей" в интернете" . Новая Газета . Retrieved 2015-10-19 .

^ "ДНИ.РУ / Эксперты оценили полномочия Роскомнадзора" . ДНИ.РУ . Retrieved 2015-11-15 .

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^ "Russia Update: Government Further Restricts Internet Freedom" . The Interpreter Magazine. 2015-02-04 . Retrieved 2015-02-04 .

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^ Roth, Andrew (2018-04-13). "Moscow court bans Telegram messaging app" . The Guardian . Retrieved 2018-04-13 .

^ MacFarquhar, Neil (13 April 2018). "Russian Court Bans Telegram App After 18-Minute Hearing" . The New York Times . Retrieved 13 April 2018 .

^ "VPN Sales Soar After Russia Bans Telegram App, Media Reports" . Retrieved 2018-05-21 .

^ "Спутниковый интернет отдают под контроль государства" . roskomsvoboda.org . Retrieved 2018-11-15 .

^ "Спутниковый интернет vs ФСБ: развитие технологий или самоизоляция?" . roskomsvoboda.org . Retrieved 2018-11-15 .

^ Axelrod, Tal (2018-12-11). "Google fined in Russia over search results: report" . TheHill . Retrieved 2019-02-11 .

^ Lee, Timothy B. (2019-03-18). "Vladimir Putin signs sweeping Internet-censorship bills" . Ars Technica . Retrieved 2019-03-19 .

^ " "Нежелательный" видеоролик о нехватке школ продолжает собирать штрафы" . roskomsvoboda.org . Retrieved 2019-05-11 .

^ "Административная форма презумпции виновности" . roskomsvoboda.org . Retrieved 2019-05-11 .

^ "Throttling of Twitter in Russia" .

^ "Russia's Digital Development Ministry wants to ban the latest encryption technologies from the RuNet" . Meduza . Retrieved 2021-07-28 .

^ "GlobalCheck" . globalcheck.net . Retrieved 2021-07-28 .

^ "Russia Takes a Big Step Toward Internet Isolation" . Wired . ISSN 1059-1028 . Retrieved 2021-07-28 .

^ "Academics: Russia deployed new technology to throttle Twitter's traffic" . The Record by Recorded Future . 2021-04-06 . Retrieved 2021-07-28 .

^ "Deciphering Russia's "Sovereign Internet Law" | DGAP" . dgap.org . Retrieved 2021-07-28 .

^ "Закон о "Суверенном Рунете" стал применяться для политического давления и сокрытия начала блокировок" . roskomsvoboda.org (in Russian) . Retrieved 2021-07-30 .

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^ "Russia tightening up SIM user registration" . www.commsupdate.com . Retrieved 2021-10-25 .

^ "Did Russia just ban anonymous use of public Wi-Fi?" . The Daily Dot . 2014-08-08 . Retrieved 2021-10-25 .

^ Soldatov, Andrei (2021-12-07). "Why the Kremlin Blocking TOR Is a Big Deal" . The Moscow Times . Retrieved 2021-12-07 .

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^ "Russian MPs back law on internet data storage" . BBC News . Retrieved 24 July 2014 .

^ "Passport now required to use public Wi-Fi in Russia" . RAPSI. 2014-08-08 . Retrieved 2014-09-22 .

^ "Russia: 'Big Brother' Law Harms Security, Rights" . Human Rights Watch . 2016-07-12 . Retrieved 2017-07-02 .

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^ Consultant Plus

^ In Russian , the blacklist is officially called the Единый реестр доменных имён, указателей страниц сайтов в сети «Интернет» и сетевых адресов, позволяющих идентифицировать сайты в сети «Интернет», содержащие информацию, распространение которой в Российской Федерации запрещено , which translates to Common register of domain
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