
Russia Launches An App That Could Spy On Its Citizens, Likely To Ban WhatsApp
However, experts believe that beneath the app's playful white-and-blue logo lies software that might work as a "spy programme", allowing Russia's FSB security service to establish a rigid surveillance programme, as per The Independent. Experts explained that the app's servers are based in Russia, meaning Max will be subject to Russian law, which grants the FSB to have access to certain materials.
With the introduction of this new app, WhatsApp, a global messenger used by more than 70% of Russians, is "highly likely" to be banned in the country. Moscow will push its people towards using Max, Mark Galeotti, a veteran observer of Russian security and politics and director of Mayak Intelligence, told The Independent.
Andrey Okun, a Russian opposition journalist, said Max would be central to the Kremlin's dream of constructing a "digital gulag". "This will be a sterile space in which the authorities have complete control over the leisure time, motives and thoughts of citizens," he said.
Experts also believe that the introduction of the app, which is said to have been developed on Vladimir Putin's orders, is only the latest step in the Kremlin's ability to monitor the entire Russian online sphere.
"This is a normalisation of Russia's surveillance of its internet use... it's part of a long, long process," Keir Giles, author of Russia's War on Everybody, told The Independent.
"The perceived threat from Western communications technology is not something that's new. It's something that has always been a focus for the Russian security services," he added.
Mr Giles explained that Russia's security industry is frustrated by Russian citizens using foreign software such as Google, Skype and Hotmail, all of which made it much more difficult to read their messages. Western communications technologies have always been perceived as a threat by Russian security services. So after years of trying to clamp down on services such as WhatsApp, the latest move to push Russians towards Max is "really just tidying up at this point", he added.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Mint
13 hours ago
- Mint
Screenshots are now serious business
Osheen Megha Akhlaq has 3,100 screenshots on her phone. They cover everything. From performance ads she's tracking as a brand executive at a skincare company, to reference images for campaign ideas, and WhatsApp chats with content creators she forwards to her boss to signal follow-ups on marketing initiatives. 'Half my job is carried through these screenshots," says the 24-year-old from Mumbai. She recalls how not too long ago, her gallery was mostly filled with screengrabs of unsolicited texts from men—school and college-era receipts that made gossip feel more real, less made-up. Now, that folder has more work than whispers. Over the last five years, screenshots—an image of data displayed on a mobile or desktop screen—have evolved into a cornerstone of modern work culture. The shift from playful archive to professional tool happened largely during the pandemic, when official communication moved online, and remote work turned casual screenshots into a means to share work-related updates. While the concept dates back to the 1960s, the modern-day screenshot found cultural footing in the 1980s, when gamers began mailing in scorecard screengrabs to magazines for a shot at printed glory, according to a 2020 Vice article. In 2011, Snapchat brought in disappearing Stories—and with it, 'screenshot notifications" that made users think twice before grabbing someone's self-destructing post. Instagram briefly tried the same before dropping it, though the warning still pops up if you screenshot a disappearing DM in 'vanish mode". Today, screenshots are serious business. Devices let you capture just a portion of the screen, take scrollable grabs of entire web pages, even add 'alt text" for accessibility. Digital payment apps let you share screenshots directly as instant proof of payment. Meme marketing runs on screenshots. And at the other end of the spectrum, streaming platforms actively block screen capture and recording to prevent piracy. It's now reached a point in the tech world where anyone building a new operating system would consider screenshot and screen-recording features as top priority, says Siddharth Jha, 25, a software engineer from Bengaluru. 'They're non-negotiable—you can't ship 'version 1' without them," he adds. That wasn't the case five years ago, Jha notes. He recalls how the Nothing Phone, launched in 2022, stood out for not having screen recording—especially when even Chrome OS, not exactly a mass-market product, offered screenshot and screen recording on its homescreen by default. 'Earlier, screen recording needed a separate app. Now it's expected to be in-built in a device. Soon, I think devices will add refined selection for screen recording too—where you would be able to edit settings such that certain things on the screen, like WhatsApp chats, won't be recorded at all." While his father still finds taking and sharing screenshots unintuitive, it is second nature at work, says Jha. 'Even when sharing code, we often send screenshots instead of plain text." Part of the reason textual screenshots edge out copy-pasting is their ability to preserve context. 'Taking a screenshot of a textual report feels symbolic," says Pranav Manie, a 25-year-old writer-marketer from Bengaluru. 'It's like capturing a genie in a botte." Manie remembers poring over screengrabs from the WikiLeaks email dumps of the 2015 Sony Pictures hack—leaked exchanges that revealed the gender pay gap and other inflammatory truths about Hollywood's inner workings. Screenshots of the emails, instead of a collated word file, offered 'a glimpse into what was happening in that moment… a lens into their world," he says. Platforms, too, seem to incentivise screenshotting over text as it favours images for better reach—a widely held belief as it keeps people on the app longer. Hence, overflowing tweets are uploaded as image posts. In fact, 'screenshot essays" are a thing on X now, as are screengrabs of Notes-app rants. 'On Instagram, so many people have taken to posting textual images in a carousel format as users have stopped reading long captions," Manie points out. People often take a screenshot of an old image instead of digging through Instagram's gallery sync—a clunky, time-consuming process. A fresh screenshot brings the image to the top of their phone gallery, making it quicker to access and post. In group chats, screenshots often get a second life when they're turned into stickers for inside jokes. 'You star a message on WhatsApp, but you also screenshot it—just in case. It's another place where you might stumble on something warm later." But for all their usefulness, screenshots aren't perfect. Soren Hamby (they/them) has low vision in one eye and no vision in the other. 'There's often something missing from screenshots," says the 38-year-old lead product designer from New York who specialises in accessibility. 'Looking at context or an annotated screenshot, I can often understand better than if I had a screenshot completely read out to me," they say. On Instagram, you can include alt text on posts, but not on Stories or Reels, and many people don't know that you can use the feature on posts either, Hamby adds. 'There's this instant consumption of images and instant sharing that is low friction, and it's often not clear what the intent is in the image if I use operating system-level tools to describe the image." Most people around Hamby forget or don't know that they have a visual disability. 'I generally am able to keep up with everyone and I don't ask for accommodations often, if ever. But giving them unasked and quietly makes me feel like I'm included, I'm allowed dignity, and that people providing them really care about others in their community," they add. When Hamby sends a screenshot, they tap the icon in the screenshot screen and grab the text so they can provide both. 'It takes just an extra few seconds to do and edit, but the habit makes it easier to accommodate people." Besides accessibility barriers, screenshots may also be quietly messing with how we process information. Akhlaq admits that while she takes them to remember things, she rarely revisits them when it actually matters. 'I take reference shots all the time—of clothes, products, ideas. But when I need to go back to them, I usually don't. More screenshots have piled up since then," she says. For her, screenshots are equal parts memory bank and clutter trap. That dissonance—between capturing and actually retaining—has a neurological basis. 'When a device is storing the information for us, the brain is not registering it," says Nipun Pauranik, a neurologist based in Indore. 'Neurons aren't getting fired up to build a memory base." Screenshots, in that sense, create the illusion of remembering without doing the mental work. 'If we try to store information without a screenshot, it'll press our brains to create that memory base. Now we know things are saved elsewhere, so we don't make the effort." It's a trade-off: the convenience of outsourcing memory often comes at the cost of weakening it. While the long-term consequences are still unfolding, the impact on our working memory—the ability to hold and use information in the moment—is already becoming clear, adds Pauranik. Jha now leans on AI to manage the overload, using tools like Gemini or ChatGPT to sift through his screenshots and surface the one he needs. For those looking to go a step further, people like Anubhav Singhal are building solutions. The 25-year-old independent tech contractor from Bengaluru recently developed an automation tool that renames screenshots contextually the moment they're taken—making them easier to find and organise later. What began as an open-source side project has now evolved into an app called Peeksy. 'You can access the free version with an OpenAI subscription key, or opt for the paid one at $5 a month," he says. Over 20 people have joined the waitlist to access the paid version since he made the announcement a week ago. 'It appeals to people who like to keep everything in order," he adds. Screenshots may still be easier to navigate on phones thanks to thumbnail previews, but if the end goal is to share them later, some level of classification becomes essential. That's the thinking that keeps Singhal spending his weekends and late nights refining the app. At its core, though, a screenshot is still a digital note to self. 'You may never go back to it," he says, 'but it helps to know that you can."


Economic Times
17 hours ago
- Economic Times
AI will lead to concentration of wealth, power; must use AI for solving social challenges: Nilekani
AP IT services major Infosys' co-founder and non-executive chairman Nandan Nilekani has said that artificial intelligence (AI) is bound to lead to concentration of wealth and power in a few, but pitched for deploying new-age technologies at scale for human betterment. Smart use of AI can solve problems of healthcare and education for a billion people, Nilekani said, stressing that he is an optimist who wants to look at the positive side of technology in tackling real issues. "Obviously, there is going to be a concentration of wealth and power with AI ... we can't fight that. Forces at play are much bigger than any of us. But in our zone of influence, we have to do what we can to create a different paradigm," he said, speaking at an event hosted by the Asia Society here late on Thursday evening. "AI will be very well used in India but in a way that helps people's lives, helps them to learn languages, get better healthcare, get better education," Nilekani, who is credited for creating a unique identity for over a billion Indians as part of the Aadhar project and also the widely popular unified payments interface, said. Even as the Western world and China invest billions of dollars to stay ahead in AI, Nilekani recommended India should avoid that expensive race for now and instead apply the tools to solve real world problems. Nilekani also went public with his reservations on the universal basic income (UBI) concept, which is being touted as a necessity in some quarters which feel that AI's impact will impact jobs, forcing humans to subsist on the cash transfers from the government. The IIT-Bombay alum explained that some people feel AI will do all the jobs or work and human life will be about playing video games on the beach while getting money in bank accounts as per this view. "I don't agree with the vision that these guys are propounding... that is a dystopian idea," Nilekani said, spelling out his view of AI. AI should be used to "amplify the human potential" and make people's lives better, he exhorted. The country's ability to render high quality service to the citizens can be amplified using AI tools, Nilekani said, reiterating that he does not subscribe to the UBI idea. It can be noted that the idea of UBI had also found a mention in one of the economic surveys authored by the then Chief Economic Advisor Arvind Subramanian had suggested it in the economic survey of 2017. Pointing to successes like Aadhar, account aggregator and their advantages to industry, Nilekani said the future is getting invented here in India but added that there is a need to keep innovating when the aspirations of over a billion people get unlocked. "... You have to innovate to keep ahead. Otherwise, you will have negative risk-to-rewards and revolutions and so on. So, I think, by force, we will have to innovate to solve the problems of a billion people," he said. As we innovate, we will have to be cognizant of the low purchasing power levels, and keep the design "frugal", Nilekani said, pointing out that it is only through the adoption of such principles that an amount as small as Re 1 can be sent for free using the UPI platform in India, which is not possible anywhere else in the world. Design simplicity is the biggest lesson from the Aadhar project which also got implemented in the UPI project, Nilekani recollected, pointing out that the document explaining the payments platform created by Dilip Asbe and Pramod Verma was just one page long Elevate your knowledge and leadership skills at a cost cheaper than your daily tea. US tariff hike to hit Indian exports, may push RBI towards rate cuts Is Bajaj Finance facing its HDFC Bank moment? Tata Motors' INR38k crore Iveco buy: Factors that can make investors nervous Trump tariffs: End of road or a new journey ending Russia reliance? Stock Radar: PI Industries stock showing signs of momentum; takes support above 50-DEMA – time to buy? Long-term investing: Volatility, even threats, have limited shelf life; 5 large-caps from different sectors with upside potential of up to 38% These large- and mid-cap stocks can give more than 21% return in 1 year, according to analysts Weekly Top Picks: These stocks scored 10 on 10 on Stock Reports Plus


Time of India
17 hours ago
- Time of India
Bring OTT communication services under regulatory framework: COAI
Industry body COAI on Thursday made a strong pitch for over-the-top communication services to be brought under the regulatory framework , saying the segment has vulnerabilities and "largely escape regulatory oversight". In the statement titled 'Strengthening India's digital frontiers', COAI noted that it is crucial for law enforcement agencies to have timely access to communication data. "The weakest link in the current communications security chain lies in Over-The-Top (OTT) communication services, which provide voice and messaging capabilities similar to traditional telecom networks but largely escape regulatory oversight," SP Kochhar, Director General of COAI, said. It is pertinent to mention here that WhatsApp , Telegram and Signal are some examples of OTT communication platforms. COAI - whose members include Reliance Jio , Bharti Airtel and Vodafone Idea - further said that the reported interception of satellite phone signal in tracking down three Pahalgam terrorists recently underscored the effective role of technology in national security . "The security instructions by the DoT under the aegis of this Act mandate domestic traffic retention, local network infrastructure, and lawful interception capabilities-all essential elements for ensuring national security while maintaining user privacy for satellite communication services. "Introducing a dedicated OTT authorisation under the Unified License would create consistency across platforms, ensuring fairness, enhancing security, and balancing innovation with the country's security needs," Kochhar said. Drawing attention to "vulnerabilities", COAI said the "regulatory gap" poses challenges for law enforcement and crime prevention when it comes to OTT communications services. To address this, it is imperative that OTT communication services be brought under a regulatory framework aligned with the Indian Telecommunications Act, 2023 , COAI asserted.