India Sets Up Panels With Veto Power Over Social Media Content Moderation
Published on October 29, 2022 at 12:55AM
India will set up one or more grievance committees with the veto power to oversee content moderation decisions of social media firms, it said today, moving ahead with a proposal that has rattled Meta, Google and Twitter in the key overseas market. From a report: The panels, called Grievance Appellate Committee, will be created within three months, it said. In an amendment to the nation's new IT law that went into effect last year, the Indian government said any individual aggrieved by the social media's appointed grievance officer may appeal to the Grievance Appellate Committee, which will comprise a chairperson and two whole time members appointed by the government. (In compliance with the IT rules, social media firms last year appointed grievance and other officers in India to hear feedback and complaints from their users.) The Grievance Appellate Committee will have the power to reverse the social media firm's decision, the government said.
Published on October 29, 2022 at 12:55AM
India will set up one or more grievance committees with the veto power to oversee content moderation decisions of social media firms, it said today, moving ahead with a proposal that has rattled Meta, Google and Twitter in the key overseas market. From a report: The panels, called Grievance Appellate Committee, will be created within three months, it said. In an amendment to the nation's new IT law that went into effect last year, the Indian government said any individual aggrieved by the social media's appointed grievance officer may appeal to the Grievance Appellate Committee, which will comprise a chairperson and two whole time members appointed by the government. (In compliance with the IT rules, social media firms last year appointed grievance and other officers in India to hear feedback and complaints from their users.) The Grievance Appellate Committee will have the power to reverse the social media firm's decision, the government said.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
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