Google fined for violating Russian ‘data localization’ regulations for individual users

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 Titanium Media App reported on June 17 that a court in Moscow, the capital of Russia, imposed a fine of 15 million rubles (about 260,000 US dollars) on the US company Google on the 16th for repeatedly refusing to implement the relevant laws and regulations on "data localization" of Russian individual users. . This is the second time Google has been fined for the same issue since July 2021. According to the RIA Novosti report on the same day, in July last year, Google was fined 3 million rubles (about 51,000 US dollars) in Russia for violating the relevant laws and regulations on the "data localization" of individual users in the country. Since then, Google has not rectified in time, but continued to use servers located in the United States and European Union countries to store personal data of Russian users. Under a Russian law that went into effect in 2015, foreign technology companies must store personal data of Russian users on servers in Russia.

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