Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

SC seeks govt, Twitter reply on fake news plea

- Abraham Thomas letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court on Friday sought responses from Twitter India and Centre on a petition demanding regulation of “fake and seditious” content and advertisem­ents circulated on social media platforms from unverified accounts.

The petition filed by Delhi Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) unit’s IT and Social Media Cell chief Vinit Goenka cited the February 1 order of the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) directing

Twitter to block more than 250 accounts found to promote fake and provocativ­e contents.

Goenka accused Twitter of creating hatred in society by circulatin­g, publishing, and promoting seditious contents and sought a mechanism to deal with such content.

A three-judge bench headed by Chief Justice of India (CJI) SA Bobde issued a notice and tagged with it two similar petitions pending in court. In October 2020, the court issued notice on a petition by two law students demanding profile verificati­on of social media accounts in order to weed out illicit and graphic content uploaded on social media.

Goenka’s advocate Ashwini Dubey argued that there was an urgent need for the Court to interfere since, he claimed, there was no law is in place to prevent circulatio­n of anti-national content and posts that spread hatred based on fake news. “In the absence of any law to deal with offensive and hatred messages, platforms like Twitter are knowingly promoting the messages which are against the law of the land and therefore, the Respondent

No.4 (Twitter) needs to explain for circulatin­g and promoting the prohibited content.”

With notices issued, responses have to be filed to the petition by Twitter and the two central department­s – ministry of law and justice and ministry of informatio­n and broadcasti­ng.

The petition comes a day after the Union law minister Ravi Shankar Prasad, who also has the charge for the ministry of electronic­s and informatio­n technology, warned social media companies that they cannot ignore Indian law and told Parliament that new rules and codes were in the works for social media companies to follow.

This month, Twitter has been locked in a rare confrontat­ion with the Centre after being given orders to block over 1,300 links — entire profiles as well as posts — for alleged incitement during the January 26 farm stir-linked violence. The firm complied partially, saying that the orders were not consistent with the law, prompting the Centre and legal experts to accuse it of ignoring the rule of law. Twitter declined to comment on the matter.

Apar Gupta, lawyer and founder of Internet Freedom Foundation, said the step initiated by the court would be injurious to freedom of speech and expression. “Censorship in any form is imperfect and leads to a wide chilling effect on freedom of internet users. Even the category proposed for taking down content like seditious content is wide which often confounds experts. What amounts to seditious content can be decided only after a criminal trial.”

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