Tech

Russia extends Twitter slowdown, deadline to remove content

The country accuse it of failing to remove content related to child pornography, drug use and calls for minors to commit suicide

Updated 5 years ago · Published on 06 Apr 2021 10:15AM

Russia extends Twitter slowdown, deadline to remove content
After the slowdown began last month, Twitter denounced Russia's attempts to 'block and throttle online public conversation'. – AFP pic, April 6, 2021

RUSSIA said yesterday it was extending a deadline for Twitter to remove illegal content by a month to mid-May, after the social media giant started cooperating when Russia slowed down its operations.

State telecommunications watchdog Roskomnadzor imposed slowdowns on Twitter's services in mid-March, accusing it of failing to remove content related to child pornography, drug use and calls for minors to commit suicide.

The watchdog gave Twitter a month to remove the content or face a complete blockage in Russia.

The move raised concerns among Kremlin critics who fear the clampdown on Twitter and other social media is aimed at silencing opposition voices.

Roskomnadzor said in a statement yesterday that after the slowdown Twitter had deleted nearly 2,000 posts containing illegal content and was moving more quickly to take content down.

It said the slowdown measures would remain in place until May 15 but that a decision had been taken not to completely block Twitter because the US company had "for the first time" changed the way its content moderation service worked in Russia.

The statement said Roskomnadzor officials had spoken by videolink with Sinead McSweeney, Twitter's vice president of public policy for the Europe, Middle East, and Africa region.

"Roskomnadzor will continue to cooperate with Twitter management until the social network completely deletes all banned information in the quickest possible manner," the statement said.

After the slowdown began last month, Twitter denounced Russia's attempts to "block and throttle online public conversation".

The media giant said at the time it had a "zero tolerance" policy regarding "child sexual exploitation" and did not promote suicide and self-harm.

Russia has in recent months stepped up efforts to impose more control on online platforms including Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube, with President Vladimir Putin saying large tech companies have become so influential that they are "competing" with sovereign states.

Putin's opponents say the efforts aim to stifle dissent, including by blocking efforts to organise protests in support of jailed opposition politician Alexei Navalny. – AFP, April 6, 2021

Related News

Malaysia / 3w

Police investigate Rosmah's alleged involvement in purchase of luxury US properties

Malaysia / 1mth

AirAsia apologises over seat incident involving girl with cerebral palsy

Malaysia / 1mth

IRB Introduces online E-assessment appeal service via MyTax portal

Malaysia / 1mth

JPJ suspends online change of vehicle ownership effective today, says DG

Malaysia / 1mth

Online fraud: Number of cases, losses continue to rise – deputy minister

Malaysia / 2mth

MOH: 850 med students affected by UK policy shift can complete housemanship locally

Spotlight

Opinion

When bullying turns violent, Malaysia must confront what is happening inside schools

By The Vibes Says

Malaysia

Malaysia-Thailand open historic border crossing to deepen trade, regional integration

By Ian McIntyre

Malaysia

Gerak Khas drama actress, Tisha Samsir denies drug involvement

Malaysia

Student stabbing: Teenage girl sent to Hospital Bahagia for psychiatric evaluation

Malaysia

Anwar wishes Tun M a happy 101st birthday

World

Israel shares intelligence with US over alleged Iranian plot to assassinate Trump

Malaysia

EPF members withdraw RM19.87 billion from Flexible Account as of May 31

Malaysia

Melaka: Student who was allegedly bullied chases schoolmate with box cutter

World

Fresh US-Iran strikes deepen Middle East crisis as ceasefire crumbles

You may be interested

Events

HashMicro rolls out AI-powered manufacturing platform to help firms tackle rising costs, disruptions

By Alfian Z.M. Tahir

Places

Four premier hotels in Penang to be restored, open doors soon

By Ian McIntyre