HomeNewsTrendsCurrent AffairsSC junked section 66A, but freedom of speech worth debating

SC junked section 66A, but freedom of speech worth debating

Logically, one would presume that an offence like defamation would be treated the same way whether committed on Twitter or in a newspaper column, a TV broadcast or a politician’s speech.

March 25, 2015 / 16:58 IST
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R JagannathanFirstpost.com

Are issues relating to free speech on the internet different from the same issues on traditional media like print, television or public speeches? Can the same offences or crimes committed on the internet draw higher penalties than elsewhere?

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The answer is yes, and this is implied in the same widely-acclaimed judgment of Justices J Chelameswar and Rohinton F Nariman, that yesterday (24 March) struck down section 66A of the Information Technology Act as unconstitutional.

Logically, one would presume that an offence like defamation would be treated the same way whether committed on Twitter or in a newspaper column, a TV broadcast or a politician’s speech. But the same Supreme Court bench that junked section 66A for being vague and violative of the constitutional guarantees on freedom of speech, seemed to suggest that theinternet is a different animal where there could be separate laws to deal with the same offence.