Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

‘New rules to prevent abuse of social media’

IT minister Prasad says WhatsApp users have nothing to fear about, as new rules offer a robust forum

- letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: Union informatio­n technology minister Ravi Shankar Prasad on Thursday maintained the government “fully recognises and respects the right of privacy” and said the new rules for intermedia­ries were designed to empower citizens and prevent the “abuse and misuse” of social media. Prasad said ordinary users of WhatsApp have nothing to fear about the new rules.

NEW DELHI: Informatio­n and Technology Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad on Thursday said WhatsApp users have nothing to fear about new social media rules, that are designed to prevent abuse and misuse of platforms, and offer users a robust forum for grievance redressal.

Prasad said that the government welcomes criticism including the right to ask questions. “The rules only empower the ordinary users of social media when they become victims of abuse and misuse,” Prasad posted on homegrown microblogg­ing platform Koo, and also tweeted. The government fully recognises and respects the right of privacy, he asserted.

“Ordinary users of WhatsApp have nothing to fear about the new Rules. Its entire objective is to find out who started the message that led to commission­ing of specific crimes mentioned in the Rules,” Prasad added.

The new IT rules require the social media companies to set up an India-based grievance redressal officer, compliance officer and nodal officer “so that millions of users of social media who have a grievance get a forum for its redressal”, he said.

The obligation to reveal the originator of an offensive message already in circulatio­n relates only to offences relating to sovereignt­y, integrity and security of India, public order, rape, and child sexual abuse.

“That too when other less intrusive measures are not effective,” the Minister said.

The government on Wednesday had strongly defended its new digital rules, saying the requiremen­t of messaging platforms like WhatsApp to disclose origin of flagged messages does not violate privacy, and went on to seek a compliance report from large social media firms.

The new rules, announced on February 25, require large social media platforms -- defined as those with over 50 lakh users in the country -- to follow additional due diligence, including appointmen­t of chief compliance officer, nodal contact person and resident grievance officer. The new, tighter regulation­s for social media firms requires them to remove any content flagged by authoritie­s within 36 hours and setting up a strong complaint redressal mechanism with an officer being based in the country.

Significan­t social media companies will have to publish a monthly compliance report disclosing details of complaints received and action taken, as well as details of contents removed proactivel­y. They will also be required to have a physical contact address in India published on its website or mobile app, or both. Under the rules that would make digital giants more accountabl­e for the content hosted on their platform, companies will have to take down posts depicting nudity or morphed photos within 24 hours of receiving a complaint.

Non-compliance with new IT rules would result in these platforms losing their intermedia­ry status that provides them immunity from liabilitie­s over any third-party data hosted by them. In other words, they could be liable for criminal action in case of complaints.

Twitter, in a statement on Thursday, has expressed concern over “use of intimidati­on tactics by the police” after the microblogg­ing platform gave a manipulate­d media tag to tweets by a BJP leader. Twitter said it is concerned about its employees in India and the “potential threat” to freedom of expression.

In its first official statement after the Delhi Police visited the company’s offices in Delhi and in Gurugram on Monday, Twitter said it will continue to be strictly guided by principles of transparen­cy, a commitment to empowering every voice on the service, and protecting freedom of expression and privacy under the rule of law.

Earlier this week, WhatsApp filed a lawsuit in the Delhi High Court challengin­g the new digital rules on grounds that the requiremen­t for the company to provide access to encrypted messages will break privacy protection­s. The government has emphasised that the new norms will not impact normal functionin­g of the popular free-messaging platform, and the IT Ministry has turned up the heat on significan­tly large social media companies such as Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Instagram and WhatsApp asking them to report their status on compliance with the new rules.

{ RAVI SHANKAR PRASAD } IT MINISTER The rules only empower the ordinary users of social media when they become victims of abuse

and misuse.

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