1/ Downloads of VPNs have soared by 1,300% in Russia as citizens try en masse to circumvent government blocks on popular apps like Telegram. As a Russian commentator warns, this is likely to lead to the government criminalising VPN use in the near future. ⬇️
2/ Yuri Baranchik writes about how Russians are adapting to a "digital concentration camp":
"According to media reports, VPN app downloads in Russia have increased 14-fold in one year (!). From March 2025 to March 2026, 35.7 million downloads were recorded on Google Play alone."
3/ "January-March 2026 were the peak download months: downloads reached 21.27 million in the first quarter. By the end of 2025, the active user base of the top 5 most popular VPN services in Russia had grown to 7.3 million.
4/ "Measures taken to restrict block circumvention services are complicating VPN use. However, experts note that user activity on platforms that block VPN traffic is simultaneously declining.
5/ "According to Apple Censorship, 116 VPN services were unavailable in the Russian App Store as of the end of April. In late March, it was reported that the store had removed over 20 VPN services at the request of Roskomnadzor [the state media regulator].
6/ "What can these figures tell us? Setting aside the usual disbelief 🤦♂️ regarding the intellectual capabilities of those who launched this digital jihad.
7/ "A 14-fold growth and tens of millions of installs aren't a fringe story of "techies," but rather the transition of VPNs into a mass consumer tool. VPNs are ceasing to be considered "hacker gadgets" and becoming a common household tool.
8/ "People are beginning to perceive blocking not as an act of state necessity, but as an inconvenience caused by someone's stupidity that needs to be circumvented.
9/ "35.7 million downloads versus 7.3 million active users speak of a large "bench of reserves"—there's plenty to choose from. People are trying things out, deleting them, and searching for viable options.
10/ "An innovative environment for finding workarounds is emerging. The information literacy of society is increasing—from schoolchildren to pensioners. And it's free. That's good.
11/ "The phrase about "user activity on platforms that block VPN traffic is declining" is key. Users don't adapt to VK Video, Ozon, Wildberries, or any other platform. Platforms lose users if they make access difficult.
12/ "Content loyalty is higher than platform loyalty—what a surprise. Who would have thought...
13/ "Our society has become completely information-driven, a long time ago. Blocking access to information would plunge the vast majority of the population into severe depression and apathy, against which they will protest loudly and decisively.
14/ "Removing an informational stimulant of higher nervous activity—that's something you have to figure out...
15/ "The result is a formalised game of whack-a-mole. And the holes are growing. The authorities are blocking services, putting pressure on stores, and deleting apps (as many as 116 VPNs). Against this backdrop, dozens of new apps and methods for circumventing bans are appearing.
16/ "As a result, it's clear how users feel about the authorities who started all this. Platforms, meanwhile, are forced to balance regulators' demands with audience retention. And this isn't inspiring loyalty either.
17/ "If Roskomnadzor and the Ministry of Digital Development continue to prod the social and digital bear, the prognosis is clear. VPNs will become the standard for an active audience (30-50 million people).
18/ "App deletions and protocol blocking will continue. However, the share of custom solutions, "grey" VPNs, self-hosted options, home proxies that can no longer be disabled, and so on will grow. Segmentation of the population will occur.
19/ "The passive and apathetic majority will live within a limited information field (with "whitelists"). The active minority, also the most inquisitive and innovative, will seek various methods to circumvent the bans, including leaving the digital concentration camp.
20/ "It's hard to say who needs this and why. But what's happening hardly looks like a tool for the country's development. Incidentally, the president hinted at something similar yesterday, recommending that lawmakers calm down with the bans.
21/ "Because the natural knee-jerk reaction of legislators to the obvious failure of the fight against block circumvention will be to criminalize VPN use. And the allocation of funds for traffic filtering will no longer be tens of billions [of rubles], but hundreds." /end
1/ The notorious Russian colonel Igor 'Evil' Puzik is once again making news for the wrong reasons. His regiment's political officer is reported to have confessed to the FSB that he and the colonel were imprisoning and torturing their own men to extract money from them. ⬇️
2/ Colonel Puzik, the commander of the 87th Motorised Rifle Regiment, is widely detested by Russian warbloggers, his own men, and their relatives, for his alleged corruption, brutality, and willingness to send men to their deaths or shoot them himself to shut them up.
3/ He became notorious over his alleged involvement in drug dealing which prompted him to send two UAV operators, who had spoken out about it, to die in an assault. No action was taken against him despite an outcry. However, it seems he may now be the target of an investigation.
1/ Why can't Russia have n̶i̶c̶e̶ ̶t̶h̶i̶n̶g̶s̶ interceptor drones that work, unlike Ukraine? The answer, says one warblogger, is that Russia's military-industrial complex has been captured by big vested interests who've made it into a "gravy train". ⬇️
"The Ukrainians also made a "Yolka." How is it different from ours?
P1-SUN.
Acceleration up to 450 km/h.
Interception altitude up to 5000 m.
3/ "Our Yolka:
Maximum speed 250.
Interception altitude 2000 m.
Not allowed in the rain, not allowed at night, not allowed if facing the sun. If a bird flies between the Yolka and an enemy UAV, the Yolka can lock onto it. It can simply get knocked off course.
1/ The Russian army's response to the threat of Ukraine's drones is to give its soldiers prayer cards appealing for divine help against "demonic drones". Incredulous Russian warbloggers are demanding something a bit more tangible. ⬇️
2/ The text of the "Prayer against demonic drones" says: "O, Saint Barbara, the great martyr and patroness, look upon us who grieve and suffer from the demonic drones, that sow death and destruction."
3/ "Strengthen us in faith and hope, give us strength and courage not to despair in the struggle for truth and freedom. Our intercessor, pray for us, that He will spare us and that He deliver us from the evil slander of our enemies. Amen."
1/ The Russian government's claims that it isn't blocking GitHub are widely disbelieved by Russian commentators, who continue to protest about the severe impact that the apparent restrictions on accessing it will have on military-industrial software development. ⬇️
2/ The military-technical Telegram channel 'Atomic Cherry' is one of many to note that Russian software developers – like developers everywhere – are functionally dependent on the open-source code libraries provided by GitHub:
3/ "Russia's restrictive policies continue to strike at various locations, smashing and destroying not just the "free internet," but the information space itself, and they've finally reached the resource I've been anticipating for so long—GitHub.
1/ The Russian Navy now appears to be covering entire submarines in anti-drone nets. A satellite photograph published by a Russian warblogger shows two net-covered Pacific Fleet submarines anchored alongside quays. ⬇️
2/ According to the Russian warblogger 'Ramsay', the photo "shows the Pacific Fleet's submarine command attempting to prevent a repeat of Operation Spiderweb." The location in question is the Rybachiy Naval Base in Kamchatka, over 7,300 km from Ukraine.
3/ Ramsay writes: "The checklist for preparing the nuclear-powered missile submarine for sea now includes the item "Clearing the superstructure of anti-drone protection."
1/ Russian programmers are reporting that GitHub, the world's largest cloud platform for IT projects and collaborative development, is becoming increasingly inaccessible for them. The reasons aren't clear, but it's a looming disaster for Russian military and civilian IT. ⬇️
2/ The Internet censorship monitoring service OONI has recorded a growing trend, beginning on 5th May, of failed connections to Github from Russian users, reaching 16% of all Russian connection attempts.
3/ While Github isn't officially listed on the Russian media regulator Roskomnadzor's registry of banned websites, over 130 projects on the site have been blocked by Russian court orders, Roskomnadzor, the consumer regulator Rospotrebnadzor, and the Ministry of Internal Affairs.