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Inside Ukraine’s open-source war

Digital networks are helping Ukraine resist the Russian invasion. Will they also reshape the future of conflict?

Andrey Liscovich was at home in downtown San Francisco when he saw a tweet from the American politician Marco Rubio: “The #Russian invasion of #Ukraine is now underway.”

He felt sick. The 37-year-old Ukrainian had spent most of the previous decade working far from his native country, including as chief executive officer of Uber Works, a subsidiary of the ride-booking group, before creating his own tech start-up. But Liscovich was born in Zaporizhzhia, on the border of the south-eastern Donbas region now suffering intense Russian bombardments.

“When I saw the news, and that [president Volodymyr] Zelenskyy was staying, I knew I had to go back to fight,” he recalls. So he boarded a plane to Poland and made his way across Ukraine to Zaporizhzhia, planning to enlist. He wrote his will on the flight.

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