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Here’s Why Russia Is Upholding a Ban Over LinkedIn Data

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Reuters
Reuters
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By
Reuters
Reuters
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November 10, 2016, 10:24 AM ET
LinkedIn Corp. Expands in China With Local Site Limiting Content
The LinkedIn Corp. website is displayed on an Apple Inc. iPad Air in an arranged photograph in Hong Kong, China, on Tuesday, Feb. 25, 2014. LinkedIn is establishing a Chinese-language website that will restrict some content to adhere to state censorship rules, moving to expand in a country where U.S. technology companies have clashed with the government. Photographer: Brent Lewin/Bloomberg via Getty ImagesBrent Lewin—Bloomberg via Getty Images

A Russian court on Thursday upheld a decision to block the website of social networking company LinkedIn, Interfax news agency reported, setting a precedent for the way foreign Internet firms operate in the country.

Russia’s Roskomnadzor communications watchdog has said LinkedIn (LNKD), which has more than 6 million registered users in Russia, was violating a law requiring websites which store the personal data of Russian citizens to do so on Russian servers.

Moscow has said the law, introduced in 2014 but never previously enforced, is aimed at protecting Russians’ personal data. Critics see it as an attack on social networks in a country which has increasingly tightened control over the Internet in recent years.

Moscow’s Tagansky District Court ruled in August that LinkedIn’s site should be blocked, but the decision had not yet come into force pending a company appeal.

“The decision of the Tagansky District Court has been upheld, the appeal by LinkedIn Corporation is unsatisfactory,” Interfax quoted a court decision as saying.

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LinkedIn’s representatives in Russia did not immediately reply to a request for comment.

Russia will take action to block LinkedIn’s website within the next week, RIA news agency cited a Roskomnadzor spokesman as saying. Roskomnadzor did not immediately reply to a request for comment.

While some companies such as online reservations site Booking.com have said they will transfer the necessary data to Russian servers, it is unclear whether others, including Facebook (FB) and Alphabet unit Google (GOOGL), will comply with the law.

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