Russia to Block LinkedIn Over Data-Privacy Dispute
November 10 2016 - 12:15PM
Dow Jones News
By Olga Razumovskaya and Laura Mills
MOSCOW -- A Moscow court upheld a decision to ban the
professional social network LinkedIn Corp. in Russia on Thursday in
a landmark ruling enforcing a personal data law.
LinkedIn is the first foreign company to publicly clash with
Russia's communications regulator, Roskomnadzor, over the law,
which requires foreign and local companies to store personal data
of Russian users within the country's borders from September
2015.
A spokesman for Roskomnadzor said the agency would proceed with
blocking the website as soon as it received the court's
decision.
The spokesman also said that the regulator would now enter
LinkedIn into a special registry of websites that are in violation
of the data-localization law. The website will be blocked in Russia
three working days after that, he added.
In early August, a lower court ruled in favor of Roskomnadzor,
saying that LinkedIn didn't comply with Russian law on two counts:
by not storing information about Russians on servers inside the
country, and by processing information about third parties who
aren't registered on the site and haven't signed the company's user
agreement.
In response to the court decision, a spokesman for LinkedIn said
the court decision "has the potential to deny access to LinkedIn
for the millions of members we have in Russia and the companies
that use LinkedIn to grow their businesses."
The company said it was interested in meeting with Roskomnadzor
to discuss the data-localization law.
LinkedIn has 2.6 million users who access the site from
computers and phones in Russia, according to the marketing research
firm TNS.
Russia has repeatedly clashed with a handful of foreign
technology companies, including Facebook Inc. and Twitter Inc., who
have resisted installing data centers on Russian soil under the new
law. Last year, Alphabet Inc.'s Google began moving some of its
servers to Russian soil in an effort to comply with the law.
Western technology executives have argued that the law, passed
in 2014, could serve as a way for the Russian authorities to demand
more access to user data, giving the government more control over
online behavior in the country.
Since the law came into effect last year, Roskomnadzor has
checked 1,500 companies to ensure they abide by the
data-localization law.
"I'm not going to name the names of the companies -- since this
is to a large extent commercial information -- but major internet
giants are in the process of complying with the law," Roskomnadzor
head Alexander Zharov said before the decision.
"It looks like this is truly a signal for all other companies
that Roskomnadzor is quite determined," said Evgeny Oreshin, a
lawyer for Goltsblat BLP who is following the case.
In a separate move, a Russian antitrust watchdog announced
Thursday that it was opening a case against Microsoft Corp. for
abusing its dominant market position.
The Federal Antimonopoly Service said in a statement that it had
opened a case to investigate Microsoft over its antivirus software.
The statement said the company may be giving preferential treatment
to its own operating system over that of competitors.
The regulator said the case had been initiated after a complaint
by Kaspersky Lab, a Russian cybersecurity firm.
Write to Olga Razumovskaya at olga.razumovskaya@wsj.com and
Laura Mills at Laura.Mills@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
November 10, 2016 13:00 ET (18:00 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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