Yandex.Taxi Admits to Sharing Customers’ Locations With Police

An ex-policeman on trial for wrongfully detaining an investigative journalist said this week that Russian tech giant Yandex’s taxi service shares passengers’ ride history with law enforcement authorities, Coda Story reports.

Igor Lyakhovets was among the several police officers who had arrested journalist Ivan Golunov on drug charges in June 2019. An unprecedented public outcry led to Golunov’s release within a week and the officers’ eventual arrest for abuse of powers months later.

Lyakhovets testified that he had obtained Golunov’s home address from his ride history provided by Yandex.Taxi, according to an account published Saturday by the Baza news website.

Yandex.Taxi confirmed that it provides its customers’ ride histories and maintained that the company is legally bound to comply with requests from authorities. The ride-hailing service declined to specify whether it had shared Golunov’s ride history.

“We know from experience that providing this information is key to solving crimes and sometimes helps save lives,” spokeswoman Natalya Rozhkova told the Mediazona news website Monday.

The news comes weeks after Russia’s The Bell news website reported that the Federal Security Service (FSB) ordered the country’s major internet companies to give it continuous access to their systems last year. The orders affect more than 200 Russian internet services, including some Yandex services, which can be blocked for failing to comply.

Critics have accused the Russian government of censorship as it has stepped up internet regulations in recent years. The expert community was divided over the legality of Yandex.Taxi’s actions.