Apple Removes Russia's State-Backed Max Messenger from App Store
Apple Removes Russia's Max Messenger from App Store

Apple has removed Russia's state-backed Max messenger from its App Store, according to the app's Russian developers. The developers announced that the app became unavailable for download on Wednesday night and remained missing from the store as of Thursday, June 4.

"Max is temporarily unavailable for download in the App Store," the messenger said in a statement on its platform. There has been no official comment from Apple, and the reason for the removal has not been disclosed.

Russia's Push for Max Adoption

Moscow has in recent months been encouraging widespread adoption of Max, a super-app that lacks end-to-end encryption and has drawn criticism over potential state surveillance concerns. Simultaneously, authorities have restricted access to WhatsApp and Telegram, Russia's two most widely used messaging platforms.

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Authorities have also directed civil servants, state companies, schools, and government agencies to shift communications onto the platform. Max, launched in 2025 by Russian social media company VK, is designed as a "super-app" combining messaging, social media, government services, digital ID functions, banking, and payments. It has been compared to China's WeChat.

Putin's Endorsement and Data Concerns

Russian President Vladimir Putin has previously described Max as a more "secure" platform aligned with Russia's goal of "technological sovereignty." The app has been pre-installed on devices sold in Russia since September, although it is not available in the European Union. Max does not use end-to-end encryption, and its terms state that user data is stored exclusively on servers within Russia.

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