Block party – Russia shutting digital borders including Facebook, Twitter

The opposing viewpoints on platforms like Facebook, Twitter has caused Russia to block or restrict these popular social media.
7 March 2022

Facebook and multiple media sites were partially inaccessible in Russia on March 4, 2022, as authorities crack down on critical voices as fighting escalates in Ukraine. (Photo by OLIVIER DOULIERY / AFP)

  • The opposing viewpoints on platforms like Facebook, Twitter has caused Russia to block or restrict these popular social media
  • Russia thus joins the very small club of countries to block Facebook, the largest social network in the world, over its ongoing invasion of Ukraine
  • Facebook’s parent Meta and Twitter have engaged on the very sensitive issue of information by blocking the spread of Russian state-linked news media

by Joshua Melvin with Julie Jammot in San Francisco

The Facebook block in Russia is a symptom of its broader effort to cut itself off from sources of information that could imperil its internationally condemned invasion of Ukraine, experts say. The often-criticized social network is part of a web of information sources that can challenge the Kremlin’s preferred perspective that its assault on Ukraine is righteous and necessary.

The block of Facebook and the restricting of Twitter last week came the same day Moscow backed the imposition of jail terms on media publishing “false information” about the military. Russia’s motivation “is to suppress political challenges at a very fraught moment for (Vladimir) Putin, and the regime, when it comes to those asking very tough questions about why Russia is continuing to prosecute this war,” said Steven Feldstein, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

Russia thus joins the very small club of countries to block Facebook, the largest social network in the world, along with China and North Korea. “It’s a censorship tool of last resort,” Feldstein added. “They are pulling the plug on a platform rather than try to block pages or use all sorts of other mechanisms that they traditionally do.”

Moscow was expected to quickly overpower its neighbor, but the campaign has already shown signs that it could go longer and could lead to the unleashing of its full military ferocity.

Earlier this week independent monitoring group OVD-Info said that more than 7,000 people in Russia had been detained at demonstrations over Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine. Web monitoring group NetBlocks said Russia’s moves against the social media giants come amid a backdrop of protests “which are coordinated and mobilized through social media and messaging applications.”

The war is meanwhile taking place during a period of unprecedented crackdown on the Russian opposition, with has included protest leaders being assassinated, jailed or forced out of the country.

No access to “the truth”

Since Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine last week, Russian authorities have stepped up pressure against independent media even though press freedoms in the country were already rapidly waning. In this context, Facebook plays a key information distribution role in Russia, even as it endures withering criticism in the West over matters ranging from political division to teenagers’ mental health.

Natalia Krapiva, tech legal counsel at rights group Access Now, said social media has been a place where independent, critical voices have been talking about the invasion. “Facebook is one of the key platforms in Russia,” she said, adding that its loss is “a devastating blow to access to independent information and for resistance to the war.”

Russia has been hit with unprecedented sanctions from the West over the invasion, but also rejections both symbolic and significant from sources ranging from sporting organizations to US tech companies. Facebook’s parent Meta and Twitter however have engaged on the very sensitive issue of information by blocking the spread of Russian state-linked news media.

Russia’s media regulator took aim at both, with Roskomnadzor accusing Facebook of discrimination toward state media. Big US tech firms like Apple and Microsoft have announced halting the sale of their products in Russia, while other companies have made public their “pauses” of certain business activities or ties.

On Friday, March 4, US internet service provider Cogent Communications said it had “terminated its contracts with customers billing out of Russia.” The Washington Post reported Cogent has “several dozen customers in Russia, with many of them, such as state-owned telecommunications giant Rostelecom, being close to the government.”

It’s exactly the kind of measure Ukrainian officials have been campaigning heavily for as they ask Russia be cut off from everything from Netflix to Instagram.

Yet experts like Krapiva worry about what that would mean for dissenting or critical voices inside Russia. “There’s a risk of people having no access to truth,” she said. “Some Ukrainians have been calling for disconnecting Russia from the internet, but that’s counterproductive to disconnect civil society in Russia who are trying to fight.”