Telegramâs reputation as a privacy-first messaging platform is under scrutiny following a new investigation by the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project and Russian outlet Important Stories.Â
The report reveals that the core infrastructure powering the app is managed by Viktor Vedeneev, a Russian network engineer with deep ties to companies linked to the FSB security agency and Russiaâs defense sector.
Vedeneevâs company controls thousands of Telegram IP addresses, key servers, and networking equipment. Court records obtained by journalists show that Vedeneev had exclusive access to Telegramâs infrastructure and was authorized to sign contracts on the companyâs behalf.Â
However, the investigation did not find any evidence that Vedeneevâs involvement resulted in data sharing or surveillance.
While no direct evidence was found that Telegram data was shared with Russian authorities, two of Vedeneevâs other companies have serviced highly sensitive government institutions, including Russiaâs intelligence agencies and a research center involved in planning the invasion of Ukraine. Telegram has not been accused of wrongdoing, but the report raises questions about whether third-party infrastructure relationships could create risks to user privacy.
Telegram representatives told Newsweek that âas a global company, Telegram has contracts with dozens of different service providers around the world. However, none of these service providers have access to Telegram data or sensitive infrastructure.â
They further went on to say that all Telegram servers belong to the company and are maintained by employees: âUnauthorized access is impossible. Throughout its entire history, Telegram never disclosed any private messages to a third party â and its encryption has never been breached.â
Security researchers say these links expose a major contradiction between Telegramâs public image and its operational reality.Â
John Scott-Railton, a senior researcher at The Citizen Lab, said the findings highlight a âdangerous disconnectâ between user assumptions about Telegramâs security and the actual vulnerabilities in its infrastructure.
Telegram founder Pavel Durov has long positioned the app as a safe haven for free expression, claiming the platform has ânever disclosed a single byte of private messages.âÂ
However, experts point out that the appâs encryption design still allows for metadata exposure, including device identifiers and user IP addresses â data that could be exploited to track user activity.
Telegramâs MTProto encryption protocol attaches an unencrypted identifier to every encrypted message, which can help observers monitor specific user devices and IP locations. This is particularly concerning in scenarios where governments or intelligence agencies have physical access to the network infrastructure.
Despite claiming to have no infrastructure in Russia, leaked border records previously showed that Durov visited the country more than 50 times between 2015 and 2021, according to the report.Â