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Interesting that Apple is involved in this.

People in those areas couldn't access Google, YouTube, Telegram, WhatsApp, or other foreign websites or apps—even if they used VPNs, according to a local Russian news site.

Russian digital rights NGO Roskomsvoboda told TechRadar that most VPNs didn't work during the shutdown, but some apparently did. It's unclear which ones or how many actually worked, though. Russia has been increasingly blocking VPNs more broadly, and Apple has helped the country's censorship efforts by taking down VPN apps on its Russian App Store. At least 197 VPNs are currently blocked in Russia, according to Russian news agency Interfax.

Interesting that Apple is involved in this. >*People in those areas couldn't access Google, YouTube, Telegram, WhatsApp, or other foreign websites or apps—even if they used VPNs, according to a local Russian news site.* >*Russian digital rights NGO Roskomsvoboda told TechRadar that most VPNs didn't work during the shutdown, but some apparently did. It's unclear which ones or how many actually worked, though. Russia has been increasingly blocking VPNs more broadly, and Apple has helped the country's censorship efforts by taking down VPN apps on its Russian App Store. At least 197 VPNs are currently blocked in Russia, according to Russian news agency Interfax.*

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[–] 1 pt 4mo

Being able to cut off internet access to the outside world is not a bad idea. No doubt during a hot war the enemy will send cyber attacks and with no access to the internet in Russia makes that kinda hard. Of course the article is "muh russia....muh bad....gofaggy hands over $500k to Ukraine because faggotry".

[–] 1 pt 4mo

Wait! But I thought the internet was a web and packets just rerouted.