The Law Itself
Online Freedom
Punishments & Fines
Government Power
Global Connections
100

The month the new Russian law took effect

September

100

The illegal form of technology Russians could use to bypass government internet blocks

VPNS

100

The fine for individuals searching banned content

$65

100

The justification used by Russian officials for increasing censorship

They say it’s needed during wartime

100

The nearby country that recently passed a similar law

Belarus 

200

The action now punishable under this new law

Searching for extremist or banned content online

200

The name of Russia’s plan to fully control its national internet system

The “Sovereign Internet”

200

The fine for individuals promoting VPNs

$2,500

200

The reason activists say the law is too vague

Because it’s unclear how authorities will prove someone “knowingly” searched for extremist content

200

The two other countries known for strict online censorship

China and Iran

300

The type of content the Russian government considers “extremist”

Anything from terrorist propaganda to LGBTQ+ or anti-government material

300

The social media platforms that Russia restricted or slowed down

YouTube, X (Twitter), and Instagram

300

The fine for companies promoting VPNs

$12,800

300

The kind of data that telecom operators would be forced to hand over to authorities if asked

User search history, device data, and browser logs

300

How this law could affect Russia’s relationship with the global internet community

It could isolate Russia and limit access to global information

400

How lawmakers justified introducing this new online censorship law

They claimed it was necessary for national security during wartime

400

How this new law is thought to change the way Russian citizens use the internet in their daily lives

It will likely make people afraid to search or discuss certain topics, leading to self-censorship and less online freedom

400

The reason activists say even small fines can be dangerous

They create fear and give police excuses to detain people


400

The reason critics claim labeling LGBTQ+ content as “extremist” helps the government strengthen its power

It lets the government silence minority voices, justify censorship, and rally conservative public support

400

Why this law is seen as a “global legal challenge”

Because it sets a precedent for other governments to justify internet censorship

500

The unusual tactic lawmakers used to pass the censorship amendment quickly

They attached it to an unrelated bill about regulating freight companies

500

Why the definition of “extremist content” in this case is controversial

It includes groups like the LGBT movement along with terrorist organizations

500

What critics fear these fines could lead to in the future

Criminal charges or imprisonment for online activity

500

What Senator Artem Sheikin claimed will happen if an individual comes across banned content on social media 

He said users won’t be punished for reading Facebook or Instagram

500

What Apple and Google did in response to Russia’s VPN bans

Apple removed about 60 VPN apps and Google removed only 6 of 212 requested