Russia files court cases for fines on annual turnover of Google, Meta
Russia's state communications regulator Roskomnadzor has
filed cases against U.S. tech firms Google and Meta that could see fines
imposed on their annual turnover in Russia, a Moscow court said on Friday.
Roskomnadzor in October threatened both Alphabet's Google
(GOOGL.O) and Meta's Facebook (FB.O) with fines based on a percentage of their
annual turnover for a repeated failure to delete content that Moscow deems
illegal.
Russian law allows for companies to be fined between 5% and
10% of annual turnover for repeated violations.
Moscow's Tagansky District Court said court dates for both
companies - neither of which immediately responded to a request for comment -
were set for Dec. 24.
Russia has increased pressure on foreign tech companies as
it seeks to assert greater control over the Internet, slowing down Twitter
(TWTR.N) since March and routinely fining others for content violations.
Google has paid more than 32 million roubles in fines this
year. Google, Twitter and Meta have significantly reduced the number of posts
prohibited by Moscow on their platforms.
Russia last month demanded that 13 foreign and mostly U.S.
technology companies be officially represented on Russian soil by the end of
2021 or face possible restrictions or outright bans.
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