Moscow wants Google to stop spreading ‘threats’ against Russians

Russia state regulator says YouTube actions are ‘terrorist in nature’ and threaten life and well being of Russian residents.

A YouTube logo seen at the YouTube Space LA in Playa Del Rey, Los Angeles, California.
YouTube, which has blocked Russian state-funded media globally, is beneath heavy stress from Russia's communications regulator and politicians [Lucy Nicholson/Reuters]

Russia has demanded that Alphabet Inc’s Google cease spreading what Moscow labelled as threats in opposition to Russian residents on YouTube amid the conflict in Ukraine.

Roskomnadzor, the regulator in Russia, mentioned adverts on YouTube had been calling for Russia’s communications methods and Belarus’s railway networks to be suspended and that their dissemination was proof of the USA tech big’s anti-Russian place.

It didn't say which accounts had been publishing the adverts.

“The YouTube administration’s actions are terrorist in nature and threaten the life and well being of Russian residents,” Roskomnadzor mentioned, quoted by Interfax information company.

“Roskomnadzor categorically opposes such promoting campaigns and calls for that Google cease broadcasting anti-Russia movies as quickly as potential.”

Google representatives in Russia haven't commented.

That is the newest salvo in a dispute between Moscow and overseas tech companies over Ukraine.

YouTube, which has blocked Russian state-funded media globally, is beneath heavy stress from Russia’s communications regulator and politicians.

Outraged that Meta Platforms was permitting social media customers in Ukraine to put up messages corresponding to “Demise to the Russian invaders”, Moscow blocked Instagram this week, having already stopped Fb entry for what it mentioned had been restrictions on Russian media.

‘One-way sport’

Former Russian President Dmitry Medvedev criticised overseas social media companies on Friday for wishing loss of life on Russian troopers, whereas hinting that entry to companies like Meta and Instagram could also be restored.

“The ‘guardians’ of free speech have in all seriousness allowed customers of their social media to want loss of life upon the Russian army,” Medvedev, who served as president from 2008 to 2012 and is now deputy secretary of Russia’s Safety Council, wrote on his Telegram channel.

Medvedev mentioned Russia has the required instruments and expertise to develop its personal social media, saying the “one-way sport” of Western companies controlling data flows couldn't proceed.

“With a view to return, they should show their independence and good angle to Russia and its residents,” he wrote. “Nevertheless, it's not a undeniable fact that they may be capable to dip their toes in the identical water twice.”

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