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Apple removes nearly 100 VPN apps from Russia's App Store. The July to September 2024 purge cuts VPNs that Russians use to bypass censorship

Apple removes nearly 100 VPN apps from Russia's App Store

Apple removed 98 VPN apps from Russia’s App Store between July 4 and mid‑September 2024 after Roskomnadzor cited “illegal content.” The silent purge delivered a compliance letter; existing installs keep working. Freedom House says the cuts shrink Russian users’ ability to access uncensored news, protect privacy, and evade surveillance, pushing users to sideload or use self‑hosted apps.

28 March 2026

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TLDR:

  • Apple removed about 98 VPN apps from Russia’s App Store between July 4 and mid‑September 2024, after initially pulling 25 apps on July 4.
  • The cuts shrink the VPN catalog, limiting Russian users’ ability to access uncensored news, protect privacy, and evade surveillance; apps keep working.
  • Authorities will likely demand more compliance; users may sideload, use web‑VPNs or self‑hosted tools, while developers must redesign or exit, sparking debate.

Apple removed nearly 100 VPN apps from Russia's App Store between July and September 2024, shrinking the toolkit Russian users rely on to bypass censorship. The removals began quietly and accelerated as regulators tightened control over digital access.

These actions reframe the relationship between platform policy and national law, limiting the choices available to millions.

On July 4, 2024, Roskomnadzor announced that Apple had removed 25 VPN apps, citing "illegal content in Russia." By mid-September, independent monitoring by GreatFire and the App Censorship Project documented close to 60 additional deletions, bringing the total to roughly 98 unavailable VPN apps.

Apple made the deletions without public announcements. Developers received letters stating their apps "contain illegal content in Russia that does not comply with the requirements of the App Review Guidelines." TechCrunch confirmed the wording and noted that apps already installed on devices would continue to function.

The shrinking catalog constrains Russian users who rely on VPNs to access uncensored news, protect privacy, and communicate without surveillance. Freedom House documented the removals as a measurable setback for digital rights, noting that each deletion narrows the window for free expression.

The same VPN clients remain available in other regional App Stores, showing that the removals targeted a single market.

Russian authorities are likely to demand further compliance as digital controls expand. Users may turn to sideloading, web-based VPNs, or self-hosted solutions. Developers face a choice between redesigning services to meet local requirements or exiting the market entirely.

The episode raises a broader question: when compliance with local law collides with global access norms, which principle governs platform behavior?

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