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With access to apps that instantly connects us to millions of users, we spend a lot of our day hunched over a screen. Adam Alter explores the rise of technology addiction in teenagers.

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A detained demonstrator shows a sign 'No War!' from a police bus in St. Petersburg, Russia.
A detained demonstrator shows a sign 'No War!' from a police bus in St. Petersburg, Russia, Thursday, Feb. 24, 2022.Dmitri Lovetsky/AP
  • The reporter said that Moscow police are stopping people and asking them to look at their phones.

  • Police would not let people pass if they refused to comply.

  • Russian authorities have the ability to access communications on a citizen's phone without a warrant.

A reporter based in Moscow said on Sunday that police in Moscow seem to be stopping civilians and demanding to see their phones in order to screen their photos and text messages.

In a Telegram post, reporter Anya Vasileva said that police officers near the popular Russian toy store in Lubyanka Square were stopping people and ordering them to show their phones. The police would not allow people to pass if they refused to let them look at their phone.

I came up and asked them what they were doing. The police checked my press card and didn't say anything. It is against the law for the police to order you to show them your phone.

In a video posted by Vasileva, police appeared to have stopped several people and were looking at their phones. According to the Library of Congress, Russian authorities are able to access communications on a citizen's phone, computer, and tablets without a warrant.

Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a new law that will make anyone who shares false information about the war in Ukraine face up to 15 years in prison. The law would punish those who support sanctions against Russia and those who call for Putin to end the attack in Ukraine, according to the Russian media outlet.

Russia began to block or limit access to Western technology platforms earlier in the week, cutting itself and its citizens off from the rest of the world's internet.

Protests in Russian cities and around the world have been sparked by Russia's assault on Ukraine. The major city of Kherson has been claimed by Russia since February 24.

Ukrainian officials and human rights groups have accused Russia of war crimes.

The Secretary of State said Sunday that the United States has seen "credible reports of deliberate attacks on civilians" by Russian forces.

The original article is on Business Insider.

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