Is Facebook too powerful without legal safeguards?
INDIA IS A KEY MARKET FOR FACEBOOK WITH 217 MILLION PEOPLE USING THE PLATFORM EVERY MONTH
NEWDELHI: It’s time India moves to put in place legal safeguards to contain the potential harm that Internet giants like Facebook Inc can cause, experts say, amid a raging scandal over access gained by political marketing firm Cambridge Analytica to user data on the social media network. India is a key market for Facebook with 217 million people using the platform every month.
Concerns centre around protection of user privacy and freedom of speech, harassment by Internet trolls, spread of misinformation and fake news, said Apar Gupta, a Delhi-based lawyer who is part of Save the Internet, a group of individuals and NGOs fighting to preserve net neutrality. It’s time to take stock of the concerns and the sufficiency of India’s legal framework to address them, Gupta said.
“Companies like Facebook have grown too big and too powerful without adequate legal safeguards,” he said.
On Thursday, Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg pledged to stop the misuse of user data on its site to manipulate voters in India, Brazil and the US.
The social media network is under scrutiny after a whistleblower alleged that London-based Cambridge Analytica accessed user data to prepare voter profiles that helped Donald Trump win the US presidential election in 2016.
Information technology and law minister Ravi Shankar Prasad on Wednesday warned social media platforms such as Facebook of “stringent action” in case of any attempt to sway the country’s electoral process.