BBS:      TELESC.NET.BR
Assunto:  Russian official admits completely banning VPNs is 'simply imposs
De:       Mike Powell
Data:     Wed, 13 May 2026 09:55:02 -0500
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Russian official admits completely banning VPNs is 'simply impossible'

Date:
Wed, 13 May 2026 14:33:34 +0000

Description:
A top Russian official has admitted that banning VPNs is technically 
impossible without breaking the country's internet infrastructure.

FULL STORY
A Kremlin official has publicly conceded
that completely blocking Virtual Private Networks (VPNs) in Russia is "simply 
impossible" and admitted that doing so could catastrophically impact the 
country's digital infrastructure. 

The surprising admission comes from Valery Fadeev, the head of Russia's 
Presidential Human Rights Council  an advisory body that consults the Kremlin 
on civil liberties. Speaking to the Russian business news outlet RBC, Fadeev 
noted that while the government disapproves of citizens using the best VPNs 
to bypass state censorship, technically eradicating them is a bridge too far. 

The reality is that the modern digital economy relies heavily on the 
cybersecurity protections and remote access provided by VPNs. Blocking them 
outright wouldn't just stop citizens from reading independent news. It would 
also disrupt critical operations for financial institutions and the tech 
sector. 

"I don't really understand how to regulate VPNs, because it became clear to 
everyone fairly quickly that this is an extremely complex system and that 
banning or switching off VPNs is simply impossible," Fadeev told RBC, 
according to an English translation published by independent Russian news 
outlet Meduza . 

"If you try to shut everything down, the entire vast internet system could 
simply be broken. That's obvious." The economic cost of an internet shutdown 
Fadeev noted that this technical reality is now "clear to everyone, though 
specialists understood it long ago." He warned that a blanket VPN shutdown 
would severely impact businesses, banks, and "programmers who download code." 

However, Fadeev remains highly critical of people using the privacy tools to 
evade internet censorship. He told RBC he has "never said that VPNs should be 
shut down," but criticized "certain Russian citizens" who use circumvention 
tools to access independent reporting and television channels blocked within 
the country. 

"It's worth remembering that some of these media outlets work for the enemy, 
they are not an alternative source," Fadeev said. "Some of them have been 
designated as foreign agents, others as undesirable organizations." 

"What you find there is not alternative information but enemy propaganda. 
This is not a legal question, not a matter of some kind of restriction, its a 
question of civic consciousness."  The Kremlin has waged an
escalating war against internet freedom , routinely blocking independent 
outlets and attempting to curb access to circumvention tools. Fadeev, who 
claims he does not use a VPN himself, previously referred to VPN usage as 
"something unnatural," arguing that citizens using them are looking for "what 
the enemy is saying." 

While many  including Telegram CEO Pavel Durov  have criticized Russia's 
attempts to restrict access to VPNs, Fadeev rejected accusations of 
undermining free speech. 

Specifically, he accused "part of the Russian intelligentsia" of equating 
internet restrictions with attacks on free speech, arguing that online 
censorship is necessary because Ukrainian forces "are striking many Russian 
cities." 

Despite the intense crackdown on VPNs, several apps appear to still be 
working, with BlancVPN, AmneziaVPN and VPN Liberty among those adapting and 
continuing to operate in the country.

Link to news story:
https://www.techradar.com/vpn/vpn-privacy-security/russian-official-admits-com
pletely-banning-vpns-is-simply-impossible

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