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Russia blocks media outlets, others hacked over Ukraine war

KION

By DASHA LITVINOVA
Associated Press

MOSCOW (AP) — Russian authorities have blocked the websites of some Russian media outlets over their reporting of the invasion of Ukraine, while hackers transposed a message across the main pages of others condemning the war. The interference on media hints at a growing anti-war sentiment among ordinary Russians, even though it’s unknown who was responsible for the hack. It also offers evidence of the relentless efforts by President Vladimir Putin’s government to suppress dissent. The state news agency Tass and the pro-Kremlin newspaper Izvestia where among the news outlets targeted Monday. A message signed by the hacker group Anonymous and “indifferent journalists in Russia” that urged Russians to “stop this madness” appeared on some hacked websites. 

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