Apple removed Russia’s state-backed Max messaging app from the App Store, cutting off new iPhone and iPad downloads and updates for existing users. Apple told BBC Russia the removal was done to comply with sanctions regulations, while Russian officials said about 20 million users lost access through Apple’s marketplace. Max, developed by VK and promoted by the Russian state as a Telegram and WhatsApp alternative, is deeply integrated with government services, digital ID, e-signatures, and payments; critics warn its lack of end-to-end encryption could make user communications easier for authorities to monitor.
Why it matters: This affects Russian users who rely on Max and highlights how app-store controls, sanctions, and state-backed platforms can shape access to communication tools. It also matters for privacy watchers because Max is closely tied to government infrastructure, so users should weigh surveillance risks and loss of updates if they continue using it.
2026.06.04
100% relevant
This article establishes a new story about Apple’s removal of the Max app as a distinct platform-access and privacy event, not the same underlying event as any listed tracked story.
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