Domain registrar and hosting provider Namecheap is terminating service provision for customers based in Russia in the face of what it describes as “war crimes” committed in Ukraine.
An email sent Monday from Namecheap to customers, and shared online by various customers of the company, reads:
“Unfortunately, due to the Russian regime’s war crimes and human rights violations in Ukraine, we will no longer be providing services to users registered in Russia. While we sympathize that this war may not affect your own views or opinion on the matter, the fact is, your authoritarian government is committing human rights abuses and engaging in war crimes so this is a policy decision we have made and will stand by.”
The original email gave customers until March 6th to transfer domains to another provider, and states that Namecheap will assist them in the process; Namecheap has since revised this deadline to March 22nd.
Shortly after Russian military action in Ukraine began, Namecheap declared support for the people of Ukraine. In a tweet, CEO Richard Kirkendall claimed his company opposed the Russian invasion, and “stands firmly against Russian aggression and war crimes being committed against the people of Ukraine.”
Kirkendall also noted that Namecheap team members on the ground were being directly affected. On the Namecheap website, a banner link also directed visitors to a Ukrainian website sharing information on how foreign supporters could help.
A post on the specialist DomainInvesting.com blog noted that Namecheap has a large footprint in Ukraine: at publication time, the company listed more than 30 job openings in the country, based in the cities of Kharkiv and Lviv. In the past few days Kharkiv has come under attack from Russian rockets and artillery fire, resulting in at least 10 civilian deaths and the destruction of many buildings.
Besides expressing opposition to the Russian invasion, the intended impact is unclear. On Twitter, many Namecheap customers expressed anger at the decision, claiming that it would impact many ordinary Russians who had no influence over the country’s military action.
In one case, Moscow-based journalist Alexey Kovalyov tweeted that an archive of his work since 2015, including award-winning investigative news stories, would need to be hosted at a new location.
Following pushback, a Namecheap spokesperson told The Verge that an updated policy had been communicated to Russian customers under which exceptions would be made for “all anti-regime media, protest resources, and any type of websites that are helping to end this war and regime.” Exceptions would also be made for Russians who were “no longer a resident of Russia and do not support the regime in any way,” the policy said, though it is unclear how support for the regime would be assessed.
Increasingly, web infrastructure organizations that have historically championed political neutrality are being forced to take sides. On February 28th, a Ukrainian official asked the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) — a nonprofit organization that manages the allocation of top-level domains like .com — to revoke the .ru, .рф and .su domains, a move that would disconnect much of Russia from the global internet.