A Moscow court on Thursday said it had fined Twitter 3 million roubles ($136,000) for allegedly failing to delete content banned by the Russian government, the latest in a string of penalties issued against U.S. tech companies this year.
The press service of the Tagansky District Court confirmed the penalty to the Russian state-owned news agency TASS.
“The magistrate court department No. 422 of a Justice of the Peace court found Twitter guilty on two protocols complied under Part 2 and Part 4 of Art. 13.41 of the Administrative Code of the Russian Federation (violation of the procedure for restricting access to information, access to which is subject to restriction under the legislation of the Russian Federation) and imposed a fine totaling 10 mln rubles—3 mln and 7 mln rubles, respectively,” the press service said.
The Epoch Times has contacted GitHub for comment.
It comes as Russian regulators continue to put pressure on Silicon Valley-headquartered tech companies this year to remove content from their platforms, typically imposing threats of large fines. Critics have condemned the move by Russian authorities, calling it an attempt to exert tighter control over the internet and suppress both individual and corporate freedoms.
Moscow has accused Twitter of repeatedly failing to delete banned content on its site and has slowed down the speed of Twitter since March as a punitive measure for not removing the content. Twitter denies allowing its platform to be used to promote illegal behavior.
The latest fine brings the total amount of fines imposed on Twitter to 55 million rubles ($748,000), TASS reports.
The Epoch Times has contacted Twitter for comment.