Hindustan Times (Jammu)

Google opposes Facebook-backed proposal for self-regulatory body

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Google has grave reservatio­ns about developing a self- regulatory body for the social media sector in India to hear user complaints, though the proposal has support from Facebook and Twitter, sources with knowledge of the discussion­s told Reuters.

India in June proposed appointing a government panel to hear complaints from users about content moderation decisions, but has also said it is open to the idea of a self-regulatory body if the industry is willing.

The lack of consensus among the tech giants, however, increases the likelihood of a government panel being formed - a prospect that Meta Platforms Inc’s Facebook and Twitter are keen to avoid as they fear government and regulatory overreach in India, the sources said.

At a closed-door meeting this week, an executive from Alphabet Inc’s Google told other attendees the company was unconvince­d about the merits of a self-regulatory body.

The body would mean external reviews of decisions that could force Google to reinstate content, even if it violated Google’s internal policies, the executive was quoted as saying.

Such directives from a selfregula­tory body could set a dangerous precedent, the sources also quoted the Google executive as saying.

The sources declined to be

The firm has reservatio­ns about setting up a self-regulator HT

identified as the discussion­s were private. In addition to Facebook, Twitter and Google, representa­tives from Snap Inc and popular Indian social media platform ShareChat also attended the meeting. Together, the companies have hundreds of millions of users in India.

Snap and ShareChat also voiced concern about a self-regulatory system, saying the matter requires much more consultati­on including with civil society, the sources said.

Google said in a statement it had attended a preliminar­y meeting and is engaging with the industry and the government, adding that it was “exploring all options” for a “best possible solution.”

ShareChat and Facebook declined to comment. The other companies did not respond to Reuters requests for comment. Self-regulatory bodies to police content in the social media sector are rare, though there have been instances of cooperatio­n.

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