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India needs legislation to hold platforms liable for online harms: IT for Change

The Bengaluru-based NGO recommended setting up of an independent and autonomous regulatory authority with discretionary powers to oversee social media regulation in India

August 12, 2022 / 18:00 IST
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Claiming that self-regulation has not yielded results in making platforms safe spaces for women and marginalised groups, Bengaluru-based IT for Change, a non-governmental organisation working on internet governance, gender, and digital justice, has said that a law should be brought in to hold social media platforms liable for online harm.

This comes at a time when the Union government is proposing a separate committee to give users an avenue to appeal decisions made by grievance redressal officers of intermediaries like Twitter, Google, Meta, and others.

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The government has also said that it is open to the establishment of an industry-formed self-regulatory body to deal with such appeals. However, a recent Reuters report said that Google has opposed the creation of such a body as it could reinstate content, even if it violated Google’s internal policies.

“What is required is legislation to hold platforms liable for online harms (with differential compliance obligations depending on the size of the platform) and the creation of mechanisms to oversee platform governance,” IT for Change said in a report titled ‘Profitable Provocations’.