Telegram’s Durov says Russia’s VPN crackdown triggered a nationwide banking outage, leaving 65M daily users on the banned platform, and cash as the only option.
Russia tried to cut off the tools its own people use every day. The banking system went down instead.
Telegram has been banned in Russia for years. Sixty-five million Russians use it daily anyway. The government has been trying to kill the VPNs that make this possible, and this week those blocking attempts came back hard. Not at Telegram. At Russia’s financial infrastructure.
According to Telegram founder Pavel Durov, on X, the government’s VPN blocking attempts “just triggered a massive banking failure.” Cash became, briefly, the only working payment method in the country. Every digital payment route went down.
When Blocking Backfires This Badly
The VPN crackdown was not new. Russia has spent years building tools to restrict the bypass networks its citizens rely on to access Telegram. What changed this week was the scale of the attempt. And the scale of the damage.
Durov posted the breakdown on his Telegram channel. The government hoped to force adoption of state-controlled messaging apps. It got mass VPN adoption instead. Now the same infrastructure Russia used to enforce that ban appears to have taken out its own payment systems.
In a follow-up post on X, @durov broke down the actual user numbers. Over 50 million Russians send at least one message on the platform every day. The 65 million figure covers total daily active users. Monthly actives, he said, could easily run twice as high.
The platform was banned. None of that slowed user growth.
Iran Already Ran This Experiment
Durov pointed directly to Iran as a precedent. The Iranian government banned Telegram years ago and pushed citizens toward its own surveillance-ready alternatives. What it got was 50 million users on VPNs. The surveillance apps never took off.
Russia is now sitting in the same position. Fifty million-plus daily senders, Durov noted in his Telegram post, joining what he called the “Digital Resistance.” The entire nation, he wrote, is now mobilized to get around the restrictions. Thousands are building their own VPNs and proxies.
On Telegram’s end, Durov said the platform would keep working to make its traffic harder to detect and block. That is not a new posture. Durov has consistently positioned the platform against state pressure to control its content and users, whether from Russia, France, or elsewhere.
What the Outage Actually Revealed
The banking failure was brief. But it exposed something that will not disappear quickly. Russia’s digital payment infrastructure and its internet-blocking infrastructure appear to be more entangled than the government planned for.
That is not just a technical problem. It is a policy one. Russia has been pushing toward a more controlled digital financial environment for years. An outage triggered by a VPN crackdown cuts directly against that goal. You cannot build a controlled digital economy while the tools used to enforce digital bans are taking that economy offline.
Durov’s framing on this is pointed. He welcomed Russian users back to the Digital Resistance. Not as a technical update. As a statement.
The ban did not work. The VPN crackdown made things worse. And now the whole country knows exactly what these blocking attempts actually cost.
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