Russian Lawmakers Vote To Force U.S.Tech Giants To Open Local Offices
Russian
lawmakers passed legislation on Thursday that would oblige U.S. tech giants to
open offices in Russia by January 2022 or face punitive measures, part of a
push by Russia to beef up what it calls internet "sovereignty".
Russia
has cracked down on U.S. internet companies in recent months and slowed down
Twitter's internet traffic since March to punish it for not deleting what
Moscow says is banned content.
The
new legislation, which passed its third and final reading in the lower house of
parliament, requires foreign sites with more than half a million daily users in
Russia to set up a local branch or Russian legal entity.
The
lack of such a requirement currently allows foreign sites to formally remain
outside of Russia's jurisdiction, the bill's authors said.
Websites
that do not comply would be marked as being non-compliant on search engines,
they could be excluded from search engine results, and banned from advertising
in Russia and for Russians, the parliament said on its website.
The
bill needs to be approved by the upper house of parliament and signed by
President Vladimir Putin before it becomes law. That is widely expected to
happen.
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