---
abstract: |
  The Information Act amendments were supposed to bring clarity,but they
  place harsh burdens on online platforms,cybercafes and users.
archive-url: "https://web.archive.org/web/20230816155432/https://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/free-as-in-free-speech/"
author:
- Pranesh Prakash
authors:
- Pranesh Prakash
categories:
- Freedom of expression
citation:
  abstract: The Information Act amendments were supposed to bring
    clarity,but they place harsh burdens on online platforms,cybercafes
    and users.
  accessed: 2023-08-16
  archive: "https://web.archive.org/web/20230816155432/https://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/free-as-in-free-speech/"
  author: Pranesh Prakash
  available-date:
    date-parts:
    - - 2011
      - 5
      - 9
    iso-8601: 2011-05-09
    literal: 2011-05-09
    raw: 2011-05-09
  citation-key: prakashFreeFree2011
  container-title: The Indian Express
  issued:
    date-parts:
    - - 2011
      - 5
      - 9
    iso-8601: 2011-05-09
    literal: 2011-05-09
    raw: 2011-05-09
  language: en
  title: Free as in free speech
  type: article-newspaper
  URL: "https://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/free-as-in-free-speech/"
comments:
  hypothesis:
    theme: clean
date: 2011-05-09
engines:
- path: /opt/quarto/share/extension-subtrees/julia-engine/\_extensions/julia-engine/julia-engine.js
license:
  text: CC BY-NC 4.0
  type: creative-commons
  url: "https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/"
listing-page: ../press.html
original-url: "https://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/free-as-in-free-speech/"
publication: The Indian Express
title: Free as in free speech
title-block-categories: true
toc-title: Table of contents
---

# Free as in free speech

Pranesh Prakash, -- Select any--

------------------------------------------------------------------------

Regulating the Internet,as with any medium of speech and commerce,is a
delicate balancing act. Too little regulation and you ensure that
criminal activities are carried on with impunity; too much and you curb
the utility of the medium. The Internet has managed to remain the
impressively vibrant space it is because of the careful choices made by
most countries,eschewing over-regulation. India,however,seems to be
taking a different tack with three sets of new rules under the
Information Technology Act.

These rules deal with the liability of intermediaries (a large and
diverse group of entities and individuals,that transmit and allow access
to third-party content),the safeguards that cybercafes need to follow if
they are not to be held liable for their users' activities,and the
practices that intermediaries need to follow to ensure security and
privacy of customer data.

By not observing these provisions,the intermediary opens itself up for
liability for actions of its users. Thus,if a third-party defames
someone,then the intermediary can be held liable if he/she/it does not
follow the stringent requirements.

The problem,however is that,many of the provisions of these rules have
no rational connection with the due diligence to be observed by the
intermediary to absolve itself from liability.

What does the Act require? Section 79 of the IT Act states that
intermediaries are generally not liable for third party
information,data,or communication link made available or hosted. It
qualifies that by stating that they are not liable if they follow
certain precautions (basically,to show that they are real
intermediaries). They observe "due diligence" and don't exercise an
editorial role; they don't help or induce commission of the unlawful
act; and upon receiving "actual knowledge",or on being duly notified by
the appropriate authority,they take some kind of action.

So rules were needed to clarify what "due diligence" involves (that
is,to state that no active monitoring is required of ISPs),what "actual
knowledge" means,and to clarify what happens in happens in case of
conflicts between this provision and other parts of IT Act and other
Acts.

However,that is not what the rules do. They instead propose standard
terms of service to be notified by all intermediaries. This means
everyone,from Airtel to Hotmail to Facebook to Rediff Blogs to YouTube
to organisations and people that allow others to post comments on their
website. What kinds of terms of service? It will require intermediaries
to bar users from "engaging in speech that is disparaging". And this
does not cover only public-oriented intermediaries. So this means that
your forwarding a joke via e-mail,which "belongs to another person and
to which the user does not have any right" will be deemed to be in
violation of the new rules. While gambling (such as betting on horses)
isn't banned in India and casino gambling is legal in Goa,for
example,under these rules,all speech "promoting gambling" is prohibited.

The rules are very onerous on intermediaries,since they require them to
act within 36 hours to disable access to any information that they
receive a complaint about. Any "affected person" can complain.
Intermediaries will now play the role that judges have traditionally
played. Any affected person can bring forth a complaint about issues as
diverse as defamation,blasphemy,trademark infringement,threatening of
integrity of India,"disparaging speech",or the blanket "in violation of
any law". It is not mandatory to give the violator an opportunity to be
heard. Many parts of the Internet are in fact public spaces,and a law
requiring private parties to curb speech in such a public sphere is
unconstitutional insofar as it doesn't fall within Article 19(2) of the
Constitution.

Since intermediaries would lose protection from the law if they don't
take down content,they have no incentives to uphold freedom of speech.
They instead have been provided incentives to take down all content
about which they receive complaints without a considered evaluation of
the content.

The cybercafe rules require all cybercafe customers be identified with
supporting documents,their photographs taken,all their website history
logged,and these logs maintained for a year. Compare this to the usage
of public pay-phones. Anyone can use a pay-phone without their details
being logged. Indeed,such logging allows for cybercafe owners to
blackmail their users if they find some embarrassing websites in the
history logs,which could be anything from medical diseases to sexual
orientation to the fact that you're a whistle-blower.

The cybercafe rules also require that all of them install "commercially
available safety or filtering software" to prevent access to
pornography. In two cases along these lines in the Madras high court
(Karthikeyan R. vs Union of India) and the Bombay high court (Janhit
Manch vs Union of India),the high courts refused to direct the
government to take proactive steps to curb access to Internet
pornography stating that such matters require case-by-case analysis to
be constitutionally valid under Article 19(1)(a) (Right to Freedom of
Speech and Expression). Besides,such software tends to be ineffective
--- non-pornographic websites also get wrongly filtered,and not all
pornographic websites get filtered--- and the high courts were right to
be wary. If the worry is about children's impressionable minds,it is up
to parents to provide supervision,and not for the government to insist
that software do the parenting instead.

All these concerns were pointed out by civil society organisations,news
media,and industry bodies when the draft rules were released,but
virtually none of their suggestions have been incorporated by the
government in the final rules.

*The writer works at the Bangalore-based Centre for Internet and
Society*
