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IT Rules, 2021 - Concerns and Opportunities

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March 02, 2021

What is the issue?

  • The central government recently released the Information Technology (Intermediary Guidelines and Digital Media Ethics Code) Rules, 2021. Click here to know more.
  • In this context, here is a look at the opportunities it offers and the concerns it has raised.

How do the Rules benefit?

  • The need for the IT Rules can hardly be disputed.
  • They make accountable the “significant” internet platforms (those above 5 million users) such as Facebook, Google and WhatsApp.
  • These have so far enjoyed immunity under Section 79 of the Information Technology Act under the ‘safe harbour’ clause.
  • The world over, these tech giants have been associated with breach of data, national security and individual privacy.
  • Besides, they have hosted incendiary stuff that can disrupt peace and harmony.
  • Secondly, the OTT platforms such as Amazon Prime, Netflix and Hotstar, which carry curated content without certification can no longer continue in this manner.
  • In a positive move, they will have to grade their content under various types of adult and child viewing.
  • They will also have to adhere to the grievance redressal mechanisms.
  • These checks and balances are necessary and go a long way in streamlining the content.

What are the concerns?

  • Free speech - The rules force digital news publishers and OTT services to adhere to a cumbersome three-tier structure of regulation.
  • It comes with a government committee at its apex.
  • This, in itself, is unprecedented in a country where the news media have been given the space all along to self-regulate.
  • This has been in place based on the understanding that any government presence could have an effect on free speech and conversations.
  • The rules might have serious implications for freedom of expression and right to information of online news publishers and intermediaries.
  • Regulation - Any person having a grievance regarding content published by a publisher in relation to the Code of Ethics may furnish his/her grievance.
  • The grievance mechanism established by the publisher will receive them.
  • So, literally anyone could force a digital platform to take up any issue.
  • To note, many of the digital publishers are small entities.
  • The regulations thus impose a compliance burden on such entities.
  • Moreover, the Rules allow government to influence the appointment of panel members in the higher level regulatory bodies.
  • All these leaves way for all kinds of interventions, and the potential for misuse is enormous.
  • Social media platforms - The new rules have increased the compliance burden for social media platforms too.
  • Such platforms in the messaging space will have to “enable the identification of the first originator of the information on its computer resource” based on a judicial order.
  • Thus, the rules require messaging apps such as WhatsApp and Signal to trace problematic messages to the originator.
  • The triggers for a judicial order that require such an identification are serious offences.
  • Nevertheless, it raises concerns as these apps have their messages encrypted end-to-end.
  • Classification - Digital news media has been unfairly and arbitrarily clubbed with OTT platforms and subjected to the same set of rules.
  • Moreover, the purview of the IT Act, 2000, has been expanded to bring digital news media under its regulatory ambit without legislative action.
  • This combination does not correspond with the provisions of the IT Act, and opens itself to legal challenge.
  • Also, the new rules pertain only to digital news media, and not to the whole of the news media.
  • This raises concerns as the former is increasingly becoming a prime source of news and views.

What are the likely implications?

  • Some amount of tightening of policy is inevitable given the new challenges.
  • But the government tries to implant itself in the grievance redress process.
  • It otherwise expects the platforms to share more information.
  • Both of these could prove counterproductive in a country where there is still no data privacy law.
    • The citizens do not have ways to guard themselves against excesses committed by any party.
  • On the other hand, the laws to combat unlawful content are already in place.
  • What is required is their uniform application.
  • Instead, the tight regulatory mechanism could only cost creativity and freedom of expression.

 

Source: The Hindu, Business Line

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