Why JetBrains Halted Sales in Russia and What It Means for Developers

JetBrains announced an indefinite suspension of sales in Russia and Belarus in response to the Ukraine conflict, detailing the CEO's stance, the company's origins, its expanding product portfolio, 2022 usage statistics, and a broader reflection on the need for self‑reliant core technologies.

Java High-Performance Architecture
Java High-Performance Architecture
Java High-Performance Architecture
Why JetBrains Halted Sales in Russia and What It Means for Developers

Indefinite Suspension of Sales in Russia

JetBrains publicly announced on its blog that it will indefinitely suspend sales in Russia and Belarus as a response to the Ukraine conflict, condemning Russia's aggression and aligning with Ukrainian people.

CEO Statement

CEO Maxim Shafirov described the decision as the most difficult the company has made, acknowledging its impact on the business and employees, but emphasized that the company cannot ignore the events that contradict its core values.

JetBrains Origins

Founded in 2000 in Prague, JetBrains also has offices in Saint Petersburg and Boston. Its three Russian founders—Sergey Dmitriev, Valentin Kipiatkov, and Eugene Belyaev—started the company after working together on Java tools at TogetherSoft, later launching the renowned IDE IntelliJ IDEA.

Since then, JetBrains has released a suite of tools including PhpStorm, WebStorm, PyCharm, AppCode, DataGrip, and the JVM language Kotlin, which Google promotes as a successor to Java. The company’s valuation approaches $10 billion.

2022 Annual Highlights

JetBrains reports that 12.8 million developers use its tools, with 92 of the Fortune Global 100 companies as customers. IntelliJ IDEA remains the flagship IDE with over 4 million users since 2020, the highest number in China.

In terms of paid users, China has consistently ranked second since 2018 and also placed second in growth rate last year.

Final Thoughts

The article reflects on the notion that technology should transcend borders, yet the Russia‑Ukraine conflict highlights Western double standards and the importance of developing independent core technologies to mitigate future risks.

Original Source

Signed-in readers can open the original source through BestHub's protected redirect.

Sign in to view source
Republication Notice

This article has been distilled and summarized from source material, then republished for learning and reference. If you believe it infringes your rights, please contactadmin@besthub.devand we will review it promptly.

product-managementJetBrainsSoftware toolsindustry newscompany policy
Java High-Performance Architecture
Written by

Java High-Performance Architecture

Sharing Java development articles and resources, including SSM architecture and the Spring ecosystem (Spring Boot, Spring Cloud, MyBatis, Dubbo, Docker), Zookeeper, Redis, architecture design, microservices, message queues, Git, etc.

0 followers
Reader feedback

How this landed with the community

Sign in to like

Rate this article

Was this worth your time?

Sign in to rate
Discussion

0 Comments

Thoughtful readers leave field notes, pushback, and hard-won operational detail here.