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India’s new social media rules a threat to free speech, activists warn

Regulations may see platforms compelled to remove content that govt deems objectionable

Updated 5 years ago · Published on 28 Feb 2021 1:00PM

India’s new social media rules a threat to free speech, activists warn
Under new regulations announced by New Delhi this week, social media platforms, online streaming services and digital news services may be forced to remove content 36 hours after a complaint is made. – Pixabay pic, February 28, 2021

NEW DELHI – Internet freedom advocates have warned that new Indian social media regulations could pose a threat to freedom of expression, after New Delhi announced plans for tough new rules that may force platforms to remove content that it deems objectionable. 

Under the new regulations – unveiled on Thursday and due to come into force in three months – social media platforms, online streaming services and digital news services could be forced to remove content 36 hours after a complaint is made.

Tech companies will also have to disclose the origin of a “mischievous tweet or message” if asked by an Indian court or the government. 

That could lead to encrypted messages – a fundamental selling point for the Facebook-owned platform WhatsApp, which boasts hundreds of millions of users in India – being exposed.

Mozilla, developer of the Firefox internet browser used by hundreds of millions of people around the world, called for the regulations to be withdrawn.

“In their current form, these rules will undeniably harm freedom of expression, privacy and security, and could be subject to legal challenges,” said Mozilla Corporation public policy adviser Udbhav Tiwari on Friday.

“Provisions like the traceability of encrypted content, harsh content take-down timelines, and automated content filtering are blunt and disproportionate to the intention behind these changes.”

Other Indian activists also warned that the regulations could be challenged in court.

“I think these new rules are extremely worrisome because they are imposing a regulation on free speech and privacy without any backing of the law,” Nikhil Pahwa, founder of a digital news portal and a cyber activist, told AFP. 

“In my opinion, all these rules should be challenged in court, and if they are, I doubt they would hold up.”

Facebook and Twitter, for whom India’s 1.3 billion people are a key market, have said they are studying the guidelines.

“We look forward to continued engagement with the government of India to strike a balance between transparency, freedom of expression, and privacy,” said a Twitter spokesman.

The social media giant wants regulation “that protects the open internet, universal access, and promotes competition and innovation”.

New Delhi, announcing the new rules on Thursday, accused big tech firms of “double standards”.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s administration has been in a protracted battle with Twitter over protests by tens of thousands of farmers against government market reforms, during which the social media giant refused a government order to delete hundreds of accounts and comments.

Information Technology Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad said tech companies have to be “more responsible, more accountable”, and described the rules as “soft-touch oversight”.

A government official said talks on the plans have already started with tech companies.

“They accept that there will have to be some kind of regulation,” said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

“There could be some changes to the rules.” – AFP, February 28, 2021

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