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New Indian IT rules take social media giants to task
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IANS | 14 Jan, 2019
As India gears up for general elections, owners of global social media
platforms are in a huddle over how to curb the spread of misinformation
and fake news in a country where deep mobile penetration has made
Facebook, its messaging service WhatsApp and Twitter available at the
fingertips of millions.
Despite efforts that began with sincerity
only in the later half of 2018 -- including ad campaigns to
collaborating with fact-checking agencies -- the Indian government has
now formulated new IT guidelines where social media platforms have to
remove within 24 hours any unlawful content that can affect the
"sovereignty and integrity of India".
India is a lucrative market
for social media firms and has the potential to grow big -- with over
400 million smartphones and over 700 feature phone users -- the latter
being targeted by mobile manufacturers with feature-packed, entry-level
devices which would help them get full access (unlike the "Lite"
versions with restricted experience) to social media apps.
For
Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey, India is extremely important and there are lot
of opportunities for him in the country. "We love the conversational
nature of the society and culture. We're really excited to make Twitter
viable to more and more people in the country," Dorsey told IANS during
his India visit in November last year.
Facebook, with close to
300 million users and over 200 million users for its WhatsApp service in
India, is also bullish on the future growth prospects.
According
to experts, social media platforms must look at India from a fresh
perspective -- just like in the case of the European nations after the
onset of General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) in May last year --
when it comes to honouring the law of the land.
"For the social
media players, India is a huge market and they want to grow... On the
other hand, they have consistently failed to stop the spread of fake
news and propaganda on their platforms," Pavan Duggal, the nation's
leading cyber law expert, told IANS.
The Indian government's
proposed rules, said Duggal, who is also a leading Supreme Court lawyer,
is in the right direction to protect the sovereignty and integrity of
the country.
"The social media companies will surely push back
against any such move, so it would be interesting to see how the
proposed rules are finally implemented. These firms, which have treated
India and its laws very softly till now, have to change with new
realities," Duggal noted.
Prasanth Sugathan, a technology lawyer
and Legal Director at Software Freedom Law Center (SFLC), however feels
the new rules have gone beyond the provisions of the parent act and
erodes the safe harbour protection available to intermediaries.
"The
draft intermediary rules have implications for free speech rights of
users with requirements for automated content removal and an array of
ambiguous terms used to categorise content deemed unlawful.
"The provision for traceability could also possibly affect the privacy and security of communications," Sugathan told IANS.
The onus, however, is clearly on the social media firms to sanitise their platforms, and fast.
Facing
the uphill task of tackling election-related interference, Facebook in
October said it is establishing a task force comprising "hundreds of
people" in India to prevent bad actors from abusing its platform.
"With
the 2019 elections coming, we are pulling together a group of
specialists to work together with political parties," said Richard
Allan, Vice President of Policy for Europe, the Middle East and Africa
(EMEA) during his India visit.
Facebook last month said that it
will start to show a disclaimer on all political ads in India that
provides more information about who's placing the ad, and an online
searchable Ad Library for anyone to access.
"Now anyone who wants
to run an ad in India related to politics will need to first confirm
their identity and location, and give more details about who placed the
ad," said Sarah Clark Schiff, Product Manager at Facebook.
After
being pulled up by the government several times last year, WhatsApp too
launched radio, TV and print ad campaigns to create awareness and
empower users.
Addressing a town-hall meeting at the Indian
Institute of Technology-Delhi in November, Dorsey said fake news is a
way too big category, adding that the social network is taking
"multi-variable" steps including the use of Artificial Intelligence
(AI), to curb the spread of misleading information ahead of 2019 general
elections in India.
As global executives from social media
companies begin to make a beeline to the country to clarify their
stands, those "multi-variable" steps now need to be elaborated further
as elections inch closer.
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