The crazy
life and times of Pavel Durov, Russia’s Elon Musk
Is the
arrested Telegram CEO a free speech martyr or a shadowy criminal?
August 26,
2024 8:56 pm CET
By Eva
Hartog
https://www.politico.eu/article/pavel-durov-russia-telegram-ceo-facebook-elon-musk-tech/
Pavel Durov
loves a good show.
The first
glimpse many Russians caught of the current Telegram CEO — now languishing in
Paris police custody — was in May 2012 when a small fleet of paper airplanes
made out of cash descended on St. Petersburg’s Nevsky Prospekt, the city's main
thoroughfare.
His face
half hidden by a black cap, cameras captured a young Durov hanging out by an
upstairs window, clearly enjoying himself as an agitated crowd scrabbled for
more 5,000 ruble notes which the young tech prodigy was raining down from
above.
At the time,
Durov was the head of VKontakte, Russia’s equivalent of Facebook, which had
skyrocketed to success aided by the near-total absence of online regulation.
A
self-professed libertarian, Durov likes to frame himself as the patron of the
individual citizen against government snooping. Authorities in France, however,
are now probing him for his defense of a far less noble group of people,
including pedophiles, drug dealers and gangsters.
Free speech
martyr or shadowy criminal? Durov's reality is much more complex.
Durov's
revenge
Authority
and Durov have never been best friends.
As a
student, Durov hacked his school’s computer network so it would show a photo of
his least favorite teacher with the text "must die" as a screen
saver.
Now in his
late thirties, he still combines the nerdy reclusiveness of Facebook boss Mark
Zuckerberg — taking after his brother Nikolai, who was a child math prodigy and
is rumored to be the real brain behind the Durovs’ success — with the
contrarian eccentricity and narcissism of Elon Musk.
Not long
after the money-throwing episode, VKontakte began experiencing serious trouble.
In the wake of large anti-Kremlin protests, Russia’s security service, the FSB,
demanded greater control over the social media platform.
Under
pressure, Durov sold his shares in the company and fled Russia in 2014,
announcing his departure with a picture of dolphins and a line from The
Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy: “So long, and thanks for all the fish.”
For the
Kremlin it was a case of good riddance. VKontakte was rebranded VK and
co-opted, with the children of Russian President Vladimir Putin's acolytes
appointed to key positions.
But like the
heroes in his favorite films, Durov soon got his revenge. From Dubai, he
doubled down on Telegram, an encrypted messaging service whose significance and
success far outgrew that of his first company.
Who uses
Telegram?
Today,
Telegram is among the most popular messenger apps in Russia and in other
post-Soviet countries, as well as in India and in a handful of autocracies such
as Iran.
For people
living in countries where they risk jail for an injudicious word or opinion,
the app promises a safe means of communication.
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What sets it
apart from rival messengers, however, is that Telegram is also a media platform
in its own right. Think: WhatsApp, Facebook and X, all in one.
That hybrid
quality has made it a core platform for more uses than just texting, and more
users than just government critics.
After Russia
invaded Ukraine in 2022, Telegram became a primary mode of communication on
both sides of the front lines. A new group of military bloggers, some with more
than a million followers, have also made it their preferred platform.
Seeming to
hold no grudge against Durov, top Russian Kremlin figures and propagandists
also have channels on Telegram.
But
Telegram, along with YouTube, has provided a refuge on the other side of the
political divide for media outlets that were blocked by Russian authorities
under wartime censorship laws.
“It’s become
a replacement for independent media which have been squeezed out of the public
space,” Lev Gershenzon, the Russian founder of news aggregator The True Story,
told POLITICO. Gershenzon previously served as head of news at Russia's Yandex
search engine, but resigned in protest of censorship at the company.
But in
Europe, where citizens face fewer dangers from their democratically elected
governments, Telegram’s function is “an altogether different story,” Gershenzon
said.
Here it is
used mostly by groups on the margins of society, such as anti-vaxxers, or by
those with a vested interest in secure communications. More ominously, it has
also become a mirror dark web for terrorists and those dealing in drugs,
weapons and child pornography.
“In Russia,
Telegram is a safe haven [from] the government’s fight against civil society,”
Russian opposition politician Maxim Katz said in a livestream Monday. “In
Europe, Telegram is a safe haven for criminals.”
Telegram
pushed back strongly against any suggestion of wrongdoing in an online
statement Sunday, saying it abides by all EU laws and that its founder “has
nothing to hide.”
Meanwhile,
Durov himself has remained elusive. He’s notoriously hard to reach for media,
and reportedly also for governments; nor is much known about his personal life
or the way his company is run. He is a citizen of the United Arab Emirates and,
for reasons that remain murky, France.
When he has
emerged from the shadows, it has usually been to cause a splash — to show off
his six pack, to example, or to announce in a fit of TMI that he has fathered
100 children.
Is Telegram
really safe?
In the
months leading up to his arrest, Durov had been more visible. In a rare
interview, with conservative media personality Tucker Carlson, he claimed he’d
been pressured by the intelligence services of various countries to give them
backdoor access to Telegram — singling the U.S. out for special mention — but
that had always refused.
Many
independent Russian internet experts, however, point to a number of cases when
channels linked to the opposition were restricted for no clear reason. While
Telegram also complied with European sanctions against propaganda network RT,
Gershenzon said it seemed to suggest Durov was more open to negotiating with
governments than he would have his followers believe.
In 2020, for
example, Telegram’s Vice President Ilya Perekopsky met with Russian Prime
Minister Mikhail Mishustin аt a tech panel in the Russian city of Kazan.
Before being
arrested in Paris this weekend, Durov was in Azerbaijan where, according to
speculation, he tried to secure a meeting with Putin, who happened to be
visiting at the same time. (The Kremlin’s spokesperson said Monday that the two
did not meet.)
Regardless
of the nature of his ties to Russia, Durov’s arrest is a coup for the Kremlin’s
propaganda machine.
Initial
reactions from Moscow suggest it will frame Durov’s arrest as an example of
Western hypocrisy on free speech. At the same time, propagandists are also
likely to argue Moscow was right to clamp down on Durov, first with VKontakte
and more recently in 2018 when it tried unsuccessfully to block Telegram.
They're
unlikely to mention, however, that in Russia, such moves have been motivated
primarily by a desire to silence the voices of political critics, rather than
those of criminals. That trend has recently spread to curbing YouTube, nudging
Russia in the direction of a Chinese-style firewall.
Durov’s
legal team will likely argue that he can't be held responsible for the actions
of a few rotten apples, unsavory though they may be, or prioritize targeting
them over the interests of some billion other users.
"Our
right to privacy is more important than the fear of terrorism," Durov said
in 2016, defending Apple’s right to resist FBI access to the encrypted iPhone
of a man involved in a mass shooting.
Regardless
of the facts, the detained Durov has two elements playing in his favor. The
first is that his case is taking place in France, where it is still possible to
get a fair trial, unlike in Russia (where the acquittal rate is 0.03 percent).
The second is that his case will play out partly in the informational sphere
and in the court of public opinion.
Judging by
his past, that's an arena for which Durov, the showman, has been preparing his
entire adult life.
An earlier
version of this article misstated the name of Russia's prime minister. It is
Mikhail Mishustin.

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