Yes, they are and the risks are growing.
When we had protests in January of this year, 12,000 people were detained, which was effectively the largest wave of repression in our country since 1937—since Stalin's time. Over 1,000 people were arrested following this detention. It was for short terms, like 15 or 30 days, but it's still very important. People are losing jobs, being fired and expelled from their institutions and their colleges and so on.
Putin has shown that he is ready to scale up the repressions, unfortunately. He has put our supporters at risk.
For instance, the new law and designation of our organization as an extremist would entitle all our donors to up to eight years in prison, so we will have to stop accepting any donations inside the country once this court decision is effective. We have 160,000 donors who send us an average of 500 rubles or $7 U.S. a month. We will have to stop all of this because otherwise any of them would be at risk.
Putin doesn't have a repressive machine strong enough to arrest 160,000 people, but he would arrest 10 of them randomly to scare all the others.