In a statement shared with Finbold, Tor said the ground of its appeal is based on the view that the ban was approved without the court allowing the participation of representatives from the browser. According to Tor, the ban by Saratov District Court violated the procedural rights and the adversarial nature of the process. Furthermore, Tor stated that the ban was unconstitutional since it hinders access to information while violating privacy. In the appeal, Tor is partnering with RosKomSvoboda, a Russian public organization focusing on digital rights protection and digital empowerment. The ban was initiated after Tor was accused of running illegal activities, including drug and gun sales. Consequently, Tor expressed confidence the ban would be lifted.
Tor users in Russia drop
Before the ban, Russia accounted for the second-largest Tor users at over 300,000 daily users. The users have, however, significantly dropped to below 200,000 since the ban. Following the ban, as reported by Finbold, Tor appealed to the international community to intervene and push Russia to restore normal services. The browser had warned that the ban could potentially open room for the emergence of malicious actors who can create replica platforms, putting user information at risk. The crackdown on Tor was part of Russia’s onslaught targeting foreign tech companies. To prevent users from bypassing the ban, authorities also limited the use of Virtual Private Networks.