Apple, Google Blasted For Junking Smart Voting App For Putin
- By The Financial District

- Sep 23, 2021
- 2 min read
Big Tech companies that operate around the globe have long promised to obey local laws and to protect civil rights while doing business.

Photo Insert: Apple and Google having buckled under Putin's pressure and the removal of Smart Voting sets a dangerous precedent around the world.
But when Apple and Google capitulated to Russian demands and removed a political-opposition app from their local app stores, it raised worries that two of the world’s most successful companies are more comfortable bowing to undemocratic edicts — and maintaining a steady flow of profits — than upholding the rights of their users, Michael Liedtke and Barbara Ortutay reported for the Associated Press (AP).
The app in question, called Smart Voting, was a tool for organizing opposition to Russian President Vladimir Putin ahead of elections held over the weekend. The ban levied last week by a pair of the world’s richest and most powerful companies galled supporters of free elections and free expression.
“This is bad news for democracy and dissent all over the world,” said Natalia Krapiva, tech legal counsel for Access Now, an internet freedom group. “We expect to see other dictators copying Russia’s tactics.”
Technology companies offering consumer services from search to social media to apps have long walked a tightrope in many of the less democratic nations of the world. As Apple, Google, and other major companies such as Amazon, Microsoft, and Facebook have grown more powerful over the past decade, so have government ambitions to harness that power for their own ends.
“Now, this is the poster child for political oppression,” said Sascha Meinrath, a Penn State University professor who studies online censorship issues. Google and Apple “have bolstered the probability of this happening again.”
Google’s own employees have reportedly blasted the company’s cave-in to Putin’s power play by posting internal messages and images deriding the app’s removal. That sort of backlash within Google has become more commonplace in recent years as the company’s ambitions appeared to conflict with its one-time corporate motto, “Don’t Be Evil,” adopted by co-founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin 23 years ago.
Neither Page nor Brin — whose family fled the former Soviet Union for the US when he was a boy — are currently involved in Google’s day-to-day management, and that motto has long since been set aside.
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