Deccan Chronicle

Break encryption to help fight child porn: Panel

ISPs will be asked to “proactivel­y” monitor & remove content

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New Delhi, Jan. 27: Indian enforcemen­t agencies should be able to break end-to-end encryption to hunt down distributo­rs of child pornograph­y online, a parliament­ary panel has urged as the south Asian nation looks to regulate social media.

The panel met officials of companies such as Google, Twitter, Facebook and WhatsApp before preparing Saturday’s report, which will be considered by several ministries in drafting future policies and law. “It is a challenge to our collective conscience,” the panel said in the 21-page report reviewed by Reuters, referring to child pornograph­y online.

It sought the “breaking of end-to-end encryption to trace distributo­rs of child pornograph­y”, saying India should require that the originator or sender of such messages be traced once law enforcemen­t becomes aware of the sharing of such content.

The call comes as India finalises other rules to force social media giants to deploy automated tools against unlawful content, fanning industry fears that more regulation could boost compliance requiremen­ts.

Facebook’s WhatsApp has already been at odds with the government, which has been pushing it to reveal the originator­s of messages on its platform, amid reports that rumours spread via WhatsApp have led to mob lynchings in recent years.

WhatsApp, which counts India as its biggest market with more than 400 million users, says it provides end-to-end encryption to help protect user privacy, and messages cannot be deciphered by the company or others. “If a company offers breaking such encryption for child porn, then it will be asked by all agencies,” an industry source who sought anonymity said of the panel recommenda­tion. “It’s like opening secure borders.”

Between 1998 and 2017, about 3.8 million reports of online child sexual abuse imagery originated from India, the world’s highest such figure, says the US National Center for Missing and Exploited Children.

The panel also recommende­d mandating Internet service providers to “proactivel­y” monitor, remove and report such content to the authoritie­s. Online search websites should also block searches for child pornograph­y sites, it added.

Adult sections denying entry to underage children should also be incorporat­ed into streaming platforms such as Netflix and social media platforms like Twitter and Facebook, the panel added.

THE CALL comes as India finalises other rules to force social media giants to deploy automated tools against unlawful content, fanning industry fears that more regulation could boost compliance requiremen­ts.

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