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Google Government The Almighty Buck

Russia Hits Google With Fine For 'Illegal Content' (bbc.com) 189

Russia has hit Google with a $373 million fine for failing to restrict access to "prohibited" material about the war in Ukraine and other content. The BBC reports: Roskomnadzor, the country's communications regulator, said the information included "fake" reports that discredited Russia's military and posts urging people to protest. It called the US tech giant a "systematic" violator of its laws. Google did not comment immediately.

The company's local subsidiary declared bankruptcy last month. The move came after Russian authorities seized its local bank account, allowing them to recover 7.2bn roubles that the firm had been ordered to pay for similar reasons last year. [...] The fine announced on Monday, which was calculated as a share of the firm's local revenue, marks the biggest penalty ever imposed on a tech company in Russia, according to state media.

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Russia Hits Google With Fine For 'Illegal Content'

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  • "Illegal" content (Score:5, Informative)

    by quonset ( 4839537 ) on Monday July 18, 2022 @06:27PM (#62714228)

    Such as reporting the effectiveness of U.S. provided HIMARS devastating Russian supply depots, reporting on the sinking of the Moskva by Ukrainian-made Neptune missiles, the hectic evacuation of Snake Island due to Ukraine pounding the shit out of Russian troops stationed there, the huge losses of men and material in only four months, far more than you lost in nine years in Afghanistan, and reporting the Wagner PMC is so desperate for people they've essentially abandoned any requirement. So long as you have a pulse and can hold a rifle, you're hired!

    Yes, the truth is "illegal" when it contradicts your lies of everything going to plan.

    • The spreading of propaganda can be the saying of something wrong, or the omission of something right.

      I do like seeing Slashdotters post about all the losses Russia has suffered. But ultimately this too is a form of propaganda. You make it sound like the Ukraine is having fun at this and could end the war in a moment. Lots of talk of Russian losses. That unfortunately is you spreading war propaganda.

      Yes Russia's invasion isn't going according to plan. That said they very much have control over many parts of

      • I do like seeing Slashdotters post about all the losses Russia has suffered. But ultimately this too is a form of propaganda. You make it sound like the Ukraine is having fun at this and could end the war in a moment. Lots of talk of Russian losses. That unfortunately is you spreading war propaganda.

        You make a very important point. Russia has a lot more logistical depth than Ukraine. Even with Western support for Ukraine, it is entirely likely that Russia can win a war of attrition.

        Western don't help nearly as much as people think. For example, if Russian oil exports to the West are restricted, they sell to certain countries in the Middle East, which then re-sell to the West. The same for many other exports: the sanctions mean some middleman gets to take a cut, but the product still gets exported, an

  • Just in case anybody ever wondered what Roskomnadzor looks like: https://static.wikia.nocookie.... [nocookie.net]
  • by Cyberglich ( 525256 ) on Monday July 18, 2022 @06:40PM (#62714272)
    and this folks he how you prevent any future outside investments in your country..
  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Monday July 18, 2022 @06:57PM (#62714342)
    For Google to pay that fine seeing as how Russia is a sanctioned Nation. Although trying to get 373 million dollars out of an American company is one way to get around sanctions. I wouldn't be surprised if Google would be willing to pay it or try to negotiate it down just to avoid giving up the market share. One of the problems with being a dominant market player is you can't risk any competition
    • They can put it into an escrow to be paid after sanctions. And that's only if Google wants to do business in Russia. If I was them, I would just leave the liability on the Russian shop, bankrupt it again, close shop, and come back later. I doubt Russia will be a huge market post war for some time.

      • I'm sure this can, and will be taken to the international courts, in which I expect russia's b.s. laws to be declared a load of b.s. .
        Unless of course Google just laughs at them and refuses to have anything to do with them until they rescind their b.s. fines. In that case, if russia tries to go to international courts to take the money from google, I expect the court will laugh at russia.
        • by kmoser ( 1469707 )
          If Russia takes Google to the international courts and wins, do you think the court will turn around and appropriate the money as reparations for Russia's war crimes?
        • by logicnazi ( 169418 ) <gerdes&invariant,org> on Monday July 18, 2022 @10:54PM (#62714726) Homepage

          What international courts are those? There is no international court for civil fines and this isn't really the kind of thing the ICC handles.

          What happens normally is that after you get a judgement in country A against someone with assets in country B is you then take that judgement to the courts in country B and ask them to enforce it for you. Usually, courts respect the judgements of courts in other countries because they want reciprocity as well. However, the courts in country B can decide that enforcing the judgement would be against public policy illegall etc.. etc.. and decline to enforce it.

          That's what will happen in this case if Russia tries to enforce it. But that's not the endgame. The endgame is to use this as a legal pretext for seizing Russia's google subsidiary. The government or a government allied corporation will buy Google's local subsidiary in the bankruptcy proceedings and then either loot it's IT, source code etc.. or continue to run the subsidiary but impose the censorship that Russia wants. At that point Alphabet will be unable to use it's local subsidiary anymore so it's services will be degraded in Russia as all connections will have to hit offshore servers (and I believe that also violates Russian law) and you end up cutting off google services in a way that looks kinda legitimate.

          Alternative the new owners of the local subsidary may try to continue to operate google services inside russia since they have all the tech, servers and even Russian employees working for them now.

          • I doubt the subsidiary has much of value other than a few servers. No source code, no encryption keys, no data that they can get at (without the right passwords). Just some servers and disks.

        • What international court?

          Care to cite on that Russia joined that would be applicable here?

      • Pretty much this. I doubt the Russian market is worth 373 millions now, let alone any time in the foreseeable future.

        Not to mention that by the time it becomes sensible to invest in Russia again, it will very likely have a very different kind of government.

    • Although trying to get 373 million dollars out of an American company is one way to get around sanctions.

      I assume the fine is in rubles, and that $373 million is according to the "official" exchange rate. In practice, Google can actually just go on the black market and buy that amount of rubles for about $17.47.

      • The official exchange rate IS the exchange rate, no matter how much it is artificially controlled from the Kremlin.

  • We demand . . . (pinky to corner of lip) . . . one MILLION dollars from Google. [jarring chord]

    The mayor of a small town could 'fine' Google for something in the millions and they'd swat 'em with it, just to make it go away. lol
  • ...the destruction of Ukraine.
  • Didn't Google pull out of Russia a month or two ago?

    So they're fining an entirely foreign organization? I wonder what they've got to say about the BBC, or CNN, or .... Faux News?

    But seriously though. To the Ukrainians who have a lot of hurt, and death, and vengeance -- please focus on destroying the _tools_ of russia, not the people-tools of russia. The people are coopted into it, they need a living, they need to support their family, and they found the only way that can do that .... is by waging war. They

    • Sounds caring, but it's no more effective than pacifism when they really do want to hurt you.
      The "tools" are essentially indivisible from the people wielding them in the conflicts of war, and even civilians can get caught up if they are part of the support of the military. Working in a warehouse the ammunition is being stored while shipping? You're building is a target, even if civilians are in it. In a fuel depot, especially one close to the front that the tank divisions are getting their fuel from? Well
  • by viperidaenz ( 2515578 ) on Monday July 18, 2022 @07:59PM (#62714446)

    There is no Google in Russia anymore, since it went bankrupt last month.
    Why would you continue to fine an entity that doesn't exist anymore?

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Lots of countries do this, including the US. It serves a couple of purposes.

      1. Unpaid fines can lead to blocks on google.com and any other Google services. Android phones might become unusable in Russia.

      2. If any asset of Google's ever comes within Russian reach, they can seize it to pay off the debt. That includes IP, not just physical things and cash.

    • Same reason you sue someone for an amount you know they can't afford to pay. Judgements like this go on the record. In some mythical future where the USA and Russia are now besties, Google will have to pay an entry fee into the market.

  • Cut Russia off totally. Suspend all Russian accounts, block all Russian emails, block all IP from Russia for all services. Make the users scream!!

    Have a banner "Putin did this" on all blocked services.
  • I think many of these comments aren't appreciating the endgame here. No, Russia isn't going to be able to collect this money from alphabet. I doubt they want to do anything of the kind.

    However, what the judgment does is give them legal cover for seizing google's local subsidiary and it's IP etc.. When Google refuses to pay Russian courts will let some government crony company purchase Google's assets in Russia, i.e., it's local subsidiary. I expect the implicit threat here is that they'll take Google's

    • They certainly can take that money when it's rubles held in domestic banks. So about $133 million, but in rubles. They will probably extinguish it to help keep inflation in check. (They're at 15% inflation, which is not as much at western sanctions had hoped to achieve, but it's still worse than most of NATO except Poland and Romania, who are about the same, and of course Turkey has ridiculous inflation but they started with ridiculous inflation)

      • Why extinguish it when you can fabricate a reason to give it to some oligarch... or better yet, Putin's relatives.

    • What IP? I'm sure the subsidiary has no IP.. other than the name "Google" which not even they would dare steal.

  • You might disagree with the reasons for prohibiting the material being published, but it is literally prohibited in Russia, not "prohibited".
    And Yes, Google violates the law there, again, regardless of Your opinion about the aforementioned law.
    Putting quotes around facts that You dislike doesn't make them go away, deal with it.

    • The quotes are correct. I'm not sure if you are a troll or misinformed. It is illegal in Russia to post *false* news about the war in Ukraine. You can get *true* news via Google. The claim is that Google is providing false information but what Google is actually doing is providing true information that the Russian government doesn't like.

      When there's this level of double-speak, you need quotes around anything pertaining to Russia.

  • Do business in a totalitarian fascist country, what do you expect to happen?

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