Two phones and an app: How Russians skirt Putin’s digital iron curtain

People use mobile phones while standing outside St. Basil's Cathedral in central Moscow, Russia
Officials have been pushing Russians to use state-backed alternatives to foreign apps and websites. (Source: Reuters/Anastasia Barashkova)
In a quiet cafe popular for its free Wi-Fi and good coffee, a Russian interior designer logs onto a virtual private network so she can chat with friends abroad using the US messaging service WhatsApp, which is blocked inside Russia. Later, she toggles off the VPN to buy a ticket on the Russian Railways website, which bars anyone using the tools to obscure their location. She then picks up a second phone to check for messages from clients on the state-controlled app Max. Since the Kremlin ratchet

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