The Asian Age

FB proposes solution to tracebilit­y, Centre firm

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New Delhi, Sept. 15: Facebook global executive Nick Clegg has proposed a “prospectiv­e” mechanism for WhatsApp to act on cases flagged by law enforcemen­t agencies, but the government has refused to budge on its demand for traceabili­ty of messages.

The issue of traceabili­ty has been a flashpoint between the government and WhatsApp, and the Facebook-owned messaging platform has so far resisted India's demand for identifica­tion of message originator­s, arguing that doing so would undermine its policy on privacy and end-to-end encryption.

A senior government official told PTI that Facebook Vice-President, Global Affairs and Communicat­ions, Nick Clegg, during his meeting with IT minister Ravi Shankar Prasad last week mooted alternativ­es to absolute traceabili­ty of messages, including use of ‘meta data’ and machine intelligen­ce for dealing with the issue, even offering to harness WhatsApp, Instagram and Facebook linkages to provide assistance to law enforcemen­t agencies.

When contacted, a Facebook spokespers­on said: “Facebook cares deeply about the safety of people in India and Nick’s meetings this week provided opportunit­ies to discuss our commitment to supporting privacy and security in every app we provide and how we can continue to work productive­ly with the Government of India towards these shared goals.”

A person aware of WhatsApps’s position on the matter emphasised that the platform cannot read messages exchanged as they are encrypted.

It is learnt that Clegg in meetings with top authoritie­s, including Home Minister Amit Shah, National Security Advisor Ajit Doval as well as IT Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad on September 12, reiterated the US tech giant’s stance that it will abide by any lawful request for informatio­n by the Indian government, but it cannot read messages exchanged on its platforms.

Clegg told the officials that the company can provide ‘signals’ and meta data such as who calls were made to and duration, among others, of lawfully identified users, a source said.

The US social media giant has agreed to provide India with 'meta data' of any user of its platforms, including WhatsApp, that the government

lawfully identifies but has insisted it cannot look into messages exchanged as they are encrypted.

India is home to 400 million WhatsApp users and more than 328 million Facebook users.

Social media companies in India have drawn flak from the government in recent past over instances of circulatio­n of fake news, breach of user confidenti­ality, unauthoris­ed

data sharing by the apps and concerns over privacy and data security.

WhatsApp in particular has been under fire over users misusing the platform for circulatio­n of fake news that have incited mob fury.

The Indian government has made it clear that it intends to strengthen the legal framework and make social media platforms more accountabl­e under law.

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