The Prayas ePathshala

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27 April 2024 – The Hindu

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Future ready Digital India

  • It is a comprehensive programme designed to get India ready for a shift to a knowledge-based economy.
  • It integrates a great deal of concepts and ideas into one cohesive vision, making each one appear to be a component of the overall objective.
  • The Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (Meity) is the one who introduced it.

Digital India’s Future:

  • The Use of Digital Infrastructure for All Citizens
  • On-demand services and governance
  • Citizens’ digital empowerment

Information Technology Act (IT Act) of 2000:

The new bill’s objective:

  • Revise the current legal framework to address new issues like user injury, unfair competition, and disinformation in the digital sphere.
  • It is probably going to redraw the boundaries of technological regulation, not just in India but throughout the world.

Modifications suggested:

  • search engines, social media firms, and e-commerce businesses are examples of diverse groups of digital intermediaries that have varied obligations and liabilities.

The IT Act of today:

  • It describes a “intermediary” as any organisation that stands between a user and the Internet.
  • Intermediaries are divided into three primary groups by IT Rules:
  • Intermediaries in Social Media (SMIs)
  • Important Social Media Middlemen (SSMIs)
  • Intermediaries in Online Gaming.
  • The regulations impose strict requirements on the majority of intermediaries, including a 72-hour window in which to respond to requests from law enforcement and handle requests for “content take down.”
  • Cloud services, websites, e-commerce platforms, and ISPs are all handled in the same way.

Problems:

  • Customer management apps like Zoho and Microsoft Teams are examples of platforms that have a closed user base and a reduced risk of damage from information spreading virally since they are licenced.
  • Not only does treating intermediaries like traditional social media networks increase their operating expenses.
  • It does not significantly lessen the risks that the Internet presents, only increasing their exposure to litigation.

Worldwide standing:

  • One of the most advanced frameworks for us to take into consideration is most likely the Digital Services Act of the European Union.
  • Along with a few new exclusions, it establishes three layers of intermediaries with escalating legal responsibilities: hosting services, online platforms, and “very large online platforms.”

Australia:

  • It produced an eight-tiered classification scheme, with distinct industry-drafted codes controlling categories including search engines and social networking sites.
  • Based on the possibility of exposure to hazardous content, such as child sexual abuse material (CSAM) or terrorism, intermediaries are required to conduct risk assessments.

SMIs, or social media intermediaries:

  • SMIs are online forums that let people exchange information and communicate with one another.
  • SSMIs are SMIs with an extremely high user base (above a predetermined threshold).
  • SMIs can include a wide range of services, including email, online comment sections on webpages, video chats, and marriage-related websites.

India’s areas of focus are:

  • Although a detailed, product-specific classification can enhance online safety and accountability, this strategy might not be sustainable in the long run.
  • We seek a categorization framework that establishes a few distinct groups, mandates risk assessments from intermediaries, and then utilises the results to group them into appropriate groups.
  • Minimising requirements for intermediaries and making sure that regulatory tasks are commensurate with size and skill should also be the goals.
  • Release micro and small businesses, as well as caching and conduit services—the Internet’s “pipes”—from significant responsibilities.
  • Make a clear distinction between communication services, which facilitate end-user interaction, and other types of intermediaries, such search engines and online markets.
  • Intermediaries that are not communication services should have less obligations because the dangers are lower.
  • They might still be forced to designate a grievance officer, assist law enforcement, recognise advertisements, and remove objectionable content quickly enough.

The Way Ahead:

  • Communication service providers may be required to do risk assessments based on the quantity of their active users, danger of damage, and likelihood of harmful content going viral.
  • Subsequently, the biggest communication providers (platforms like Twitter) could have to follow specific rules like designating officers who are based in India.
  • establishing internal grievance appeal processes in collaboration with impartial outside parties to boost trust in the grievance procedure.
  • Other strategies for reducing virality should be taken into consideration, such slowing down content via circuit breakers.
  • Metrics for risk assessment and suitable thresholds would need to be established and assessed on a regular basis in collaboration with industry in order for the suggested strategy to be effective.
  • A framework might lessen many intermediaries’ legal responsibilities while promoting accountability and internet safety.
  • It might contribute to the development of a regulatory framework that supports the government’s policy objective of fostering economic growth and a safer Internet ecosystem.

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