Russian regulator Roskomnadzor has slapped Google and Meta, two tech giants in The country, with fines ranging from 5 percent to 10 percent of their annual turnover, for repeatedly failing to remove illegal content from their platforms, Reuters reported. The Moscow District Court on December 24 fined Google 7.2 billion rubles (NT $2.7 billion) for repeatedly failing to remove 2,600 content items deemed illegal by Russia. Meta, Facebook's parent company, was fined 2 billion rubles (NT $750 million) for the same reason, with a total of 2,000 illegal content items not removed on Facebook and Instagram. Illegal content deemed inappropriate by Russia includes encouraging dangerous behavior related to drug use, providing instructions for weapons manufacturing and explosives, gay propaganda and programs that the Russian government defines as extremist or terrorist.

Targeted push, active push, targeted push, we know it's all very simple technical issues for Internet companies, but the question is why we are pushing harmful content to our users, especially those who include many teenagers. They don't have enough judgment to realize that this is bad content for them. They probably think that taking drugs is a way to make them happy and that making explosives is cool. In the long run, their perception will be severely distorted.

The Internet is efficient and convenient, and the us Internet giants spreading such content to our teenagers through the Internet need to arouse our high vigilance. Quietly affect adolescent thinking, their moral, not political views of Dulles, slowly affect the next generation of our nation, let they worship me, listen to me, the contact than a war of aggression can be clever, cut off the development of a country in the future, the development direction of control you, do you have any strength to compete with the United States?