Business Standard

Omar Abdullah freed after eight-month detention

Google, Twitter, Tiktok, Facebook team up with global health agencies and government­s to put up the guardrails on the fake trail

- NEHA ALAWADHI New Delhi, 24 March

Former Jammu and Kashmir chief minister Omar Abdullah was on Tuesday freed after nearly eight months in detention, with the administra­tion revoking the Public Safety Act against him. He said the first task was to fight COVID-19 and any discussion on political developmen­ts could come later.

In the midst of the countrywid­e panic and pandemoniu­m over Coronaviru­s, social media platforms have been grappling with a problem of their own. A sharp spike in fake news—posts on how the prime minister’s call to applaud those at the frontlines of the fight back was timed so as to purify the air and improve blood circulatio­n were shared widely. Ditto for all news about how Indians are leading the fight against the virus with ayurvedic and homeopathi­c cures and for conspiracy theories about the origins of the virus. The industry of fakes is bustling even as everything else is shutting down. Worse, none is exempt from its influence. For instance several celebritie­s gave wide currency to tweets that claimed that the prime minister had deliberate­ly chosen 5 p.m. as the time for the applause because the country was moving under a particular constellat­ion of stars that would imbue the clapping and applauding exercise with special miraculous potency to help fight the virus. After celebritie­s with hundreds and thousands of followers shared the post and retweeted it, Twitter and PIB rushed in to douse the fires with hashtags that debunked such notions. This is of course, just the tip of the iceberg. A plethora of home remedies have been swirling the airwaves as tried and tested cures or divine prescripti­ons to kill the virus.

On Friday, the Ministry of Electronic­s and Informatio­n Technology (Meity) wrote to social media platforms to “inform their users not to host,

display, upload, modify publish, transmit, update or share any informatio­n that may affect public order and (is) unlawful in any way.”

For the media platforms, it is a fraught moment. While usage peaks in times of anxiety, their inability to cross check every piece of informatio­n coursing through their highways makes it impossible to stop the flow of fakes. Doing nothing is not an option either, given the critical nature of the present crisis and also because the platforms have spent the most part of the past year running trust-building campaigns in the country.

As a combat strategy, thus far, the platforms have decided

to outsource the trust problem. Hand over the handle to the experts seems to be the best way forward for most.

Tiktok, owned by Chinese firm Bytedance, has tied up with the World Health Organizati­on (WHO). WHO posts informativ­e videos and has hosted two livestream­s on March 17 and 19 that featured informatio­n about COVID-19. It was watched across 70 markets by almost 350,000 users. On Twitter a hunt for Covid19 or coronaviru­s (and other related terms) leads one to the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare (MOHFW) or the WHO. Facebook and Instagram too have a similar option. Google has tied up with MOHFW and launched “Do the Five,” a campaign around key precaution­s to prevent contractin­g and spreading the virus. It has also issued push notificati­ons on the Google app for Android and IOS (Apple) users in India highlighti­ng this informatio­n.

On Youtube, Google has a promotiona­l card on the Homepage that links out to the MOHFW website for up-to-date informatio­n. Search results and videos about coronaviru­s also appear alongside informatio­n from reliable sources like the WHO, and curated playlists on topics from tips for preventing spread of the virus, to working from home more effectivel­y are prominentl­y displayed.

Facebook-owned Whatsapp has partnered with the Ministry of Electronic­s and Informatio­n Technology and MOHFW to launch a chatbot that deals with virus-related anxieties. This is similar to one that it has globally, with the WHO.

The Mygov Corona Helpdesk was launched last week and works on an Ivr-like interface that lets users select the informatio­n they want by choosing the options provided. There also campaigns and challenges being posted on Twitter and Tiktok, some have the support of WHO and local government­s while some have been initiated by the marketing teams of big brands. Some initiative­s are global, such as the #Safehands challenge, while some are local and supported by the big brands.

No doubt, say experts, the social media platforms have rushed in with tightened communicat­ion controls and stronger protocols this time around, but is it enough?

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