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Russia warned Google in a Sunday letter not to advertise videos of what some called the country’s largest political protest in almost a decade.
The letter came a day after thousands of protesters took to the streets of Moscow on Saturday calling for free and fair local elections. More than 200 activists were detained, reported CNN Business, citing monitoring group OVD-Info.
Russia’s state communications watchdog, Roscomnadzor, asked Google on Sunday to stop advertising “illegal mass events” by offering advertising tools like push notifications to spread information, Reuters reported.
Roscomnadzor said some users had been buying advertising tools from YouTube, such as push notifications, in order to spread information about the protests.
The Kremlin’s media regulator, Roskomnadzor (Federal Service for Supervision of Communications, Information Technology and Mass Media) threatens Google over YouTube allowing streaming of the protests and using “push notifications.”#Russia pic.twitter.com/Rkh7kiIe3h
— Julia Davis (@JuliaDavisNews) August 11, 2019
The watchdog added in its letter that Russia would consider Google’s failure to respond to the request an “interference in the sovereign affairs of the state, as well as a hostile influence [over] and obstruction of democratic elections in Russia.”
Russia has cracked down on search engines in recent years by introducing laws that restrict specific search results. Search engines are required to share encryption keys, as well as the personal data of Russian social media users on servers within the country, with security services.
The country hit Google with a $7,663 fine in 2018 for failing to comply with the country’s laws requiring search engines to remove certain results, according to Reuters.
While Roscomnadzor mainly bans sites for child pornography, drugs and suicide, some have also accused the media oversight agency of being a tool for “state censorship,” according to the Moscow Times in 2018.
“The regulator has blocked access to corruption investigations by opposition activist Alexei Navalny, the LinkedIn social network and the Telegram messaging app, and is currently investigating BBC Russia over possible violations,” the Moscow Times reported.
Google and YouTube did not immediately respond to the Daily Caller News Foundation’s request for comment.
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