Residents of Moscow are experiencing GPS spoofing in downtown areas, leading many to use paper maps instead of digital navigators due to signal manipulation by security forces to counter Ukrainian drones. The Russian government is "throttling" popular messaging apps like WhatsApp and Telegram in favor of a domestically developed super-app named Max. This strategy aims to reshape online interactions in Russia and is part of broader efforts to control the digital landscape. Analysts suggest that this could lead to a near-total internet shutdown during emergencies, with a published "whitelist" of about 900 essential websites. The internet disruptions have particularly affected younger generations who rely heavily on social networks and online services. Russia's media regulator, Roskomnadzor, has blocked foreign platforms for non-compliance with data localization laws and is targeting messaging apps, making them largely unusable without VPNs. Telegram may face a complete shutdown on April 1. Despite the crackdown, state agencies continue to use Telegram for communication, while security services view these apps as potential threats.