Telegram is currently in a long-running battle with Russian authorities, who argue that its promise of privacy and anonymity has helped enable crime and political unrest.
Founded in 2013 by Pavel Durov, the platform quickly grew into a global social media tool used by students, entrepreneurs, officials, and even the military. It presented the opportunity for secure communication, free calls, bots, and anonymous payments.
From the beginning, Telegram was marketed as a “secure and encrypted” platform. Durov positioned the app as a privacy tool for this digital age, where personal data protection is a symbol of awareness and education. The promise of end-to-end encryption, two-factor authentication, secret chats, and hidden phone numbers helped it gain a huge number of users over the years.
However, Russian authorities have argued that the same anonymity that drew millions of users has also attracted extremists, criminal networks, and radical groups. By 2015, the security officials claimed that thousands of Russian citizens were participating in online communities linked to international terrorism through the app. Telegram has also been accused of pushing the idea of secret financial transactions and the exchange of sensitive location data without proper caution.
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Telegram Clash With the State
As the concerns of terrorism in the nation continued to grow, Russian lawmakers introduced amendments to the country’s Law on Information. The new law requires all online services to identify users, store their data locally, protect personal information, and remove illegal content within 24 hours.
In April 2018, the Tagansky District Court ruled to restrict access to Telegram in Russia after the company refused to hand over encryption keys to security services. The regulator Roskomnadzor even moved further and blocked the app.
Telegram later publicly stated it was willing to comply with the law but argued that providing encryption keys was impossible without compromising user privacy. Russian authorities saw this as a refusal to cooperate.
Today, Roskomnadzor maintains that Telegram has failed to fully comply with Russian legislation and has not done enough to combat fraud and extremist content. The agency says it will continue imposing restrictions on the app until it meets the national legal standards.
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