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Disclaimer: This article is based on the general regulations for OK.ru and associated services as of the 2026 update. Always refer to the official OK.ru Regulations for the most current information. AI responses may include mistakes. Learn more
Avoid sharing content that could be interpreted as illegal or harmful. Secure your account with two-factor authentication.
In March 2021, a Moscow district court fined Mail.Ru (ok.ru's operator) for failing to promptly delete illegal communications on the social network—specifically, messages encouraging minors to participate in unauthorized public events. The legal basis was Article 13.41, Part 2 of the Russian Administrative Code, which imposes fines of 800,000 to 4 million rubles for failing to restrict access to prohibited content within 24 hours of notification. Repeated violations can trigger fines of up to one-tenth of the company's annual revenue. ok.ru regulations
Data privacy on OK.ru operates parallel to its primary user agreements. Information collected during user sessions is governed strictly by the corporate .
If your profile or group has been restricted, you can appeal the decision through the official :
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OK.ru uses a mix of automated AI moderation and human review to flag, restrict, or delete content that violates community safety. Illegal and Harmful Content The platform enforces a zero-tolerance policy for:
: Spreading false information or "propaganda of illegal activities" is prohibited. 📈 Business and Advertising Rules
Group topics must match their actual content. Switching a group's theme from a harmless hobby to political propaganda or commercial advertising after gaining followers is a violation. AI responses may include mistakes
Users must meet the minimum legal age requirement (typically 13 years old, or higher depending on regional jurisdictions) to register an account independently.
Effective March 1, 2026, Decree No. 1667 established content moderation regulation as part of Russia's cybersecurity management framework. The decree defines a "threat to network security" as the dissemination of online information subject to restricted access under Russian law. Roskomnadzor is authorized to apply measures limiting access to such information or entire information resources when these threats appear on the official list of threats.
Using personal profiles for automated spam or unauthorized commercial advertising is a frequent cause for bans.