Gulf Today

‘Social media should be restricted before voting’

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NEW DELHI: There are over 30 crore monthly active users on Facebook and more than 20 crore on Whatsapp in India. Even the Narendra Modi app alone can reach 1 crore people in a day.

With such a wide reach, should social media platforms be made to censor political content 48 hours ahead of polling as part of the strategy to maintain the so called “campaign silence”? “Today, when social media is increasing­ly one of the most significan­t factors for impacting the electoral decisions of voters, it is important that the Election Commission take adequate steps to maintain campaign silence,” Pavan Duggal, one of the nation’s top cyber law experts, said.

While the Election Commission of India recognises the impact social media can have on voters ahead of voting, the current legislatio­n does not bar these platforms - many of which now allow live video streaming services - from blocking political ads or propaganda. These platforms can decide to do so voluntaril­y, but how effective such a measure would be remains doubtful.

In fact, in response to a petition to restrain any political advertisem­ents, videos or messages before elections, Facebook last month told the Bombay High Court that it would not self-censor any content on its site.

It also raised practical difficulti­es of implementi­ng such a rule as elections in different parts of India are held on different dates and oten spread over a week.

The Election Commission last year formed a commitee to review this section so that maintainin­g campaign silence can be made effective in the changed circumstan­ces where social media yields considerab­le influence. The commitee submited its recommenda­tion earlier this year.

A query to the poll panel on how it plans to stop social media platforms from broadcasti­ng campaign material ahead of polling went unanswered.

“The Election Commission does not need to be a silent spectator,” Duggal said.

“The Election Commission should invoke the provisions of the specific liability of the service providers in their capacity as intermedia­ries under the Informatio­n Technology Act, 2000,” he said.

A parliament­ary panel earlier this month raised grave concerns regarding Facebook’s ability to prevent misuse of its platform during the upcoming Lok Sabha elections and to proactivel­y help the security agencies.

The social media company admited it doesn’t “always get it right” regarding content moderation on its platform.

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