Censorship backfire: Kremlin orders media blackout as web-blocking tools paralyze financial systems

The Russian media watchdog, Roskomnadzor, has ordered news outlets to purge reports suggesting that state-mandated internet restrictions triggered massive disruptions in the country's banking sector.
High-profile platforms, including Forbes Russia and the Telegram channel Mash, deleted articles detailing how the April 3 systemic collapse was a direct consequence of the government's digital censorship infrastructure.
Infrastructure under pressure
In its now-deleted report, Forbes cited internal sources claiming that the "Technical Means of Countering Threats" (TSPU) failed to process the current volume of blocking rules.
The specialized hardware, designed to filter traffic and isolate the Russian internet, reportedly buckled under the load, inadvertently severing the connection to critical banking services.
Political fallout
The Telegram channel Newsach/Dvach, which commands 650,000 subscribers, confirmed receiving orders to remove similar content. The regulator justified the demand by claiming the reports were "aimed at destabilizing the socio-political situation."
Similar censorship notices were served to Ostorojno Novosti. Their reporting emphasized that the state’s traffic filtering systems are currently "overloaded" and unable to manage the complexity of modern network demands.
Systemic censorship
Journalistic investigations by Aghentstvo and Deutsche Welle highlight a growing pattern of information suppression regarding the collateral damage of Russia's "Sovereign Internet" project.
The crackdown confirms fears that the apparatus used to silence dissent is increasingly interfering with the functional stability of the nation's financial digital landscape.
Translation by Iurie Tataru