Network Blocking Map

Realtime detection of carrier-level jamming and signal restrictions
Checking...

The Mobileproxy.space network blocking map shows in real time which regions are experiencing carrier-level signal restrictions. The system automatically detects cellular jamming using an objective rule: simultaneous signal degradation across several physically independent servers in the same city, while the servers themselves remain fully operational.

This public monitoring helps mobile proxy customers understand the root cause of temporary signal issues — the problem is not in the service infrastructure, but in the regional cellular network. Data refreshes automatically every 5 minutes based on thousands of checks from real equipment: GSM modems in dozens of cities.

Active blockings
 
Operators affected
 
Servers affected
 
Events (24h)
 
Status
Operational
Degraded
Jamming
Severe jamming

Events timeline (24 hours)

−24hnow
Checking...

How we detect carrier blocking

To distinguish real cellular network jamming from a random hardware failure or infrastructure issue, we use a multi-criteria algorithm with five required conditions:

  • At least 2 different physical servers with independent SIM cards and modems are simultaneously affected in the same city
  • The servers themselves are fully operational and reachable on the network — confirming the issue is not on our side
  • Successful cellular connection rate has dropped below 70% over the last 30 minutes
  • At least 30 measurements have been collected for the region — the sample is statistically meaningful
  • At least 2 servers in the city show the same degradation pattern — rules out a single broken device

Why a public network blocking map matters

Cellular jamming and targeted signal restrictions are real events in dozens of countries. Operators or regulators may temporarily limit cellular connectivity in specific regions: during mass gatherings, emergencies, or operator maintenance. For mobile proxy users this means: even the most reliable infrastructure cannot operate if the local cellular network is degraded.

Public blocking monitoring is about service transparency. If your proxy temporarily stops working in Moscow or Rostov, this map will instantly show the truth: the problem is not with the proxy provider, it is with the regional cellular network. This lets users make decisions quickly — switch to a different geo, wait for recovery, or contact support with accurate information.

Frequently asked questions about the blocking map

What does "jamming" mean on this map?
A confirmed drop in cellular signal quality in a region, where several independent servers simultaneously lose connectivity while their infrastructure remains fully operational. This usually happens when mobile service is restricted at the operator or regulator level — for example, during mass events or operator maintenance.
How often is the map data updated?
Server states and active events refresh every 60 seconds. The detection algorithm runs server-side every 5 minutes. The 24-hour history refreshes every 2 minutes. All measurements come from live monitoring of real GSM modems in real regions.
Which cellular operators do you monitor?
All major mobile operators in the countries where we have deployed equipment: in Russia — MTS, Beeline, Megafon, Tele2, Yota; in Kazakhstan — Beeline, Tele2, Kcell; in Ukraine — Vodafone, Kyivstar, lifecell; and dozens of operators across Europe, Asia, and the Americas. The full list depends on current infrastructure coverage.
Why does my region show no blocking events?
This is a normal situation — it means cellular service in your region is operating reliably. The algorithm requires simultaneous degradation on at least two different servers in the same city, so isolated failures or single-device issues are not classified as blocking.
Where does the data on the map come from?
From live monitoring of our own infrastructure: over 1200 servers and tens of thousands of GSM modems in dozens of cities. Every few minutes the system automatically checks connectivity through each modem and records the result — the map is the aggregated statistics of these checks, no third-party sources involved.