1/ Muscovites are being locked into an ever-growing 'digital gulag', complain Russian warbloggers, as a still-mysterious mobile Internet shutdown in central Moscow enters its second week. The shutdown is reported to be causing huge commercial losses and inconvenience. ⬇️
2/ Starting March 5th, Internet access in central Moscow was shut down, apparently on the orders of the Russian government. It has even extended to shutting down Wi-Fi on the Moscow Metro and the parliamentary Wi-Fi network in the State Duma.
3/ 'Blue Beard' says the city is being plunged back into the primeval darkness of 2007:
"The only app that works in the city centre in the evening, regardless of mobile internet conditions, is Yandex Music.
Meanwhile, Sberbank and T-Bank's banking apps have crashed."
4/ "Oh well, no banking, but at least there's music.
And in the Kremlin area near the Lenin Library, you're transported not even back to 2007, but perhaps back to the days of Alexander Graham Bell, since making a mobile phone call near the Red Castle is simply impossible."
5/ But what the blogger calls a "Satanic experience" has got worse since then:
"Firstly, the zone with poor mobile internet service is expanding beyond the Central Administrative District."
6/ "The spot where Telegram starts working tolerably in the eastern part of the city center is between Elektrozavodskaya and Semyonovskaya.
Secondly, in the very centre, Yandex services, which were functioning normally just yesterday, are already experiencing outages.
7/ "No music, no taxis.
Speaking of taxis, half of the Danilovsky District is gradually plunging into our beloved 2007. Taxis in the Yerevan Plaza area are already being hailed [manually] by the public."
And it got even worse the next day:
8/ "After whitelisting all key British banks so that respected citizens would be aware of the movement of funds withdrawn abroad, and after Russian bank apps still weren't functioning properly in the city center, someone apparently decided that Yandex Music was just too much fun.
9/ "So they shut it down, too.
Of all the music services, Apple Music is suddenly the only one working.
10/ "From Novokuznetskaya to Elektrozavodskaya, all you can do is sing and dance. It's a joyous celebration of the achievements of Russian thought, in the "hold and don't let go" format.
11/ "Incidentally, most kiosks, tobacco shops, and grocery stores can't accept card payments. They demand cash."
'Zhivoff' notes that Internet shutdowns have been commonplace elsewhere in Russia since 2022, but are only ever explained in the vaguest terms:
12/ "I see people's justifiable outrage at the senseless, unjustified internet and communications blockades in Moscow.
13/ "Let it be known, colleagues, that half of Russia already lives like this. In Crimea, they shut down the internet every other day; in the Krasnodar region, the Urals, and even Siberia, they manage to terrorize people.
14/ "And each time, it's either without any explanation or clear framework, or in the "interests of security." Whose security? Where are the criteria? It's just that Moscow was the last to notice.
15/ "And of course, initially, all this was introduced to combat drones. I'd like to ask, has it helped? Perhaps you could report back for a change, or are reports just for suckers, and normal people always take their word for it?!
16/ "But the problem is, there's no connection, and drones are flying, as I was told, for example, from the Volgograd region. And it would be fine if Telegram didn't work; nothing works at all, for example, the MTS or Sber ecosystem.
17/ "But, as it turned out recently, British bank websites are working. And there's another trick. While some people are without internet, others have it without any restrictions on their "whitelisted numbers." They "need it for work." Excellent segregation, let's keep it up.
18/ "Meanwhile, communication restrictions in central Moscow caused 5 billion rubles [$62m] in damage. Now imagine the damage inflicted on regions that live in this rhythm year-round. White lists, white numbers, segregation, and so on. Is this our sovereignty?"
19/ 'KARNAUKHOV' notes the apparent implementation of whitelisting so that people can only use state-approved online services. He suggests, probably rightly, that this offers the authorities an excellent new means of extorting money from businesses which depend on the Internet:
20/ "I've reread everything written about the lack of service in the Central Administrative District. You can only call. And even this service isn't being provided properly. So, almost all the reports boil down to testing "whitelists" ...
21/ "The same applies here: you can only use services that are allowed: Gosuslugi, Sberbank, Parking, EMIAS (probably), and so on.
22/ "AI, foreign libraries, instant messengers, VPNs for working with AI... This is impossible to use now, because it will likely later be classified as using hostile resources that threaten security.
23/ "To a certain extent, I agree with this, because to get on the "whitelist," T-Bank, for example, will have to pay a lot of money, and so will others, which means revenue for the treasury. This means new schools and kindergartens.
24/ "The Lenin Library and the Library of Foreign Literature will come to life. We'll have to stand in line for the right to read. I haven't been able to use CyberLeninka for a whole week, and it's completely stopped my work. And I have to get to the offline library...
25/ "In other words, I'm a little creeped out that someone is even thinking about "whitelists" of this format. And then what? Will there be a "food whitelist" too? And a "friends whitelist"?..."
26/ 'DELYAGIN'S Special' applauds the government for cutting off Internet access for Russia's puppet parliament as well:
27/ "The State Duma's Wi-Fi has stopped working. Just yesterday, it wasn't working on all phones, and now both networks (one for everyone, the other password-protected—and it wasn't there yesterday either) are simply down.
28/ "I wholeheartedly agree: deputies must be united with the people. When United Russia's policy of strangulation (or "cooling off") finishes off the sewer system, the toilets in the Duma will have to be shut down too."
29/ 'Soldier of Fortune' is simply frustrated by the misdirected effort and expense:
"Honestly, I'm sick and tired of this crap. The country is being massively isolated, and only the most blind fool wouldn't understand it."
30/ "A huge amount of money is being spent on things that could have been invested in the army, air defence, and protecting border communities."
31/ 'Papyrus' is appalled by his discovery that Russia is, in fact, an increasingly oppressive dictatorship:
"How these “super-brains” are driving me crazy by turning my country into North Korea!"
32/ "If even a patriotic person like me is fed up with all these bans and blocks, I can’t even imagine what’s going on in the minds of ordinary, apolitical people.
Well, it’s no big deal—we’ll just put up with it for now, put up with it… BUT THEN WE’LL REALLY MAKE THEM PAY!!!"
33/ Meanwhile, as the Russian media reports a boom in sales of pagers, paper maps, and landline phones, Fighterbomber looks forward to Russia stepping boldly back into the past:
34/ "We didn't live well before, so there's no point in starting now.
Our ancestors got by just fine without all your gadgets and were perfectly happy.
Again, cartography and navigating by the stars are useful skills that should have been introduced in schools long ago.
35/ "And we should teach children to wipe their asses with a burdock leaf. Let them be prepared for harsh and merciless progress from a young age." /end
1/ Russia's statistical agency Rosstat has recently highlighted Russia's dire demographic situation, which has become far worse due to its war losses. Komsomolskaya Pravda war correspondent Grigory Kubatyan suggests nuking Ukraine as a solution. ⬇️
2/ The slumping birth rate has recently been the subject of Rosstat data and has produced alarmed commentary from Russian commentators (see thread below). The war's human losses have also become so huge that they can no longer be ignored.
3/ While Russia has declined to release casualty figures, Western and Ukrainian sources have consistently estimated between 1-1.2 million Russian casualties (with estimates of around 500,000-600,000 Ukrainian casualties). Russian warbloggers seem increasingly to accept this.
1/ Russian soldiers in Ukraine face a "catastrophic" shortage of drones and personnel at the front, according to two Russian warbloggers. The Russian offensive is coming to a standstill with Ukrainian forces said to be outnumbering the Russians two or three to one in places. ⬇️
2/ Anatoly Radov compains that the massive Russian missile strikes against Kyiv over the weekend were a case of exerting the wrong kind of force in the wrong place:
3/ "The real problem with these expensive retaliatory strikes is that there's a catastrophic shortage of Mavics and FPVs on the front.
1/ Continuing with Russian warbloggers' reactions to the overnight Oreshnik ballistic missile attacks against Ukraine, there's a great deal of criticism and bitterness about the Russian government's tactics. One asks: why not attack London instead? ⬇️
1/ Russia's Oreshnik missile is clearly losing its cachet as a 'wonder weapon'. Many Russian warbloggers express frustration and weariness, calling it a propaganda gimmick. One says it's a "humiliating circus, a clown dance on the bones of Russians." ⬇️
2/ The ultra-nationalist 'Russian Movement of Strelkov' (a group of supporters of the imprisoned Igor Girkin) is scathing about the use last night of Oreshnik against targets in Kyiv and Bila Tserkva:
3/ "Hmm...
Just another bunch of empty shells that, aside from being “kind of a cool special effect,” don’t really accomplish anything—or are we supposed to be thrilled about the craters they leave behind, which won’t punish the enemy for Starobilsk in the slightest?
1/ Ukraine's Hornet drones are continuing to attack Russian targets across the occupied territories, seemingly without hindrance. A Russian warblogger fighting in the region expresses deep frustration at Russia's inability to prevent the drone strikes. ⬇️
2/ Writing on the 'Donetsk infantry' Telegram channel, one of the contributors (a member of the "Club of Anonymous Commanders") is clearly exasperated by the situation. He calls for urgent action:
3/ "The road to Crimea, the Donetsk-Novoazovsk and Donetsk-Mariupol highways, the Donetsk outskirts, and so on—all roads in the DPR are now under daily mass attacks by Hornet UAVs, also known as Martian-2. These attacks are escalating daily.
1/ Russian soldiers fighting in the Zaporizhzhia region say they have run out of medications due to their officers' incompetence, and are having to rely on folk remedies such as pine needles for coughs, salt and soap for fungal infections, and vodka with garlic to treat pain. ⬇️
2/ 'Brothers in Arms' writes:
"Brothers from the 166th Motorised Rifle Regiment sent a message via chat ... about medicine in their regiment's units."
3/ "They write: they're searching for medications themselves, first aid kits are empty, medical assistance can be postponed, and sometimes, instead of normal medications, people are prescribed folk remedies.