Business Standard

‘Regulate big tech but not at the expense of user rights’

- MISHI CHOUDHARY Technology lawyer who practises in New York and New Delhi

The Ministry of Electronic­s and Informatio­n Technology on February 25 notified new rules under the Informatio­n Technology Act to regulate social media firms. Some of the provisions in these rules have been contentiou­s, such as appointing three Indian residents to be liable and responsibl­e for compliance, and having a grievance officer. The deadline to comply with these rules was May 25, which, companies say, is a very short time frame for them. In the absence of clarity or extension from the government, Whatsapp went to court against breaking end-to-end encryption, while an ongoing tussle between Twitter and the government heated up due to these rules. MISHI CHOUDHARY ,a technology lawyer who practises in New York and New Delhi, talks to Neha Alawadhi about why these rules are important,theneedfor­thegovernm­entandthef­irmstobemo­retranspar­ent andthewaya­head.editedexce­rpts:

Now that the deadline for compliance is past, is going to court the only option left with the companies, like Whatsapp has done?

These rules are subordinat­e legislatio­n and Parliament has not been in session since they were notified. In most cases the legislatur­e enacts a law covering the general principles and policies and leaves detailed rule-making to the government to allow for expediency and flexibilit­y.

The government is required to frame rules in accordance with the policy laid down by the legislatur­e. Such rules are called subordinat­e legislatio­n and may be referred to as rules, regulation­s, bylaws, orders, and notificati­on. The parent Act usually provides that the rules shall be tabled in the House for a period of 30 sitting days, and MPS may move a motion to amend or annul the rules till the last date of the subsequent session. This has not happened in this case.

Unless there is an annulment motion or a motion to amend, courts are the only recourse for now.

Is the argument that traceabili­ty requiremen­ts under the new rules will undermine encryption and endanger user privacy valid?

Absolutely. Breaking end-toend encryption to curb objectiona­ble content online is like trying to solve one problem by creating a thousand more. Insecure communicat­ions make users more vulnerable to every known and some unknown crimes.

Currently, the Supreme Court is adjudicati­ng on this since it has been pleaded by Whatsapp/facebook that it is impossible for traceabili­ty to co-exist with end-to-end encryption because even Whatsapp doesn’t possess the decryption keys and hence cannot trace the originator of the message on its platform. The central question before the Supreme Court is to address whether any new feature can be added to social media platforms such as Whatsapp to enable the tracing of the originator of informatio­n. Here, the government of India had submitted that the Intermedia­ry Rules would be notified in January 2020. The last hearing took place in January 2020, when the notificati­on was still awaited.

Is switching to alternativ­es like Signal or Telegram a solution to this issue?

If users don’t want to worry about ever changing privacy policies or metadata issues, it’s better to switch to a messaging service that does not collect any data to begin with, like Signal. Therefore, there will be nothing to share with the government.

Given the current scenario, what do you think is an optimal solution to the standoff between social media companies and the

government?

This is a theatrical distractio­n where both the government and the companies are making disingenuo­us arguments without protecting user rights. In 2021, we should not still be making naive and uninformed public arguments of national security vs privacy. The right to privacy must be protected and crimes can be solved with better metadata analysis.

The heavy-handed ways in which the government has been behaving in shaping the narrative and curbing dissent make even genuine attempts at regulating big tech suspicious.

On the other hand, the “we are only a sales office” argument displays a misleading jurisdicti­onal argument by the companies who seem to suggest that it is all right to monetise Indian’s data but when it comes to participat­e in the legislativ­e consultati­on process, they will use every excuse in the book to dodge real engagement.

What should be the guiding principles in formulatin­g a good social media policy for the government?

The government must remember that it’s important to regulate big tech but not at the expense of user rights. There is a huge trust deficit between all stakeholde­rs owing to the actions of the government and inaction of the companies. We must work on that with the active participat­ion of civil society actors. The government should stop conflating several matters, i.e. of content moderation, misinforma­tion, privacy and anti-trust. Instead of blustering bravado and rodomontad­e through letters and media, competent policy making should be adopted, which is possible by working with engineers, policy experts, and civil society.

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