imageMOSCOW: Russia's lower house of parliament on Friday approved a raft of anti-terror measures that the opposition called the "Big Brother" law, which may also cost Internet companies billions to store mandated users' data.

In the last session ahead of parliamentary elections in September, lawmakers approved legislation that criminalises failure to report some crimes, lowers the age of criminal responsibility to 14 for a number of offences, and foresees seven years in jail for abetting terrorism online.

But what caused an even bigger stir was a second bill that significantly increases the security service's surveillance prerogatives, with communication providers obliged to store users' calls, messages and data for six months and hand it to "relevant government agencies" when requested.

Social networks also have to store such information for six months, according to the bill, which still has to be approved by the upper house of parliament and signed by President Vladimir Putin.

Copyright AFP (Agence France-Presse), 2016

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