President Biden continues warning Vladimir Putin over his regime's treatment of imprisoned opposition leader, Alexei Navalny. German Chancellor Angela Merkel called for Navalny's release in a meeting with the Russian president last month. Merkel's appeal followed Navalny's return to Russia after recovering in Germany from a suspected assassination attempt. In contrast, the Kremlin's leading critic has singled out tech giants, accusing sites like YouTube of acquiescing to Putin's whims as protests over free and fair elections continue in Moscow.
Business Insider reports on allegations that YouTube and other platforms have complied with the Kremlin's campaign to stomp out dissent:
Last week, Russian news service Interfax reported that Vladimir Putin's regime hadย ordered YouTube's parent company, Google, and Appleย to remove access to a voting app run by jailed opposition activist Alexey Navalny. The appย disappeared from both app stores,ย sparking criticismย among both the public andย Google's own employees.
In an interview withย Bloomberg, YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki said free speech remained a โcore valueโ at the company, but added that there were โmultiple considerationsโ to take into account when dealing with a country like Russia.
The companyย has removed videos featuring Navalnyย in the past, citing Russian censorship laws, and reportedly took down another of his group's campaign ads ahead of the country's parliamentary election.
Wojcicki did not give a direct answer when asked if the latest video had been removed at the Russian government's request.ย
While hundreds protest the contested parliamentary election results in Moscow, Silicon Valley faces growing accusations of empowering the Kremlin's reported efforts to deceive the Russian people.