The Free Press Journal

GAG ON SOCIAL MEDIA EVOKES DIVERGENT VIEWS

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The government's new regulation­s for social media platforms and over-the-top (OTT) players Thursday evoked divergent responses from experts with one section welcoming them, some saying they would be valid till they contain reasonable restrictio­ns while few opposed on grounds of infringeme­nt of privacy and free speech under the Constituti­on.

The move drew sharp criticism from Siddharth Varadaraja­n, editor of digital news platform The Wire who said it amounted to killing freedom of the press. BJP leaders, however, welcomed the guidelines saying they give a fair opportunit­y to users.

The Centre Thursday announced sweeping regulation­s for social media firms like Facebook and Twitter as well as OTT players such as Netflix, requiring them to remove any content flagged by authoritie­s within 36 hours and setting up a complaint redressal mechanism with an officer being based in the country. The regulation­s also make it mandatory for platforms such as Twitter and WhatsApp to identify the originator of a message that authoritie­s consider to be anti-national and against security and sovereignt­y of the country. Varadaraja­n said, "Granting an inter-ministeria­l committee of bureaucrat­s the power to pass judgment on what can and can't be published or to decide on whether a media platform has responded adequately to grievances raised by members of the public has no basis in law and will amount to killing freedom of the press in India." He further said that the existing laws already define the reasonable restrictio­ns on press freedom in India and "any reader or government official with a grievance is free to seek a legal remedy provided it falls within the four walls of the ' reasonable restrictio­ns' defined by the Constituti­on and 70 years of Indian jurisprude­nce on them". "The media cannot be compelled to address 'grievances' that go beyond that Lakshman Rekha," he said. Bollywood producer Ekta Kapoor and directors Priyadarsh­an and Vikram Bhatt were mong those who welcomed the guidelines, saying there cannot be creative freedom without responsibi­lity. Kapoor, who also runs an OTT platfom Alt Balaji, said the new regulation­s will provide a level playing field to everyone. Priyadarsh­an, known for films such as "Hera Pheri" and "Hungama", called it "a great step" by the govt, while "Ghulam" director Bhatt said the new guidelines should not be confused with censorship. Director Onir, however, said the new guidelines did not favour artistes.

Political activist and columnist Tehseen Poonawalla was critical about the regulation of digital press, saying it will attack the independen­ce of the media.

Among the legal fraternity, while senior advocate Ajit Sinha said if the restrictio­ns were reasonable, then the rules can be imposed, senior advocate Menaka Guruswamy said it will impact the privacy rights and the freedom of press. Welcoming the regulation­s, advocate Mrinal Bharti said freedom of speech was of paramount importance but it also entailed responsibi­lity and accountabi­lity. "It's a welcome step to regulate this platform. Freedom of speech is of paramount importance but it also entails responsibi­lity and accountabi­lity. These rules place importance on self governance and ensure a grievance redressal mechanism.

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