Russia’s history restricting pornography dates back more than a century. In 1923, world leaders created an international treaty that criminalised the circulation of so-called obscene publications. The treaty was later ratified by the Soviet Union, but even after the country’s dissolution, Russia left the law unchanged.
In recent decades, as other European countries have decriminalised most pornography, with bans remaining on material involving animals and children, Russian leaders and conservative activists have been expanding the country’s definition of criminal pornography.
Online business
Webcam work in Russia was a legal grey area for more than a decade, and between the 2000s and the early 2010s, business was booming. Large cities hosted “studios”: apartments where administrators provided models with internet access and live streaming. The models would undress or perform erotic tasks for a paying audience that tuned in from across the country.
Technically, pornographic video and photography were illegal, but webcam models created live content, which was not. But in late 2022, the Supreme Court reinterpreted the law, ruling that “actions performed live” should be considered public demonstrations of pornography. This allowed the security forces to crack down on the webcam business and its employees.