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Govt frames new rules to hold social media, OTT accountable for content
The rules also call for a three-tier regulation mechanism for over-the-top (OTT) platforms like Netflix, YouTube, etc and require them to self-classify their content into five categories based on age suitability.
Written by Aashish Aryan , Pranav Mukul | New Delhi |
Updated: February 26, 2021 7:39:29 am
Digital media rules, social media guidelines, new degital media guidelines, digital media rules new, Intermediary guidelines, Intermediaries guidelines 2021, social media rules 2021, ott platforms, new social media rules, ott platform guidelines, digital media guidelines, indian express latest news
Digital media rules, social media guidelines, new degital media guidelines, digital media rules new, Intermediary guidelines, Intermediaries guidelines 2021, social media rules 2021, ott platforms, new social media rules, ott platform guidelines, digital media guidelines, indian express latest news
Ravi Shankar Prasad at the press conference in New Delhi on Thursday. (Express photo by Anil Sharma)
The Centre Thursday notified new guidelines for intermediaries in “soft touch oversight” rules, saying these were needed to hold social media and other companies accountable for “misuse and abuse”. These will require Big Tech platforms to set up stronger grievance redressal mechanisms, and appoint executives to coordinate with law enforcement in India.
For social media platforms like Twitter, Facebook, etc, the guidelines essentially remove the “safe harbour” provided to these companies — it limited their liability over content that users posted on their platforms — if the platforms do not comply with due diligence norms.
The rules also call for a three-tier regulation mechanism for over-the-top (OTT) platforms like Netflix, YouTube, etc and require them to self-classify their content into five categories based on age suitability.


Explained |Inside new social media code
The government’s move comes amid a flurry of activity across geographies over the last 12 months to frame new regulations aimed at policing Big Tech, which may force some of the world’s most valuable companies to fundamentally recalibrate their business models in order to stay in line with these regulations.
Guidelines for Social Media Platforms
A Grievance redressal mechanism should be developed and there should be a Grievance Redressal Officer
Should be registered within 24 hours and disposed in 15 days: Union Minister @rsprasad#ResponsibleFreedom #OTTGuideline pic.twitter.com/8A0DQycQqe
— PIB India (@PIB_India) February 25, 2021
Although the government had been working on these rules since 2018, work on issuing the new guidelines gained fresh momentum after the de-platforming of former US President Donald Trump and the more recent spat between the IT ministry and microblogging site Twitter over removal of certain accounts affiliated with the farm protests.
Also Read |Privacy vs curbs: Rules reflect global trend but sweeping blacklist puts law and order at centre
The regulations also seem to take a maximalist position, driven by both the strength of the user numbers of the Indian market and increasing realisation within the administration of the tech groups’ dissemination powers encroaching on the ambit of the state, especially on issues concerning governance and law and order.
Top Tech News Now
CLICK HERE FOR MORE
Reiterating that social media companies were welcome to do business in India but would have to follow the laws set in India, IT minister Ravi Shankar Prasad said while the government was open to criticism and right to dissent, it was “equally important” that the users of social media be given a forum to raise their grievances against “the misuse and abuse” of such platforms.
“The social media users running into crores should also be given a proper forum for resolution of their grievances in a time-bound manner,” Prasad told a press conference.
1x1.trans.gif
data-2-1.jpg

While all the rules have been framed and notified under the existing Information Technology (IT) Act, the administrative powers for regulation of OTT and digital news sharing platforms shall be under the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting (I&B).
The new guidelines place more onus on nearly all such companies which provide a platform to host, share, view or modify content, while also including for the first time, entities which are in the business of either creating or distributing news online under the ambit of an online intermediary.
Among the first, the government has made social media intermediaries more liable for the content being shared on their platform by following due diligence, failing which the “safe harbour provisions” will not be applicable to them.
Also Read |News websites have to give govt details on editorial head, ownership: I&B Secretary
These safe harbour provisions have been defined under Section 79 of the IT Act, and protect social media intermediaries by giving them immunity from legal prosecution for any content posted on their platforms.
Digital media rules, social media guidelines, new degital media guidelines, digital media rules new, Intermediary guidelines, Intermediaries guidelines 2021, social media rules 2021, ott platforms, new social media rules, ott platform guidelines, digital media guidelines, indian express latest news
Digital media rules, social media guidelines, new degital media guidelines, digital media rules new, Intermediary guidelines, Intermediaries guidelines 2021, social media rules 2021, ott platforms, new social media rules, ott platform guidelines, digital media guidelines, indian express latest news
Express cartoon by EP Unny.
However, the protection provided fails if the government notifies the intermediary of “any information, data or communication link residing in or connected to a computer resource controlled by the intermediary is being used to commit the unlawful act” and the platforms fails to “expeditiously remove or disable access to that material”.
Further, social media intermediaries will also be required to have a grievances redressal and compliance mechanism, appointing a grievance officer whose name and contact details will have to be shared, a resident grievance officer who shall have an office in India and will be an Indian passport-holding citizen, and a chief compliance officer.
The chief compliance officer, who will have to be present in India, shall be responsible for ensuring the platform’s compliance with the IT Act and the rules notified Thursday, Prasad said.
A nodal contact person who can be available round-the-clock for “coordination with law enforcement agencies” will also have to be appointed by social media intermediaries, he said.
A monthly compliance report on the complaints received, the action taken and the redressal for such complaints will also have to be published by the intermediaries, he said.
The second major change brought in with the new rules is making social media intermediaries more liable for “identification of the first originator of the information”.
“Social media intermediaries, upon being asked either by the court or by a government authority, will be required to disclose the first originator of the mischievous tweet or message, as the case may be,” Prasad said.
The platform will, however, be liable to disclose the originator of the message “only for the purposes of prevention, detection, investigation, prosecution or punishment of an offence related to sovereignty and integrity of India, the security of the State, friendly relations with foreign States, or public order”.
In a statement, social media giant Facebook said: “We have always been clear as a company that we welcome regulations that set guidelines for addressing today’s toughest challenges on the Internet… The details of rules like these matter and we will carefully study the new rules that were just published.”.
Twitter did not comment on the guidelines.
Social media intermediaries will now also need to trace originators of messages which call for incitement to an offence relating to the above or in relation with rape, sexually explicit material or child sexual abuse material punishable with imprisonment for a term of not less than five years. The government has, on a prior occasion, engaged with Facebook-owned messaging platform WhatsApp to seek traceability of certain users, a request that the platform denied.
Apart from these, social media companies have been asked to give users a chance for explanation and a fair opportunity to be heard before removing access to their accounts.
The rules for OTT platforms also follow a “soft-touch self-regulatory architecture” and call for online digital news disseminating agencies to self-categorise their content into one of the five age-based broad categories.
“The publisher of online curated content shall prominently display the classification rating specific to each content or programme together with a content descriptor informing the user about the nature of the content, and advising on viewer description (if applicable) at the beginning of every programme, enabling the user to make an informed decision prior to watching the programme,” Information & Broadcasting minister Prakash Javadekar said.
A self-regulatory body, headed either by a retired Supreme Court or High Court judge or an independent eminent person, shall also be formed, which will ensure the compliance of ethics and rules by online digital news platforms.
The ministry shall, in due course of time, “formulate an oversight mechanism. It shall publish a charter for self-regulating bodies, including Codes of Practices. It shall establish an Inter-Departmental Committee for hearing grievances”.
 
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Govt frames new rules to hold social media, OTT accountable for content
The rules also call for a three-tier regulation mechanism for over-the-top (OTT) platforms like Netflix, YouTube, etc and require them to self-classify their content into five categories based on age suitability.
Written by Aashish Aryan , Pranav Mukul | New Delhi |
Updated: February 26, 2021 7:39:29 am
Digital media rules, social media guidelines, new degital media guidelines, digital media rules new, Intermediary guidelines, Intermediaries guidelines 2021, social media rules 2021, ott platforms, new social media rules, ott platform guidelines, digital media guidelines, indian express latest news
Digital media rules, social media guidelines, new degital media guidelines, digital media rules new, Intermediary guidelines, Intermediaries guidelines 2021, social media rules 2021, ott platforms, new social media rules, ott platform guidelines, digital media guidelines, indian express latest news
Ravi Shankar Prasad at the press conference in New Delhi on Thursday. (Express photo by Anil Sharma)
The Centre Thursday notified new guidelines for intermediaries in “soft touch oversight” rules, saying these were needed to hold social media and other companies accountable for “misuse and abuse”. These will require Big Tech platforms to set up stronger grievance redressal mechanisms, and appoint executives to coordinate with law enforcement in India.
For social media platforms like Twitter, Facebook, etc, the guidelines essentially remove the “safe harbour” provided to these companies — it limited their liability over content that users posted on their platforms — if the platforms do not comply with due diligence norms.
The rules also call for a three-tier regulation mechanism for over-the-top (OTT) platforms like Netflix, YouTube, etc and require them to self-classify their content into five categories based on age suitability.


Explained |Inside new social media code
The government’s move comes amid a flurry of activity across geographies over the last 12 months to frame new regulations aimed at policing Big Tech, which may force some of the world’s most valuable companies to fundamentally recalibrate their business models in order to stay in line with these regulations.

Although the government had been working on these rules since 2018, work on issuing the new guidelines gained fresh momentum after the de-platforming of former US President Donald Trump and the more recent spat between the IT ministry and microblogging site Twitter over removal of certain accounts affiliated with the farm protests.
Also Read |Privacy vs curbs: Rules reflect global trend but sweeping blacklist puts law and order at centre
The regulations also seem to take a maximalist position, driven by both the strength of the user numbers of the Indian market and increasing realisation within the administration of the tech groups’ dissemination powers encroaching on the ambit of the state, especially on issues concerning governance and law and order.
Top Tech News Now
CLICK HERE FOR MORE
Reiterating that social media companies were welcome to do business in India but would have to follow the laws set in India, IT minister Ravi Shankar Prasad said while the government was open to criticism and right to dissent, it was “equally important” that the users of social media be given a forum to raise their grievances against “the misuse and abuse” of such platforms.
“The social media users running into crores should also be given a proper forum for resolution of their grievances in a time-bound manner,” Prasad told a press conference.
1x1.trans.gif
data-2-1.jpg

While all the rules have been framed and notified under the existing Information Technology (IT) Act, the administrative powers for regulation of OTT and digital news sharing platforms shall be under the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting (I&B).
The new guidelines place more onus on nearly all such companies which provide a platform to host, share, view or modify content, while also including for the first time, entities which are in the business of either creating or distributing news online under the ambit of an online intermediary.
Among the first, the government has made social media intermediaries more liable for the content being shared on their platform by following due diligence, failing which the “safe harbour provisions” will not be applicable to them.
Also Read |News websites have to give govt details on editorial head, ownership: I&B Secretary
These safe harbour provisions have been defined under Section 79 of the IT Act, and protect social media intermediaries by giving them immunity from legal prosecution for any content posted on their platforms.
Digital media rules, social media guidelines, new degital media guidelines, digital media rules new, Intermediary guidelines, Intermediaries guidelines 2021, social media rules 2021, ott platforms, new social media rules, ott platform guidelines, digital media guidelines, indian express latest news
Digital media rules, social media guidelines, new degital media guidelines, digital media rules new, Intermediary guidelines, Intermediaries guidelines 2021, social media rules 2021, ott platforms, new social media rules, ott platform guidelines, digital media guidelines, indian express latest news
Express cartoon by EP Unny.
However, the protection provided fails if the government notifies the intermediary of “any information, data or communication link residing in or connected to a computer resource controlled by the intermediary is being used to commit the unlawful act” and the platforms fails to “expeditiously remove or disable access to that material”.
Further, social media intermediaries will also be required to have a grievances redressal and compliance mechanism, appointing a grievance officer whose name and contact details will have to be shared, a resident grievance officer who shall have an office in India and will be an Indian passport-holding citizen, and a chief compliance officer.
The chief compliance officer, who will have to be present in India, shall be responsible for ensuring the platform’s compliance with the IT Act and the rules notified Thursday, Prasad said.
A nodal contact person who can be available round-the-clock for “coordination with law enforcement agencies” will also have to be appointed by social media intermediaries, he said.
A monthly compliance report on the complaints received, the action taken and the redressal for such complaints will also have to be published by the intermediaries, he said.
The second major change brought in with the new rules is making social media intermediaries more liable for “identification of the first originator of the information”.
“Social media intermediaries, upon being asked either by the court or by a government authority, will be required to disclose the first originator of the mischievous tweet or message, as the case may be,” Prasad said.
The platform will, however, be liable to disclose the originator of the message “only for the purposes of prevention, detection, investigation, prosecution or punishment of an offence related to sovereignty and integrity of India, the security of the State, friendly relations with foreign States, or public order”.
In a statement, social media giant Facebook said: “We have always been clear as a company that we welcome regulations that set guidelines for addressing today’s toughest challenges on the Internet… The details of rules like these matter and we will carefully study the new rules that were just published.”.
Twitter did not comment on the guidelines.
Social media intermediaries will now also need to trace originators of messages which call for incitement to an offence relating to the above or in relation with rape, sexually explicit material or child sexual abuse material punishable with imprisonment for a term of not less than five years. The government has, on a prior occasion, engaged with Facebook-owned messaging platform WhatsApp to seek traceability of certain users, a request that the platform denied.
Apart from these, social media companies have been asked to give users a chance for explanation and a fair opportunity to be heard before removing access to their accounts.
The rules for OTT platforms also follow a “soft-touch self-regulatory architecture” and call for online digital news disseminating agencies to self-categorise their content into one of the five age-based broad categories.
“The publisher of online curated content shall prominently display the classification rating specific to each content or programme together with a content descriptor informing the user about the nature of the content, and advising on viewer description (if applicable) at the beginning of every programme, enabling the user to make an informed decision prior to watching the programme,” Information & Broadcasting minister Prakash Javadekar said.
A self-regulatory body, headed either by a retired Supreme Court or High Court judge or an independent eminent person, shall also be formed, which will ensure the compliance of ethics and rules by online digital news platforms.
The ministry shall, in due course of time, “formulate an oversight mechanism. It shall publish a charter for self-regulating bodies, including Codes of Practices. It shall establish an Inter-Departmental Committee for hearing grievances”.
So India experiment with democracy ends. Natsiizm takes its place. Who would have thought

k
 
. .
If PDF is banned in India @PAKISTANFOREVER would be the happiest.

- PRTP GWD

This is the important part.

PDF needs to appoint a resident grievance officer who shall have an office in India and will be an Indian passport-holding citizen, and a chief compliance officer.


However, the protection provided fails if the government notifies the intermediary of “any information, data or communication link residing in or connected to a computer resource controlled by the intermediary is being used to commit the unlawful act” and the platforms fails to “expeditiously remove or disable access to that material”.
Further, social media intermediaries will also be required to have a grievances redressal and compliance mechanism, appointing a grievance officer whose name and contact details will have to be shared, a resident grievance officer who shall have an office in India and will be an Indian passport-holding citizen, and a chief compliance officer.
The chief compliance officer, who will have to be present in India, shall be responsible for ensuring the platform’s compliance with the IT Act and the rules notified Thursday, Prasad said.
A nodal contact person who can be available round-the-clock for “coordination with law enforcement agencies” will also have to be appointed by social media intermediaries, he said.
A monthly compliance report on the complaints received, the action taken and the redressal for such complaints will also have to be published by the intermediaries, he said.
The second major change brought in with the new rules is making social media intermediaries more liable for “identification of the first originator of the information”.
“Social media intermediaries, upon being asked either by the court or by a government authority, will be required to disclose the first originator of the mischievous tweet or message, as the case may be,” Prasad said.
The platform will, however, be liable to disclose the originator of the message “only for the purposes of prevention, detection, investigation, prosecution or punishment of an offence related to sovereignty and integrity of India, the security of the State, friendly relations with foreign States, or public order”.
So India experiment with democracy ends. Natsiizm takes its place. Who would have thought

k

PDF now needs to comply with Indian Laws else it will be banned in India.

Read my post above.

 
. .
.
India will go full Bangladesh in her attempt for a homogenous society.
 
. . .
This is not about Indians but non-Indians poking into Indian affairs.

How do random discussions on the internet so worrisome for Indian government and fragile Indian society?

Indians usually are busy treating each other as anti nationals anyhow. No outsider influences that
 
.
PDF needs to appoint a resident grievance officer who shall have an office in India and will be an Indian passport-holding citizen, and a chief compliance officer.


Isn't PDF blocked in India...are you sure it is not banned/blocked.

The reason many uses VPN to login PDF, maybe it depends on states and in some Indian states it was not blocked as some Indian names can be seen.

And you are also using a VPN...?
 
.
So India experiment with democracy ends. Natsiizm takes its place. Who would have thought

k

Pdf is already banned in China so are your iron biradars Nazis?
Isn't PDF blocked in India...are you sure it is not banned/blocked.

The reason many uses VPN to login PDF, maybe it depends on states and in some Indian states it was not blocked as some Indian names can be seen.

And you are also using a VPN...?
Nope, it's not. Besides pdf doesn't allow login via a vpn.
If that happens that will work as a huge publicity boost for PDF. Being 'banned' is seen a positive thing in the media business. People always get attracted to the forbidden things.
How much publicity pdf got after getting banned in China.
 
. .
For PDF to have a compliance officer and what not it needs at least 1 million active users from India (or more) I don't think the government rain down on forums most Indians don't visit these places or have the reach.
qb.JPG
 
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