Hindustan Times (East UP)

Twitter in soup over faulty map of India

- Deeksha Bhardwaj letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: In fresh trouble for Twitter, the Union government is looking into the issue of the social media company displaying the wrong map of India that shows Jammu and Kashmir, and Ladakh as separate country, an official familiar with the matter said on Monday.

The misreprese­ntation caused an uproar online amid the ongoing impasse between the government and the microblogg­ing platform over the new IT rules.

The map is available on the company’s website under careers sections on the page titled Tweep Life.

HT reached out to Twitter but did not receive a response till this report was filed.

This is the second time Twitter has misreprese­nted India’s map. In October last year, the Centre had served Twitter with a notice over the geotag for Leh showing it as a part of China. Writing to Twitter chief executive officer (CEO) Jack Dorsey, the Centre on October 22 conveyed its “disappoint­ment regarding the misreprese­ntation of the map of India”.

It also asked Twitter to explain why action should not be taken against it and the micro-blogging site resolved the issue.

In December last year, the government warned Wikipedia for misreprese­nting the country’s borders.Since it was a particular page, it issued Wikipedia an order to scrap it. “The secretary further adds that it violates the territoria­l integrity of the country, and it is well within the power of the ministry under section 69A to order it to be be

taken down,” HT quoted one of the ministry officials as saying then. The current map fiasco comes at a time when the company is engaged in an escalating battle with the government over the new controvers­ial social media and intermedia­ry guidelines.

The ministry has asserted that the social media firm has failed to comply with the guidelines, which can result in it losing the safe harbour protection granted to intermedia­ries under the IT Act. Twitter, in turn, has raised concerns about the safety of its employees in India and flagged intimidati­on by the police. There have been several instances of confrontat­ion between the social media firm and the government over orders to block access to content and marking of posts by Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leaders as manipulate­d media. Twitter’s grievance redressal officer Dharmendra Chatur also stepped down over the weekend, prompting the firm to hire a new official.

Assistant professor of political science at the University of Albany, Christophe­r Clary, however, said that according to analysis, Twitter was also misreprese­nting the map of the US. “By this analysis, I guess Twitter is also showing at least 10 American states as separate countries,” Clary tweeted.

TWITTER, IN TURN, HAS RAISED CONCERNS ABOUT THE SAFETY OF ITS EMPLOYEES IN INDIA AND FLAGGED INTIMIDATI­ON BY THE POLICE.

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