New Delhi: The Centre has asked the Supreme Court for three months’ time to finalise rules on preventing the misuse of social media profiles. In an affidavit filed with the apex court on Monday, the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY) argued that though “technology has led to economic growth and societal development, on the other hand, there has been an exponential rise in hate speech, fake news, public order, anti-national activities, defamatory postings, and other unlawful activities using internet/social media platforms”.
The affidavit also mentioned that the internet had emerged as a “potent tool to cause unimaginable disruption to the democratic polity”. There have been several rounds of consultations on the issue. These rules had to be revised so as to effectively regulate social media companies “keeping in view the ever growing threats to individual rights and nation’s integrity, sovereignty, and security”.
The information technology (IT) ministry, the affidavit said, has so far had discussions with several other ministries, individuals, and other stakeholders. The updated draft containing suggestions received from various stakeholders is being currently deliberated upon by the government.
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A two-judge bench comprising Justices Deepak Gupta and Aniruddha Bose had during the last hearing said that government must, within three weeks, come up with the guidelines needed to curb the misuse of social media. Observing that technology had taken a “dangerous turn”, the bench had said that social media firms expressing inability in tracing the origin of morphed photos, pornographic content, or terror messages was a serious concern.
There have been several public interest litigations (PILs) filed in the case, with the earliest being moved before the Madras high court in July 2018. The petitioner, Antony Clement Rubin, had sought directions from the court to ask the government to make it mandatory to link Aadhaar or any other government authorised identity (ID) proof for authentication of social media profiles. Other similar PILs sought that Facebook should seek some similar ID proof before allowing any person to open an account on its platform.
The MeitY had proposed changes to Section 79 of the Information Technology Act, 2000 and asked for public comments on the draft amendments that seek to regulate a set of companies that qualify as intermediaries.
Among other things, the proposed amendments ask the intermediary to trace the origin of a fake message. This would mean platforms such as WhatsApp would have to weaken their encryption and undermine user privacy. The proposed changes also required an intermediary to provide access to the origin of a message within 72 hours of a government agency making a request for information.
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WhatsApp has maintained that tracing the origin of messages would mean breaking end-to-end encryption on the platform, which is what makes WhatsApp a trusted source of communication.
Encryption is the practice of scrambling data to make it unintelligible for even the service providers, and has been an important tool to prevent government snooping. However, it has equally been abused for the spread of fake news and criminal activity. Technologists and privacy experts have always argued that breaking encryption is the first step towards government surveillance on its own citizens.
“Encryption and backdoors can’t go together. There is an argument that there are technical ways to give access to law enforcement agencies when they ask for it. But as long you have built a backdoor, it may lead to unauthorised surveillance and misuse of it by various government and private actors,” said Sarvjeet Singh, executive director, Centre for Communication Governance at National Law University Delhi.
By arrangement with Business Standard.