A Russian court on Tuesday fined TikTok for failing to delete LGBT material, the country's latest crackdown on Big Tech companies.
The Tagansky District Court in Moscow issued the 3 million
rouble (€51,000) penalty to the short-video sharing platform following a
complaint by Russian regulators.
TikTok, which is owned by China’s ByteDance, did not
immediately respond to a request for comment.
According to the case file, state communications regulator
Roskomnadzor complained about a video published on the platform earlier this
year that breaches Russian laws against promoting "LGBT, radical feminism
and a distorted view on traditional sexual relations”.
The Russian government has been stepping up efforts to
enforce greater control over the internet and social media, issuing penalties
over content, demands over data storage and some outright bans.
Earlier this year, a court fined chat service WhatsApp and
disappearing message platform Snapchat for failing to store Russian users’ data
on local servers, following complaints by Roskomnadzor.
Music streaming service Spotify and Match Group, which owns
dating app Tinder, also have been hit by Russian fines.
Twitch also fined over Ukraine content
On Tuesday, Russia also fined streaming service Twitch,
which is owned by Amazon, for hosting a video interview with a Ukrainian
political figure that Moscow said contained "fake" information.
Twitch was already fined 3 million roubles (€51,000) earlier
this year for hosting another Arestovych interview. The company did not
immediately respond to a request for comment.
Russia passed a law in early March, soon after sending tens
of thousands of troops into Ukraine, that prohibits "discrediting"
the armed forces, with a sentence of up to 15 years. Foreign tech firms have
been warned against violating that law.
TASS reported on Tuesday that Twitch faces two new fines of
up to 8 million roubles (€135,000) for not deleting what Russia considers
unreliable information about the course of its "special military
operation" in Ukraine.
Russia is considering expanding its existing "gay
propaganda" law, passed in 2013, which bans any person or entity from
promoting homosexual relationships to children. Lawmakers have argued the law
should be expanded to include adults as well and fines for exposing minors to
"LGBT propaganda" should be increased.
Russian authorities say they are defending morality in the
face of what they argue are un-Russian liberal values promoted by the West, but
human rights activists say the law has been broadly applied to intimidate
Russia's LGBT community.
Separately, the Wikimedia Foundation, which hosts online
encyclopaedia Wikipedia, also faces a 4 million rouble (€68,000) fine for not
deleting "fakes" about the Russian army, RIA reported.
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