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Paper: How Internet censorship changed in Russia during the 1st year of military conflict in Ukraine
slides-biasws-how-internet-censorship-changed-in-russia-during-the-st-year-of-military-conflict-in-ukraine-02

Slides IAB Workshop on Barriers to Internet Access of Services (BIAS) (biasws) Team
Title Paper: How Internet censorship changed in Russia during the 1st year of military conflict in Ukraine
Abstract
Blog post: https://ooni.org/post/2023-russia-a-year-after-the-conflict/

As of today, last year, Russia started its military operation in Ukraine. This was followed by increased levels of internet censorship, as …
Blog post: https://ooni.org/post/2023-russia-a-year-after-the-conflict/

As of today, last year, Russia started its military operation in Ukraine. This was followed by increased levels of internet censorship, as Internet Service Providers (ISPs) in Russia started blocking access to several news media websites. In early March 2022, OONI published a report documenting these blocks, as well as the blocking of a site (200rf.com) that shares information about captured and killed Russian soldiers in Ukraine. OONI also reported that Russian ISPs started throttling access to Twitter on 26th February 2022, and switched to blocking it by 4th March 2022 – at which point, they also started blocking access to Facebook.

Information controls are known to occur during conflicts, and the increased censorship events in Russia suggest an attempt to control the narrative surrounding the conflict in Ukraine. But has internet censorship changed in Russia over the last year?

In this report, we attempt to answer this question through the analysis of OONI measurements collected from Russia between January 2022 to February 2023. We supplement our findings with information from relevant legal analysis and desk research provided by Roskomsvoboda.
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Last updated 2024-01-11

slides-biasws-how-internet-censorship-changed-in-russia-during-the-st-year-of-military-conflict-in-ukraine-02
Blog post: https://ooni.org/post/2023-russia-a-year-after-the-conflict/

As of today, last year, Russia started its military operation in Ukraine. This
was followed by increased levels of internet censorship, as Internet Service
Providers (ISPs) in Russia started blocking access to several news media
websites. In early March 2022, OONI published a report documenting these
blocks, as well as the blocking of a site (200rf.com) that shares information
about captured and killed Russian soldiers in Ukraine. OONI also reported that
Russian ISPs started throttling access to Twitter on 26th February 2022, and
switched to blocking it by 4th March 2022 – at which point, they also started
blocking access to Facebook.

Information controls are known to occur during conflicts, and the increased
censorship events in Russia suggest an attempt to control the narrative
surrounding the conflict in Ukraine. But has internet censorship changed in
Russia over the last year?

In this report, we attempt to answer this question through the analysis of OONI
measurements collected from Russia between January 2022 to February 2023. We
supplement our findings with information from relevant legal analysis and desk
research provided by Roskomsvoboda.