There has been rare public resistance to the push to throttle Telegram, Russia’s most popular messaging app, with even some pro-Kremlin hawks fearing it could backfire.

The Kremlin’s tightening grip on Russian life has a new target: the country’s most popular messaging app.

Ordinary Russians and even pro-Kremlin hawks have offered rare public pushback against the campaign to throttle Telegram, warning it could backfire, not just at home but for Russia’s military in Ukraine.

The app is woven into the daily existence of those who support and oppose the government alike. But the Kremlin is instead pushing people to its new “national” messenger MAX, which many fear could be used to surveil them as part of a deepening crackdown on freedoms since the invasion of Ukraine. Those fears have been amplified by a wave of mobile internet outages, including recent disruptions in Moscow, which authorities have justified as necessary for security.

  • MrJameGumb@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Sounds like people are discovering that dictators mistrust their own supporters as much if not more than their political dissidents

  • aceslip@lemmy.zip
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    1 day ago

    Weren’t there articles floating around last year saying that Telegram is an FSB honeypot? So which is it?

    • comrade_twisty@feddit.org
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      1 day ago

      Both can be true. It can be a honeypot abroad but hard to control domestically.

      China provides multiple apps that can only be used abroad. These apps can’t be used in China where domestic alternatives from the same companies are promoted.