Google faces second turnover fine in Russia over failure to delete banned content about Ukraine
- In May, Russian bailiffs seized more than US$143 million from Google that it had been ordered to pay late last year
- Roskomnadzor said YouTube had permitted content promoting extremist views and calls for children to participate in unauthorised protests
Alphabet’s Google may face a fine of 5-10 per cent of its turnover in Russia for what the state communications regulator said on Wednesday was a repeated failure to delete banned content, including “misleading information” on YouTube about events in Ukraine.
This is the second fine based on a percentage of turnover that Google could face Russia. In May, Russian bailiffs seized more than 7.7 billion roubles (US$143 million) from Google that it had been ordered to pay late last year, marking the first time Moscow had exacted a percentage of the company’s annual Russian turnover.
Google, whose Russian subsidiary last week submitted a declaration of bankruptcy, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
“The video hosting site YouTube deliberately promotes the dissemination of misleading information about the progress of the special military operation in Ukraine, discrediting the armed forces of the Russian Federation,” regulator Roskomnadzor said.
It said the repeat offence could lead to a fine of 5-10 per cent of annual turnover in Russia, with the amount to be determined in court. Reuters calculated that the previous fine equated to just over 8 per cent of turnover.
Russia sent tens of thousands of troops into Ukraine on February 24, saying it had to defuse a threat to its security and protect Russian speakers from persecution, in what Moscow calls a “special military operation”.
Ukraine says it is fighting an illegal land grab by Russia.