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General Studies 2 >> Governance

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MINISTRY OF TRUTH

MINISTRY OF TRUTH

1. Context 

Despite a barrage of criticism and concerns, the Centre has decided to create a regulatory regime that will allow a fact-checking body it appoints to label content related to the government on online platforms like Facebook and Twitter as "fake" or "misleading".

2. Key Points

  • Content marked as such by the body will have to be taken down by online intermediaries if they wish to retain their "safe harbour", which is the legal immunity they enjoy from third-party content.
  • The Ministry of Electronics and IT notified amendments to the Information Technology Rules, 2021, which allows the ministry to appoint a fact Minister of check body who will take a call on whether online information related to the Central Government is accurate.
  • The final rules come months after the Ministry, in January, had first proposed that any piece of news that has been identified as "fake" by the fact-checking unit of the Press Information Bureau (PIB) the Centre's nodal agency to share news updates will not be allowed on online intermediaries. However, the final draft has removed the reference to PIB.

3. Final rules

  • On paper, what the final rules now say is that an online intermediary including social media platforms like Facebook, Youtube and Twitter and internet service providers like Airtel, Jio and Vodafone Idea should make "reasonable efforts" to not host content related to the Central Government that is "identified as fake or misleading" by a "fact check unit" that may be notified by the IT ministry.
  • In essence, if any piece of information is marked as fake by the upcoming fact check unit, intermediaries will be required to take it down, failing which they would risk losing their safe harbour, which protects them from litigation against third-party content.
  • Social media sites will have to take down such posts and internet service providers will have to block URLs of such content.

4. Concerns with the new rules

  • Civil society groups have said that the rules could hamper speech online.
  • The notification of these amended rules cements the chilling effect on the fundamental right to speech and expression, particularly for news publishers, journalists, activists etc.
  • The fact check unit could effectively issue a takedown order to social media platforms and even other intermediaries across the internet stack, potentially bypassing the process statutorily prescribed under Section 69A of the IT Act, 2000.
  • The notified amendment, unlike the previous proposal, does not designate the Press Information Bureau as the appropriate fact-checking agency, its ultimate effect is the same.

5. Concerns around censorship

  • Minister of State for Electronics and IT Rajeev Chandrasekhar "assured" that the government-backed fact check body will work credibly, in a bid to address the concerns.
  • The agency will certainly be very clear that any doubts in the mind of people that the power will be misused on behalf of the government will be addressed. There will be a list of dos and don'ts that it will have to adhere to.
  • It will not be business as usual, where it will be a government department type of organisation.
  • It certainly wants to conduct fact checks credibly and that is not just for the government but also for the intermediary that is going to depend on that particular fact check.

6. Criticism

  • The Editors Guild of India had said that the "determination of fake news cannot be in the sole hands of the government and will result in censorship of the press.
  • The News Broadcasters & Digital Association said it will "have a chilling effect on the media and should be withdrawn.
For Prelims: Ministry of Electronics and IT, PIB, Editors Guild, Censhorship, IT Act 2000, Fake news,
For Mains: 
1. Explain the concerns over the government's new fact-check body. Discuss the challenges in effectively curbing the spread of fake news. (250 Words)

Source: The Hindu
 

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