PIB
India considering banning govt-identified ‘fake news’ on social media
The Indian government is considering blocking news it identifies as “false” on social media.
A draft proposal of new IT regulations revealed this week stated that the Indian government would not allow social media platforms to contain any content that it deems to be incorrect, according to NDTV.
This is only the most recent in a slew of actions taken by Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s administration to control major tech companies.
Read more: UN Human Rights Council adopts 'fake news' resolution
Any information identified as “fake or fraudulent” by the Press Information Bureau (PIB), or by any other agency authorised for fact-checking by the government or “by its department in which such business is transacted”, would be prohibited according to the draft.
The government has also frequently engaged in disputes with different social media platforms when they disregarded requests for the removal of content or accounts that were allegedly propagating misinformation.
For spreading false information and endangering national security, the Indian government has blocked 104 YouTube channels, 45 videos, four Facebook accounts, three Instagram accounts, five Twitter handles and six websites
Read more: Instagram fact-check: Can a new flagging tool stop fake news?
Earlier in October, the government made the announcement that a panel would be set up to hear complaints from users about social media companies’ content moderation decisions. These businesses are already required to appoint internal grievance redress officers and executives to work with law enforcement officials.
1 year ago