Making A Difference

Russia Fines Google, Telegram For Not Removing Content

A Moscow court ordered Google's parent company Alphabet Inc. to pay a new fine for not deleting content Russia considers illegal. The move comes as state officials seek to rein in tech giants.

Russia Fines Google, Telegram For Not Removing Content
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Russia ordered Google's Alphabet Inc. to pay a 2 million ruble ($28,085, €24,220) fine on Monday, on top of 32 million rubles in previous fines already paid by the US company.

The court also ordered the domestic messaging app Telegram, which also serves as an unofficial news distribution network in Russia, to pay 4 million rubles.

According to the decision, both companies have failed to remove content deemed illegal by the state. The Moscow court postponed two more cases against Google until November 29 to allow a Google representative more time to study case materials.

Navalny's aides disappointed in Google, Apple

Russia is cracking down on large internet companies in what is often described as a push for internet "sovereignty" from predominantly US-based businesses.

Officials have repeatedly urged tech giants to delete links and posts dealing with pornography, suicide, and drug use, but also information pertaining to internal politics in Russia.

In January, Russian regulators demanded that social networks remove posts and videos that allegedly called on minors to attend opposition rallies.

In September, the state pressured Google and Apple into removing a tactical voting app pushed by jailed opposition leader Alexei Navalny ahead of the parliamentary election. Russian lawmakers told the companies' representatives that failure to remove the app could result in criminal prosecution.

Navalny's aides slammed the removal as a "shameful act of political censorship."

Media watchdog threatens massive fines

Facebook, Twitter and TikTok are also targeted by Russian regulators. In addition to fining Twitter, Russian officials also subjected it to punitive slowdown and threatened to ban it altogether over illegal content.

Last week, a Moscow court ruled to enforce the collection of fines from Facebook for breaching content laws, ordering bailiffs to collect some 26 million rubles from the company.

Media watchdog agency Roskomnadzor threatened it will escalate to much larger fines if the conflict continues, possibly demanding a payment of 5-10% of Facebook's sales turnover in Russia.

Google has also faced similar threats for failing to remove banned content both on its search engine and its video-sharing platform YouTube. Last month, Roskomandzor said it might seek a fine amounting to 5-20% of Google's annual Russian turnover, which could reach some $240 million.