On May 22, LinkedIn India was found in violation of significant beneficial owner norms under the companies law, according to the Corporate Affairs Ministry. As a result, Microsoft chief Satya Nadella, along with eight other individuals, has been fined ₹27 lakh. The Ministry of Corporate Affairs imposed these fines for the breaches in compliance with the companies law. LinkedIn India is owned by Microsoft.
#MCA slaps #fines on #LinkedIn #India, #SatyaNadella, 8 others for #CompaniesLaw violations https://t.co/1k9SPcWaoy
#LinkedIn, its CEO #SatyaNadella and eight other individuals were fined for violating beneficial ownership (SBO) norms Here's what it means https://t.co/jqfnjIbt2X
The corporate affairs ministry on Wednesday slapped fines on #Microsoft-owned #LinkedInIndia, #SatyaNadella and eight other individuals for violation of the significant beneficial owner norms under the companies law https://t.co/8JQxB1bz9Y
LinkedIn India, Satya Nadella, 8 Others Fined ₹ 27 Lakh For Companies Law Violations https://t.co/PuHSYJUd6f https://t.co/5PMjgLOzOH
Corporate Affairs Ministry fines Satya Nadella, LinkedIn India and others ₹27 lakh @knvanand https://t.co/tRZVRMCXOp
#TechWithMC | #MCA imposed fines on #Microsoft-owned #LinkedIn India, chief Satya Nadella and 8 others for companies law violations. Read more on it 👇🏻 https://t.co/oUw6KnvpxB #Technology #SBO #LinkedIn
#LinkedIn #India violated significant beneficial owner norms under #CompaniesLaw, says #CorporateAffairsMinistry (PTI) 🗞️ Catch the day's latest news and updates ➠ https://t.co/hIkQpjEfnC https://t.co/4CqzLVJ0Na
LinkedIn India: Corporate affairs ministry fines Microsoft chief Satya Nadella, others, for significant beneficial owner norms violations
LinkedIn India violated significant beneficial owner norms under companies law, says Corporate Affairs Ministry