Twitter Withholds Accounts of Singer JazzyB, 3 Others on Indian Govt’s Request

Jazzy B had frequently tweeted in support of the farmers’ protests.

New Delhi: Twitter has reportedly removed the accounts of Punjabi singer JazzyB, hip-hop artist L-Fresh the Lion and two others in response to a legal demand in India.

According to an information on the Lumen database, Twitter received a legal request from the Indian government on June 6 for actioning four accounts, including that of JazzyB.

Requests received by Twitter for withholding content are published on the Lumen database – an independent research project studying cease and desist letters concerning online content.

Users checking Jazzy B’s account are shown a message saying “account has been withheld in India in response to a legal demand”.

When contacted, a Twitter spokesperson told PTI that when it receives a valid legal request, it reviews it under both the Twitter Rules and local law.

“If the content violates Twitter Rules, the content will be removed from the service. If it is determined to be illegal in a particular jurisdiction, but not in violation of the Twitter Rules, we may withhold access to the content in India only,” the spokesperson added.

The spokesperson noted that in all cases, it notifies the account holder directly so that they’re aware that the company has received a legal order pertaining to the account.

“We notify the user(s) by sending a message to the e-mail address associated with the account(s), if available… Twitter is committed to the principles of openness, transparency, details of the requests to withhold content have been published on Lumen,” the spokesperson said.

Reports suggest that Jazzy B had frequently tweeted in support of farmers’ protests.

Earlier this year, more than 500 accounts were suspended and access to hundreds of others in India blocked after the government ordered Twitter to restrain the spread of misinformation and inflammatory content related to farmers’ protests.

Over the past many months, Twitter has been embroiled in a number of issues. Twitter had drawn the government’s ire after it marked several tweets by ruling BJP leaders as ‘manipulated media’. Sambit Patra, Raman Singh and other BJP leaders had tweet a forged document claiming to be a Congress ‘toolkit’ against the government.

The row over Twitter’s handling of certain messages had recently blown up into all-out war of words between the Centre and the social media platform.

Last week, the government issued a notice to Twitter giving it one last chance to “immediately” comply with the new IT rules and warned that failure to adhere to the norms will lead to the platform losing exemption from liability under the IT Act.

Twitter has an estimated 1.75 crore users in India, as per data cited by the government recently.

The new IT rules for social media companies that came into effect last month mandate large platforms like Facebook and Twitter to undertake greater due diligence and make these digital platforms more accountable and responsible for the content hosted by them.

The rules also require significant social media intermediaries – providing services primarily in the nature of messaging – to enable identification of the “first originator” of the information that undermines the sovereignty of India, the security of the state, or public order.

The new IT rules require significant social media intermediaries – those with other 50 lakh users – to appoint a grievance officer, nodal officer and a chief compliance officer. These personnel are required to be resident in India. Non-compliance with the rules would result in these platforms losing their intermediary status that provides them immunity from liabilities over any third-party data hosted by them. In other words, they could be liable for criminal action in case of complaints.

Several rights groups and others believe that the new rules will place unwarranted restrictions on social media usage and give the government more opportunities to clamp down on dissent.

(With PTI inputs)