Traffic from Russia to Cloudflare is 60% down from last year

(radar.cloudflare.com)

100 points | by secondary_op 6 hours ago ago

45 comments

  • tananaev 4 hours ago ago

    Russia has been slowly cracking down on popular communication and media platforms. First they slow down connection to unusable speeds. This happened to YouTube at some point last year. At first they even said that it's something wrong with Google and it's not them. I think the intention is to slowly get people off the platform without completely blocking it. Then eventually they block access completely. Same happened to messaging apps, like WhatsApp and Telegram. Telegram is still working for messaging, but not calls. It's kind of funny because Telegram is used by Russian military to coordinate a lot of things, so they complain a lot about the block.

    • Esn024 13 minutes ago ago

      >It's kind of funny because Telegram is used by Russian military to coordinate a lot of things, so they complain a lot about the block.

      If that's true, then it was really stupid of them to allow things to get to that point. Look at the US -- they had no tolerance for a major social media app (TikTok) to be outside their own control, and they weren't even in a major war at the time. It seems obvious that if you ARE in a major war, you wouldn't want your main social media and messaging app to be under the control of somebody (Pavel Durov) who was recently arrested by a member (France) of the military alliance you're fighting against (NATO), when it is unclear what deal he may have made with that government to be released from prison. It seems obvious to suspect that the price of his freedom may have been a backdoor that allows the opposing military to read all the messages your own people are sending.

      The real failure of Russia's is that, unlike the US, they have been systematically unable to keep its own top tech talent supportive of their own government. The top US tech companies have been only too eager to do almost anything their government asks of them, with only some rare and tepid pushback (such as that by Anthropic recently), that seems to get severely punished when it does happen. So there has been no need for the US government to go to the extents that Russia is going to now, simply because they were able to coopt their top talent into working for and with the state (with some rare exceptions like Snowden, and I'd say the "damage" from that has been pretty successfully contained).

      The Chinese government may have had some issues with that as well, considering what happened with Jack Ma (though I don't know much about it).

    • _fat_santa 4 hours ago ago

      I have family in Russia and it's a sad state of affairs. Our ability to communicate with them is slowly degrading to the point where now I am looking into self-hosted communications.

      • tananaev 3 hours ago ago

        I've been using WeChat. My hope is they won't dare to block Chinese messenger. China is pretty much the only remaining lifeline for Russia.

      • TitaRusell 31 minutes ago ago

        On a positive note Russia is now the heart of digital piracy. They aren't in a mood to go after piracy groups.

        • DANmode 20 minutes ago ago

          Now? lol

      • sega_sai 3 hours ago ago

        I have a similar situation and Amnezia (either in WG mode or Xray mode) works well with a self-hosted server. Also SSH tunnel as proxy so far also works.

      • proxysna 3 hours ago ago

        Look into vxray it works for my wife's family. AmneziaVPN worked for me during my last visit too.

        • bbminner 3 hours ago ago

          To my surprise, even sophisticated means of traffic masking like amnezia and vxray get disrupted frequently, requiring hopping around self hosted solutions and updating ones setup periodically. That's waaay beyond what most people are capable of. I am fortunate to have some tech worker acquaintance who live next to my family members, otherwise there'd be no way for me to for example guide them through setup and re-configuration remotely. Still, this setup gets disrupted every month or so requiring manual intervention.

          • konart an hour ago ago

            I have 3x-ui installed in Netherlands and everything works fine so far.

            But sure, they are trying their worst to block every channel of data exchange they can.

      • pixl97 3 hours ago ago

        Iron curtain is coming back up.

    • bojan 3 hours ago ago

      That explains why I can't seem to access VKontakte anymore from outside.

      Not a huge loss as it rightfully suffers the same fate as Facebook, but still.

      • betaby 3 hours ago ago

        VK loads just fine from Canada. Rogers and Bell mobile phones to be more specific.

    • Modified3019 3 hours ago ago

      > It's kind of funny because Telegram is used by Russian military to coordinate a lot of things, so they complain a lot about the block.

      This plus the starlink cutoff blinded them so badly Ukraine was able to counterattack and retake a bit of area north of Huliaipole, with armored vehicles (which normally attract immediate drone response these days) last I checked operations are still ongoing, so it’ll be a bit before we know the extent of what they were able to do.

    • ekropotin 3 hours ago ago

      Russia seems to be executing CCP’s playbook. They even trying to push everyone to their version of WeChat, which is called Max.

      • esafak 3 hours ago ago

        Perhaps they could use an encryption program that uses the sanctioned app as the transport layer. Like how people used to use PGP with email.

        • Terr_ an hour ago ago

          That might satisfy message-privacy and connectivity, but it seems it'd be vulnerable when it comes to identity-privacy and detection.

          I suppose you could use an LLM on each end to write superficially plausible messages and use ~sten~ steganography, although then there's still the problem of "Weird, this user types at 500WPM without sleeping."

      • adgjlsfhk1 3 hours ago ago

        oh cool, I didn't know hbo had a Russian messaging service

    • mandeepj 2 hours ago ago

      VPNs didn't help?

    • moralestapia 3 hours ago ago

      What do they use, instead?

      It's not like they don't want any videos online.

    • sourcegrift 3 hours ago ago

      > youtube is slow

      Maybe they're using Windows Phones?

  • neurotixz 4 hours ago ago

    Likely reason: https://blog.cloudflare.com/russian-internet-users-are-unabl...

    In a nutshell:

    Since June 9, 2025, Internet users located in Russia and connecting to web services protected by Cloudflare have been throttled by Russian Internet Service Providers (ISPs).

  • ivankra 3 hours ago ago

    VPNs are widespread in Russia, so they probably misattribute a good chunk of the traffic.

    "By 2025, about 41% of Russian internet users were relying on VPNs — one of the highest adoption rates in the world." [1]

    [1] https://cepa.org/article/blocked-and-bypassed-russians-evade...

  • tzury 3 hours ago ago

    I changed the URI to show the US data and was surprise by the fact Virginia surpassed California [1], so I looked into Virginia [2] and realized, mostly are automated bots from AWS and other US-East based region

    1. https://radar.cloudflare.com/traffic/us?dateRange=52w 2. https://radar.cloudflare.com/traffic/6254928?dateRange=52w

  • robotnikman 31 minutes ago ago

    Maybe its just me, but it feels like there has been a lot less ransomware attacks since the Ukraine/Russia war started as well.

  • loopback_device 5 hours ago ago

    > Traffic shifts seen in some networks/locations due to phased integration of new IP geolocation provider

    There's an event marker with a possible reason for it - which does make one wonder how bad the accuracy of the geolocation data is/was

  • miohtama an hour ago ago

    Russia testing whitelisted only Internet today

    https://x.com/KyivInsider/status/2031296657229242577?s=20

  • ogurechny 3 hours ago ago

    Should be phrased as “Despite the ham-fisted bans, overheating DPI boxes, and propaganda (from both sides, and it is not always clear who is better at scaremongering), a lot of people learned to not give a fuck”.

    Like, obviously, Instagram has been blocked for a long time, and, obviously, everyone who is obsessed with that social network keeps using it, including the rich kids of the top crooks (a.k.a. “the elites”) who can't miss a chance to drool over some dress they wore on a private concert of a Western pop star in Dubai (suspiciously never announced in media), and, obviously, the censors are making a fuss about it for the hundredth time, promising to fine anyone who does business there into oblivion to make users move to the competing local services that have been lobbying that under pretext of politically correct patriotic alignment.

    I would advise everyone to familiarise yourself with tools like zapret. You'll need them sooner than you think.

  • egorfine 4 hours ago ago

    Can we conclude that this means the Great Firewall of russia is working and ~60% of population does not care?

    Update: no. Russian people who care use VPN and thus are not counted as russian traffic.

    • ivan_gammel 4 hours ago ago

      Well, they are concerned, however citizens of authoritarian states have no agency in decision-making. It works to the extent where mobile internet is mostly not working in places like Moscow (traffic to a few white-listed sites is allowed). A lot of services based on mobile connectivity are nearly impossible there for this reason (and geolocation has 4-digits before decimal point precision in km).

      • blell 18 minutes ago ago

        The blocking of cloudflare in Spain shows that citizens of “democratic” states have no agency either.

    • jonwinstanley 4 hours ago ago

      What leads you to think they don’t care?

      • tokai 4 hours ago ago

        If you talk or write with Russians, its quite clear that they don't care. A majority of them are not following any kind of news, and the ones that are follow pro government stuff. Even though telegram was banned, the majority of all Russian channels are pro-government.[0]

        [0] https://cedarus.io/research/what-do-russians-read

        • orbital-decay 3 hours ago ago

          I do both in real life, and it's quite clear that what you say is false. Remember that media and online spaces are not a reflection of the reality on the ground. Your own link even discusses one of the reasons for that: dissident media tries to fill the gap avoided by loyal media, of course all that seems similar and manipulative as a result, because they don't write about anything else. Some do understand that, but they operate from abroad - try covering anything mundane about Russia in Latvia, where e.g. Meduza resides, and see how it goes. Naturally people grow tired of the media that feels the same. (Meduza in particular making a lot of stuff up doesn't help). Online spaces are simply suppressed, you can't even give a thumb up without facing 20 years and likely being sent to the meat grinder head-first.

          • pixl97 3 hours ago ago

            Russia has very effective media in using the firehose of falsehood (Trump and his media groups follow the same pattern). You fill the field with so many lies that Bullshit Asymmetry makes it near impossible to figure out the truth.

            The entire point is making everyone so tired all the time and feel like they can't make any progress. Then the government as less work of finding the few places where people congregate and stop them from meeting there.

            • orbital-decay 2 hours ago ago

              Yes, my point is "censorship and bots do work" does not equal "people don't care". People online often imagine themselves to be pretty informed about some other country, especially if they communicate with people from that country. This is delusional, I can't claim I know much about "average reality of living in Brazil" even though I communicate with people from there, follow some media, have traveled across it on a motorcycle, and was a guest to some friends there. This is even less true for current Russia.

        • an_ko 4 hours ago ago

          I always doubt statistics based on self-reporting, when there are such strong incentives not to be caught supporting the opposition. If you say the wrong thing, you may get prison, or very accidentally trip and tragically fall out of a window.

        • justsomehnguy 3 hours ago ago

          > If you talk or write with Americans, its quite clear that they don't care. A majority of them are not following any kind of news, and the ones that are follow pro government stuff.

          Case in point: totally-not-a-war with Iran.

        • thinkingtoilet 4 hours ago ago

          It's hard to get accurate numbers when there can be very real consequences for saying you do care about these things. I'm not saying I know one way or the other, just that it's hard to know what people really think in a situation like this.

          • TitaRusell 16 minutes ago ago

            It doesn't matter what people think it only matters how people act. The Russian ability to suffer in silence is legendary.

    • flexagoon 3 hours ago ago

      People who do care use a VPN and don't get counted as Russian traffic

      • egorfine 2 hours ago ago

        Ahhh so that completely invalidates my hypothesis. I stand corrected.