Russia fines Google for not blocking banned content

Russia fines Google for not blocking banned content

A city court in Moscow fined Google for 3 million rubles ($41,000) on Thursday for showing extremist, pornographic, and suicidal content in search results in Russia.

This is the biggest penalty Google has ever faced in Russia. The amount was increased because, despite the previous warnings, the company continues to show about 30% of prohibited content, the court said.

FINES PAID BY GOOGLE

Google has already paid fines of 500,000 rubles in 2018, 700,000 rubles in 2019, and 1.5 million rubles in 2020 for similar violations.

The US tech giant’s relations with the Russian government have been recently deteriorating. In recent months, Google blocked dozens of accounts belonging to Russian media on its platforms, including YouTube.

Russia’s Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said US social media networks and video hosting websites “unilaterally and arbitrarily conduct political censorship of Russian media accounts”.

MOSCOW’S CLAIM REGARDING US-BASED COMPANY

She claimed Google wanted to maintain the supremacy of western media, which once dominated the information space.

Earlier she also condemned Twitter’s move to mark state-media accounts, claiming that the platform did not mark any western media outlet affiliated with the government.

Exit mobile version