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As of 2020, 122,488,468 Russians (85% of the country's total population) were Internet users. [1] As of September 2020, Russia ranked 47th among the world's countries by the fixed broadband Internet access speed, with an average download speed of 75.91 mbit/s, and 88th by mobile network Internet access speed, with 22.83 mbit/s. [2]
In May 2008, some 32.7 million users in Russia had access to the Internet (almost 30% of the population). [32] In 2012, 75.9 million Russians (53% of the population) had access. [33] In December 2015, most of the country, 92.8 million Russians (70% of the population) had Internet access. [34]
Sovereign Internet Act is intended to create a possibility to isolate the Russian segment of the Internet, in addition it could be possible to switch off the Internet connection to certain areas of Russia. [25] Among the public, the Sovereign Internet Act was considered to be an instrument of censorship and control over the Internet.
CGTN Russian (formerly CCTV International Russian (Russian: Центральное Телевидение Китая Международный канал на ...
It is often provided bundled with internet access services by ISPs to subscribers and runs in a closed network. [4] IPTV normally requires the use of a set-top box , which receives the encoded television content in the MPEG transport stream via IP multicast , and converts the packets to be watched on a TV set or other kind of display. [ 3 ]
LG Electronics smart TV from 2011. A smart TV, also known as a connected TV (CTV), is a traditional television set with integrated Internet and interactive Web 2.0 features that allow users to stream music and videos, browse the internet, and view photos.
For comparison, Internet penetration in Ukraine was 33.7%, in Romania 35.5%, Russia 42.8%, and Serbia 55.9%. The most active Internet users in Belarus belong to the 17–22 age group (38 percent), followed by users in the 23–29 age group. Internet access in Belarus is predominantly urban, with 60 percent of users living in the capital Minsk.
Calls to block access to Wikipedia have been made by various Russian political actors since the beginning of the invasion. In particular, Valery Fadeyev and Igor Ashmanov , members of the Presidential Council for Civil Society and Human Rights , called on 4 April 2023 to block the access because of "systemic bias".