Business Standard

Govt hired firm to check in on social media: RTI

- KUMAR SAMBHAV SHRIVASTAV­A

In August this year, the Union Ministry of Informatio­n & Broadcasti­ng (I&B) withdrew a tender through which it wanted to hire an agency to monitor social media accounts of citizens. This was after the Supreme Court (SC) warned the plan could lead to India becoming a “surveillan­ce state”. According to the tender, floated in April, the government wanted to contract an agency to monitor social media posts of citizens, including their historical conversati­ons and emails, to gauge their opinions about government policies, and target them with personalis­ed messages to promote positive opinions about government schemes.

A Right to Informatio­n (RTI) applicatio­n now reveals that the ministry had already been monitoring social media accounts and posts of citizens through a “social media communicat­ion hub” — for at least two years before the April tender came under the court’s scrutiny. The tender was to extend and upgrade the already-running scheme for another year, up until the 2019 polls.

According to the documents, the ministry in April 2016 hired ObjectOne Informatio­n Systems to conduct “monitoring services” at the social media communicat­ion hub for up to two years. The services included installing a software and “listening tool” that could monitor “individual social media user(s)/account(s),” identify “influencer­s” and monitor “overall responses to a message, tweet or data”.

The software could crawl “entire social media segment including paid and private media data” and monitor “social media sentiments” and segregate “activities into problemati­c and non-problemati­c”.

Based on the monitoring, the company generated various daily, weekly and monthly reports, including on “users/ accounts” and “message/ tweets”. The government paid ~10.9 million to the company for a year of monitoring services, documents show.

The ministry initially denied this informatio­n under an RTI applicatio­n filed by Venkatesh Nayak of the Commonweal­th Human Rights Initiative in May. It was only after Nayak filed an appeal against the denial that the ministry shared the records.

On November 28, Business Standard sent detailed queries to the Ministry of I&B and Object- One Informatio­n Systems, asking how much and what kind of data of citizens’ social-media activities were collected over two years and what they were used for. Neither the ministry nor the company responded, despite repeated reminders. Concerns over monitoring

Concerns over misuse of social media data have increased globally in the past year or so, ever since it emerged that the UK-based political consulting firm Cambridge Analytica collected the social media data of individual­s, without their informed consent, to use it for political campaignin­g. The firm is alleged to have analysed the social media posts of millions to create their psychologi­cal profiles, which it used for targeted messaging to influence voting patterns.

A public interest litigation was filed in the SC challengin­g the April tender of the ministry, on the grounds of privacy violation after Scroll.in reported the tender was meant to institute a software that could create a “360-degree” view of citizens and send them targeted messages to influence their opinions about government schemes. It was also reported later that over 40 Indian government department­s had been using a “strategic” tool created by the Indraprast­ha Institute of Informatio­n Technology, Delhi, that conducts mass surveillan­ce of citizens’ social media activities.

Though the I&B Ministry withdrew the tender, several government agencies have been justifying the monitoring, arguing that they are only looking into the informatio­n posted publicly by citizens. Privacy advocates, however, argue that monitoring even the publicly-posted opinions could have a chilling effect on free speech.

“If the posting on social media websites is meant only for a certain audience... then it cannot be said that all and sundry in public have a right to somehow access that informatio­n and make use of it,” the SC said on August 24, 2017, in its order by a nine-judge Bench on right to privacy. The communicat­ion hub

Nayak had in May filed the RTI applicatio­n with the I&B ministry, asking specifical­ly for correspond­ence, file notings and other official documents on the basis of which the ministry took the decision to float a social-media-monitoring tender in April. The ministry denied having specific records of correspond­ence on the plan. Nayak then filed an appeal challengin­g this response.

The ministry then shared with him a memorandum of agreement it had signed with its public-sector arm, the Broadcast Engineerin­g Consultant­s India (BECIL), to implement a “social media platform” scheme between 2012 and 2017, at a cost of ~182.3 million. According to it, BECIL set up the Social Media Communicat­ion Hub for the ministry between 2013 and 2016.

By early 2016, BECIL floated three tenders to hire agencies to operate and run the social media hub. One of the three tenders was for monitoring services, the contract for which was bagged by Object- One Informatio­n Systems. The other two were to contract agencies for covering government events, preparing publicity material for the government’s social-media handles and managing responses/feedback on those handles. The I&B ministry spent ~29.2 million on these activities during 2016-17.

Documents reveal that the ministry intended to increase its presence in regional languages and wanted to hire social media executives in each district in 2018.

It was planning to hire a new agency with more advanced monitoring capabiliti­es for its communicat­ion hub through the April tender. It is now not clear as to how the activities of the hub would be affected by the tender withdrawal.

“...We are internally assessing the situation,” said an official in the ministry.

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