MobileNews

Russia threatens to slow down Google services in 24 hours over banned content

Reuters reports that Google is facing trouble in Russia this week, as the country has threatened a slowdown of the company’s services unless it deletes content that’s been banned by the government.

The Russian government has given Google a 24-hour deadline to prevent the slowdown. Roskomnadzor, a Russian watchdog, says it has sent “more than 26,000 calls to Google” over the content in question. That apparently includes videos that contain illegal information around subjects such as drugs, violence, and what the government considers “extremist organizations.” Google is also being accused of censoring Russian media outlets such as RT and Sputnik on YouTube.

Google has yet to publicly comment on the situation in Russia, but the company could face fines of “between 800,000 roubles and 4 million roubles” if it doesn’t restrict access to the information. That equates to mere tens of thousands in US dollars, barely a dent in the company’s bottom line, but a “repeat offense” could result in fines of up to 10% of Google’s yearly revenue.

Twitter, notably, is facing the same slowdown in the country, a lesser impact versus the complete ban that was at one point on the table.

More on Google:



Author: Ben Schoon
Source: 9TO5Google

Related posts
GamingNews

Developer of Steam Hit Life Sim Paralives Explains How It Can Manage Without Selling Paid DLC

GamingNews

Bungie Is Letting Players Try Marathon for Free for a Limited Time

GamingNews

Subnautica 2 Has Sold So Well That Krafton Has to Pay That $250 Million Earnout to the Devs

CryptoNews

XRP Traders Hit 47% Losses as Santiment Flags Historic Dip-Buy Setup