Especially for those who shrieked that the information that the FSB had requested data on people who donated money to RosPil was made up and was just "RosPil PR." PR, sure. We even brought counterintelligence into it.
This is a reply to user nykolaich. He was one of the people who received calls from strange individuals (presumably members of the Nashi movement, a pro-Kremlin youth group), and at our request he sent Yandex an official inquiry (since the information concerned his account, Yandex could only respond to him personally). This remarkable document gives us a new understanding of what our country's counterintelligence is busy with. What kinds of tasks it is assigned. Whom it provides information to. In that context, the gigantic failures of our special services in the relevant area are hardly surprising. I would like to ask our counterintelligence officers (the decent part of them, if any still remain) a rhetorical question: isn't it humiliating for you yourselves that you are being used as support staff for the stunts of a former member of the Lyubertsy criminal gang, a crook and bandit, Vasya from the 29th Block? Investigating transfers into the foreign accounts of the same Yakemenko, his crooked boss Surkov, and the rest of that thieving brotherhood would be far more useful work for counterintelligence. On the whole, I don't strongly object to the FSB checking up on RosPil—if only they weren't leaking personal data to all sorts of swindlers from Nashi. So, did you check? Did you confirm that RosPil is funded not by the CIA, but by 15,000 patriotically minded citizens of Russia? Draw your conclusions, and now start investigating those who are looting the budget.