RIO DE JANEIRO, Aug. 22 (Xinhua) -- Brazilian
prosecutors sued U.S. Internet group Google Inc. on Tuesday for not following
orders from a Brazilian Federal Court to provide information on members using
its social network site, Orkut.
The prosecutors demanded the closure of the company's
operations in Brazil and the payment of a fine of 130 million reais (61 million
U.S. dollars), about 1 percent of the company's gross revenue, as penalty for
withholding user information, required for a criminal investigation.
According to the prosecutors, the site Orkut, which
has become hugely popular in Brazil over the past two years, hosts communities
and personal profiles of Brazilians charged with crimes.
In anticipation of the complaint, Google's Brazilian
unit, Google Brasil, petitioned a judge on Monday to name an independent
specialist to determine whether it was withholding user information.
Google Brasil said on Tuesday that the information
requested is not available to them, because though 70 percent of Orkut users are
Brazilians, all data is stored in their headquarters' servers based in the
United States, where Brazilian laws are invalid.
But federal prosecutor Sergio Suiama, who coordinates
a group battling cyber crimes, dismissed on Tuesday Google's explanation as an
unsatisfactory "excuse."
The question is of the access to the data, and not
where the data is stored, said Suiama, noting that Microsoft and Yahoo also have
data stored outside Brazil, but provide information to Brazilian authorities
when requested. Enditem