Russia blocks chess website over Ukraine

Russia blocks chess website over Ukraine

Russia blocks chess website over Ukraine
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The famous internet site Chess.Com has been blocked in Russia after publishing important articles on the situation in Ukraine branded “fake statistics” by using the government.

The website, which boasts 50 million members globally, is now on a list of blocked resources drawn up by means of Russia’s telecom watchdog Roskomnadzor.

The popular prosecutor’s workplace asked that access to simply pages of the Chess.Com important of Russia’s “special operation” in Ukraine be restricted, home organizations and media reported.

But because Chess.com uses the HTTPS protocol, the whole site has become unavailable, the media said.

Chess.com could not be opened in Russia on Sunday afternoon.

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The articles allegedly condemned the offensive Russia unleashed in Ukraine on February 24, according to Russian media reports.

Chess.com has already banned Russian grandmaster Sergey Karjakin, who has publicly supported the offensive, from playing games on the site.

Karjakin, who played Norway’s Magnus Carlsen in 2016 for the world title, has also been suspended for six months by world chess governing body FIDE.

This month he called for Chess.com to be blocked, accusing it of “anti-Russian choices” and “insulting propaganda”.

Karjakin took to the Telegram messaging service to praise the move against Chess.com by the Russian government.

“Is it really a great loss for Russian-speaking users?” he asked, adding, “Not in my opinion.”

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“Once again we are witness to a situation where Western platforms lose their Russian public because of their own phobia of Russia.”

Social networks such as Twitter, Facebook and Instagram have already been blocked in Russia, as have dozens of media websites over Ukraine.

Since President Vladimir Putin sent troops to Ukraine, authorities have stepped up measures to silence critics of the army operation in Russia’s seasoned-Western neighbor.

New regulation imposes prison phrases of up to fifteen years for spreading information about the Russian military deemed false by using the government.

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