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Mob Lynchings: WhatsApp At Risk Of Being Labelled “Abettor”

Government tells Whatsapp to stop being a mute spectator or face legal action.

Mobile-messaging application WhatsApp is displayed on an Apple  iPhone. (Photographer: Brent Lewin/Bloomberg)
Mobile-messaging application WhatsApp is displayed on an Apple iPhone. (Photographer: Brent Lewin/Bloomberg)

India today expressed dissatisfaction over measures listed by WhatsApp for checking fake news that has in several cases led to mob violence, saying the company cannot escape its responsibility for such rampant abuse and needs to find the originators of provocative messages.

It is regretted that the enormity of the challenge and the rampant abuse happening in the country leading to repeated commissioning of crimes pursuant to rampant circulation of irresponsible messages in large volumes on their platform have not been addressed adequately by Whatsapp.
IT Ministry Statement

In the second notice to the U.S.-based messaging service in three weeks, the government warned that in the absence of adequate checks, it will treat the messaging platform as 'abettor' of rumour propagation and legal consequences will follow.

Facebook-owned WhatsApp has been under fire from the Indian government over fake news and false information being circulated on its messaging platform.

Such messages have incited mob-fury, triggering multiple cases of lynching across the country.

Documentary filmmaker Anand Patwardhan with other activists raise slogans to condemn mob lynching, in Mumbai on  July 19, 2018. (Photographer: Shashank Parade/PTI) 
Documentary filmmaker Anand Patwardhan with other activists raise slogans to condemn mob lynching, in Mumbai on July 19, 2018. (Photographer: Shashank Parade/PTI) 

The government had in the past too issued a stern warning to the company to clamp down on hoax messages designed to "provoke" and "instigate" people.

In response, WhatsApp introduced a new feature to let its users identify the forwarded messages, and issued full-page ads giving "easy tips" to spot fake news.

"When rumours and fake news get propagated by mischief mongers, the medium used for such propagation cannot evade responsibility and accountability. If they remain mute spectators they are liable to be treated as abettors and thereafter face consequent legal action," the IT Ministry said in a statement today.

The ministry said it has approached WhatsApp to bring more effective solutions to the table, to ensure greater "accountability and facilitate enforcement of law" beyond the existing efforts towards labelling forwards and identifying fake news.

"It has been conveyed to them in unmistakable terms that it is a very serious issue which deserves a more sensitive response," it said.

Taking note of the recent incident in Bidar, where a 32-year-old software engineer was killed after messages about child lifters did the rounds on WhatsApp, the ministry rued that "rampant circulation of irresponsible messages in large volumes" on the platform has not been addressed adequately by the company.

Opinion
Lynch Mobs Are India’s Problem, Not WhatsApp’s


Earlier today, Law and IT Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad informed the Rajya Sabha that he will hold discussion with stakeholders, including political parties, to evolve a policy to deal with the misuse of social media.

Prasad had earlier told WhatsApp that the platform "cannot evade accountability and responsibility".

In response, WhatsApp announced a new feature to let its users identify the messages that are forwarded.

At the same time, WhatsApp had informed the Centre that fake news, misinformation and hoaxes can be checked by the government, civil society and technology companies "working together".

Outlining steps it has taken to curb abuse of its platform, WhatsApp, in its response to the first notice sent by the IT Ministry, had said that it has the ability to prevent spam but since it cannot see the content of private messages, blocking can be done only based on user reports.

WhatsApp had also told the government that it is "horrified by these terrible acts of violence" and its strategy to deal with the situation involves giving people the controls and information they need to stay safe while working pro-actively to prevent misuse of the service.

Rumours on WhatsApp have sparked off a spate of incidents involving mob fury, including one where five men were lynched on the suspicion of being child lifters in Maharashtra's Rainpada village of Dhule district.

The Supreme Court, earlier this week, asked parliament to consider enacting a new law to effectively deal with incidents of mob lynching, saying "horrendous acts of mobocracy" cannot be allowed to become a new norm.