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Russia threatens to block Facebook unless it starts storing Russian users’ data there

Russia's communications watchdog has threatened to block access to Facebook next year if the company does not store data locally.
(Matt Rourke / Associated Press)
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In its latest attempt to wrest control of the internet, Russia’s communications agency has threatened to block access to Facebook if the company refuses to store its data locally.

Alexander Zharov, chief of the Federal Communications Agency, told Russian news agencies Tuesday that they will work to “make Facebook comply with the law” on personal data, which obliges foreign companies to store it in Russia. Critics have slammed the law, which took effect in 2015, for potentially exposing the data to Russian intelligence agencies.

Zharov said that the Russian government understands Facebook is a “unique service” but that it will not make exceptions and will have to block it next year if Facebook Inc. does not comply.

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Last year, Russia blocked business-focused social network LinkedIn after a court ruled it violated the law on data storage. LinkedIn is available in Russia only if accessed via proxy servers.

In another recent step to crack down on internet freedom, Russia’s parliament in July outlawed the use of virtual private networks, or VPNs, and other internet proxy services, citing concerns about the spread of extremist materials. Russians use VPNs to access blocked content such as LinkedIn by routing connections through servers outside the country.

The law obliging companies to store personal data about Russian citizens in Russia has been applied selectively since it took effect two years ago. It has been widely viewed as the Kremlin’s attempt to expand control over the internet. Russian internet freedom activists have urged international tech companies to reject the government’s calls to give them access to personal data, saying that this would undermine cybersecurity for millions of Russian users.

In comments carried by the Interfax news agency Tuesday, Leonid Levin, chair of the parliamentary committee on communications and information policy, expressed hope that “it would not come to” blocking Facebook and that Russian authorities would be able to negotiate with the Menlo Park, Calif., company.

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