- Google, Apple and GitHub sites have been inaccessible on Russian IP since July 14
- State regulator Roskomnadzor denies blocking websites
- A reliable VPN remains the only way for citizens to avoid outages
Russian internet users were locked out of crucial digital services on Tuesday, when widespread and unexplained outages took Google, Apple and GitHub offline across the country.
The network outages, which began around 10:00 Moscow time, prevented anyone using a national IP address from accessing the websites. This sudden digital blackout is the latest obstacle for citizens trying to access the open web, making the use of VPN services an absolute necessity and not just a privacy luxury.
According to data from Russian web monitoring platforms Detector404 and Sboy.rf, as reported by Novaya Gazeta, the failure rates were staggering. The tracker noted that HTTPS connections to Google were broken in 26% of cases, while connections to Apple sites failed 99% of the time.
The outages caused more than a thousand complaints from users in a matter of hours, highly concentrated in regions such as Moscow, Saint Petersburg and Novosibirsk. Users quickly discovered that accessing the sites through a foreign IP address completely restored service.
Despite the highly localized nature of the blocks, Russia’s telecommunications watchdog, Roskomnadzor, denied any state involvement. In a statement published by the Moscow Times, the regulator said it did not restrict access to the affected platforms.
Regardless of the official explanation, the result is the same: the only way to restore normal access to these everyday platforms is by routing your connection through a secure external server using a virtual private network (VPN).
How a VPN helps and why VPN traffic is the next target
For anyone trapped behind Russia’s digital Iron Curtain, a VPN is a vital lifeline.
By encrypting your Internet traffic and routing it through a secure server outside the country, a VPN masks your real IP address. This effectively tricks the network into thinking you’re browsing from a completely different location, allowing you to bypass national censorship and load Google, Apple, or investigative news outlets as usual.
However, the Kremlin is well aware of this solution and the censorship landscape in the country is rapidly deteriorating. Russia’s ongoing war against the open internet has increasingly focused on circumvention tools themselves, and Roskomnadzor wants to block 92% of VPN apps by 2030.
The tactics go far beyond simply banning websites. Earlier this year, Russian authorities ordered major mobile operators to disable the ability for users to top up their Apple ID balances through mobile phone accounts. This calculated measure was specifically designed to prevent citizens from paying for premium VPN apps through the App Store, compounding the payment difficulties created when Visa and Mastercard suspended operations in 2022.
Worse yet, the VPN traffic itself is now an active target. Roskomnadzor has invested heavily in deep packet inspection (DPI) technology to detect and block VPN protocols.
In recent months, the agency has limited popular protocols like WireGuard and VLESS, creating a frustrating game of cat and mouse for providers trying to keep their users online, including the popular Amnezia VPN.
Meanwhile, Russia continues to use DNS and IPR blocking to restrict YouTube, Telegram and WhatsApp, while aggressively pushing state-controlled alternatives.
As state control intensifies, free access to basic technological tools is no longer guaranteed. If you’re in the region, securing a tested, obfuscated VPN is the only defense left against an increasingly isolated Russian Internet.
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