Russia denies PyPI blockade as TLS failures affect developers

Published on June 02, 2026 | Translated from Spanish

The Russian regulator Roskomnadzor has denied blocking the Python package repository PyPI.org, despite thousands of users reporting failures to access the service on June 1. Complaints reached up to 10,000 people, with connection outages due to issues with the TLS security protocol, similar to those that occurred with the DeepSeek service. For citizens, this means potential technical obstacles in programming tools used for work and study.

technical illustration of a developer workstation with two screens, left screen showing PyPI.org error page with red TLS warning icon, right screen showing blocked connection to DeepSeek service, keyboard with Python code visible, mouse cursor hovering over a certificate error notification, desk cluttered with programming books and tangled ethernet cables, background showing a blurred map of Russia with a red cross over Moscow, dramatic overhead lighting casting shadows over the setup, photorealistic engineering visualization

Recurring TLS Failures: The Technical Pattern Behind the Restrictions 🔒

The outages reported on PyPI.org are not an isolated case. Problems with the TLS protocol, which ensures connection security, have recurred in services like DeepSeek. This suggests possible interference at the network layer, beyond a simple technical error. For developers, relying on external repositories becomes a risk, as the disruption affects the installation and updating of libraries essential for daily work.

The Russian Regulator and Its Talent for Denying the Obvious 🤡

Roskomnadzor claims it did not block PyPI, but connection data shows otherwise. It is like a waiter denying having served the soup while the customer has it on the table. With 10,000 complaints and TLS failures identical to other blocks, the denial sounds more like a comedy script than a technical explanation. Developers, meanwhile, are still waiting for someone to restore their access to their tools.