UPDATE 2: Russian service asks operators to block US network LinkedIn - News Archive - PRIME Business News Agency - All News Politics Economy Business Wire Financial Wire Oil Gas Chemical Industry Power Industry Metals Mining Pulp Paper Agro Commodities Transport Automobile Construction Real Estate Telecommunications Engineering Hi-Tech Consumer Goods Retail Calendar Our Features Interviews Opinions Press Releases

UPDATE 2: Russian service asks operators to block US network LinkedIn

(Adds comments in paragraphs 7–11)

MOSCOW, Nov 17 (PRIME) -- Russia has added U.S. business and employment-oriented social network LinkedIn to the register of violators of rights of personal data subjects and asked connection operators to block the resource on the country’s territory on Thursday, the Federal Service for Supervision of Communications, Information Technology, and Mass Media said.

“On the basis of a court decision, which came in force, social network LinkedIn has been included into the register...and indicated for blocking by operators,” the service said.

Presidential spokesman Dmitry Peskov said that the Kremlin will not interfere with LinkedIn blocking, as the communications service acts according to the law.

Russia has no fear that the blocking will be interpreted as censure, Peskov said. “The Russian authority acts in strict compliance with the law and asks companies to respect Russian laws and rules,” he said.

On November 10, the Moscow City Court sided with a lower court’s decision to block LinkedIn for breaking the law obliging Internet companies to store personal data of citizens on the country’s territory. Web sites of perpetrators are included in the register and can be later blocked.

The communications service’s press secretary Vadim Ampelonsky said a possible meeting of representatives of the authority and LinkedIn on data storage is being discussed. “The matter is being agreed upon with state entities; I don’t know when the process will come to an end,” he said.

Presidential aide for the Internet German Klimenko said in a broadcast of the Rossiya 24 television channel that LinkedIn would likely obey the communications service’s requirements and would be unblocked.

The dispute is on the legislative level. “What personal data are; what is being guarded. Positions of LinkedIn as a company with an American experience and our court, which sticks to Russian law, have diverged here,” Klimenko said.

“Our law is rather flexible, and the Internet is a new terrain. The current position could be revised, or, maybe, maintained.”

The country’s biggest operators have already started blocking the social network’s Web site. “Rostelecom has received an upload of registers from the communications service, under which http://linkedin.com was automatically blocked,” the operator’s press secretary Andrei Polyakov said.

Top mobile operators MTS, MegaFon and VimpelCom have also fulfilled or are in the process of fulfilling the order.

LinkedIn had more than 400 million users worldwide as of the end of 2015, including 5 million in Russia.

End

17.11.2016 15:25