The Hindu (Erode)

SC stays govt. notification on establishi­ng fact check unit

The court’s stay will operate till the third judge in the Bombay High Court decides the question of validity of provisions of Rule 3(1)(b)(v) of the Informatio­n Technology, Rules, 2021

- Krishnadas Rajagopal By threatenin­g intermedia­ries with the loss of their statutory safe harbour should they fail to take down content that the FCU identifies as fake, false or misleading

The Supreme Court on Thursday stayed a government notification of March 20 establishi­ng the Press Informatio­n Bureau’s Fact Checking Unit (PIB FCU) to act as a “deterrent” against the creation and disseminat­ion of fake news or misinforma­tion regarding the “business” of the Centre.

The order was passed by a threejudge Bench headed by Chief Justice of India D.Y. Chandrachu­d on petitions filed by the Editors Guild of India (EGI) and standup comedian Kunal Kamra.

The Bench said the implementa­tion of the March 20, 2024 notification would remain stayed until a third judge of the Bombay High Court took a final call on the validity of provisions of Rule 3(1)(b)(v) of the Informatio­n Technology (Intermedia­ry Guidelines and Digital Media Ethics Code) Rules, 2021. It is under this provision that the March 20 notification was issued. The case had gone to the third judge of the High Court following a split verdict by a Division Bench.

The notification was issued by the Centre after the third judge found no reason to stay Rule 3 on March 11.

The Supreme Court did not comment on the merits or legality of Rule 3(1) (b)(v), saying the impact of the provision on the fundamenta­l rights to free speech and expression would be analysed by the High Court.

Appearing for Mr. Kamra, senior advocate Darius Khambata said the establishm­ent of the FCU would result in “every social media intermedia­ry pulling down content for fear of consequenc­es”.

Mr. Khambata said the Centre setting up an FCU was like “Caesar judging

Caesar”. “Why does only the business of the Central government need protection from misinforma­tion and fake content,” Mr. Khambata asked. He said individual­s needed more protection from fake content.

Mr. Khambata informed the Bench that the Centre had assured the High Court on April 27 last year that it would not implement Rule 3 till a final decision was taken by the court. He pointed to the timing of the issuance of the March 20 notification barely days before the Lok Sabha polls were due to start.

Advocate Shadan Farasat, for the EGI, said the implementa­tion of the FCU run by the government would ensure that only the Centre would have a monopoly over the truth.

Solicitor General Tushar Mehta referred to several instances in the past when fake news had proliferat­ed on social media.

He said the statutory mechanism was found inadequate to combat the disseminat­ion of false content. He said the social media intermedia­ries had not challenged the Rule.

Mr. Kamra, in his petition, argued that the sweep of the Rule operated to “muzzle speech against the Central government”.

“By threatenin­g intermedia­ries with the loss of their statutory safe harbour should they fail to take down content that the Central government’s FCU identifies as fake, false or misleading, the Rule coerces intermedia­ries to execute a regime of selfintere­sted censorship of online content relating to the business of the Central government,” the petition argued. It said the intermedia­ries, who were profit making commercial enterprise­s, would choose to bend rather than risk civil or criminal liability for thirdparty content on their online platforms.

Petitioner

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