Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Govt holds consultati­on on grievance clause

- Deeksha Bhardwaj

NEW DELHI: Tech companies, members of the civil society and multiple other stakeholde­rs in the informatio­n technology domain raised concerns over the government’s proposed new amendments to the IT Rules in a meeting on Thursday, according to people aware of the discussion­s, even as a minister described the conversati­ons as productive.

The meeting comes weeks after the government unveiled amendments to the Informatio­n Technology Rules, 2021, which became controvers­ial for a particular proposal to set up a government-appointed grievance appeals committee that will have the final say on what content stays up or has to be removed from social media websites.

Some of the people who attended the meeting raised concerns over the constituti­onality of the amendments, while others recommende­d financial liabilitie­s instead of criminal liability, and creating a self-regulatory mechanism instead.

Those present were representa­tives from Meta (formerly Facebook), Netflix, Koo, legal activists and industry body Internet and Mobile Associatio­n of India (IAMAI).

Union minister for electronic­s and informatio­n technology Rajeev Chandrasek­har told Hindustan Times that the consultati­on was very productive. “The biggest takeaway from the session is that all stakeholde­rs can agree that the Indian cyberspace needs to respect four boundary conditions for policy and rulemaking — openness, safety and trust, accountabi­lity and complete compliance with the constituti­on,” he said.

“There is need to tighten the accountabi­lity matrix to ensure all citizens have recourse to an appeal in case their complaints are not addressed properly.” One of the people who attended the meeting said the government appeared to be receptive to the suggestion­s, including a self-regulatory mechanism. “The minister said that the government would be open to such a mechanism and would also be amenable to changes in the rules in case they were found to be more effective,” said a tech policy official present at the consultati­on. Supreme Court lawyer and founder of Cybersaath­i, NS Nappinai, said there is the question of constituti­onality of the rules, as well as the need for specificit­y when it comes to sections of it, such as whether or not an appellate body can be set up under the rules instead of going through Parliament.

“There is inconsiste­ncy in terms of timelines when it comes to takedown of content,” said Nappinai. The tech policy official mentioned above cited Chandrasek­har as saying that intermedia­ries cannot act as “arbiters of truth” and there need to be checks and balances.

Chandrasek­har also said the government was working on a new IT Act since, he said, the existing one was outdated.

 ?? ?? Rajeev Chandrasek­har
Rajeev Chandrasek­har

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