Hindustan Times (East UP)

India seeks tougher action from cos on fake news

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NEW DELHI: Indian officials have held heated discussion­s with Google, Twitter and Facebook for not proactivel­y removing what they described as fake news on their platforms, sources told Reuters, the government’s latest altercatio­n with Big Tech.

The officials, from the Ministry of Informatio­n and Broadcasti­ng (I&B), strongly criticised the companies and said their inaction on fake news was forcing the Indian government to order content takedowns, which in turn drew internatio­nal criticism that authoritie­s were suppressin­g free expression, two sources said.

The sources, who were familiar with the proceeding­s at the virtual meeting on Monday, described the conversati­on as tense and heated, signalling a new low in ties between American tech giants and Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s administra­tion.

The officials did not issue any ultimatum to the companies at the meeting, the sources said. The government has been tightening tech sector regulation­s but wants companies to do more on content moderation.

The meeting was a follow-up to the I&B ministry’s use of “emergency powers” in December and January to order the blocking of 55 channels on Google’s YouTube platform, and some Twitter and Facebook accounts.

The government had said the channels were promoting “fake news” or “anti-India” content and that the disinforma­tion was being spread by accounts based in neighbouri­ng Pakistan.

The I&B ministry did not respond to a request for comment on the meeting, which was also attended by Indian contentsha­ring platforms ShareChat and Koo, which have millions of users in the country.

Without commenting on the meeting, Alphabet Inc’s Google said in a statement it reviews government’s requests and “where appropriat­e, we restrict or remove content in keeping with local laws.” Koo said it complies with local laws and has strong content moderation practices in place.

In its transparen­cy reports, Twitter has said the Indian government makes among the highest number of requests to remove content from its platform.

Technology website Comparitec­h in October said India made 97,631 content removal requests in 2020, the second-highest in the world after Russia, mostly to Facebook and Google.

During the meeting, senior tech executives told the officials that they take adequate measures to remove or curb the spread of misinforma­tion on their platforms, and act on legally-valid content removal requests, said the sources.

The officials told Google to review its internal guidelines to remove fake content automatica­lly, said the sources.

The officials also said the government was disappoint­ed that big social media platforms, including Facebook and Twitter, weren’t detecting and removing such content on their own.

 ?? REUTERS ?? As per reports, India made 97,631 content removal requests in 2020, second-highest in the world, mostly to FB and Google.
REUTERS As per reports, India made 97,631 content removal requests in 2020, second-highest in the world, mostly to FB and Google.

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