In September 2021, two weeks before the
State Duma election, Moscow Arbitration Tribunal issued an injunction prohibiting
Google and
Yandex from creating a list of results for the search query Smart Voting. The lawsuit against both companies was brought by Woolintertrade, a company whose main activity is the wholesale of agricultural raw materials. Earlier in the summer, the company received approval from
Rospatent, the Russian governmental agency in charge of intellectural property, to register the Smart Voting trademark and then sued for trademark protection. The court then approved the block as an interim measure. At the same time,
Roskomnadzor, the Russian federal executive agency responsible for monitoring, controlling and censoring Russian mass media, restricted access to the Smart Voting website insisting that the website was used to continue the activities of the "extremist" organization
Anti-Corruption Foundation.
Roskomnadzor also warned
Apple and Google that they were risking fines by not removing the Smart Voting app from their app stores; the warning said that not blocking the app could be interpreted as "interference in Russian election". On 17 September, Apple and Google complied with
Roskomnadzors demands and removed the app from their app stores. Later that day,
Telegram messenger blocked a Smart Voting
chat bot. On 15 September, regulators temporarily blocked
Google Docs where the list of Smart Voting endorsements had been released. Navalny's team subsequently published the list to
GitHub. Google Docs and
YouTube removed the Smart Voting lists following a Roskomnadzor demand on 18 September. == References ==