top of page

Beating flu fashionably: Voga masks now touted as the 'world’s first high fashion, high filtrati


fashion.jpg

Earlier this week, the fundamental right to freedom of expression posted a momentous victory. The nation's top court struck down the much­reviled Section 66A of the IT Act — which criminalized communications that are "grossly offensive", cause "annoyance", etc — as "unconstitutionally vague", "arbitrarily, excessively, and disproportionately" encumbering freedom of speech, and likely to have a "chilling effect" on legitimate speech.


It also struck down Sec 118(d) of the Kerala Police Act on similar grounds. This is a landmark judgment, as it's possibly the first time since 1973's Bennett Coleman case that statutory law was struck down by the Supreme Court for violating our right to free expression.


The SC also significantly 'read down' the draconian 'Intermediary Guidelines Rules' which specify when intermediaries — website hosts and search engines — may be held liable for what is said online by their users. The SC held that intermediaries should not be forced to decide whether the online speech of their users is lawful or not. While the judgment leaves unresolved many questions — phrases like "grossly offensive", which the SC ruled were vague in 66A, occur in the Rules as well — the court's insistence on requiring either a court or a government order to be able to compel an intermediary to remove speech reduces the 'invisible censorship' that results from privatized speech regulation.


The SC upheld the constitutional validity of Sec 69A and the Website Blocking Rules, noting they had several safeguards: providing a hearing to the website owner, providing written reasons for the blocking, etc. However, these safeguards are not practised by courts. Na Vijayashankar, a legal academic in Bengaluru, found a blogpost of his — ironically, on the topic of website blocking — had been blocked by a Delhi court without even informing him.


He only got to find out when I published the government response to my RTI on blocked websites. Last December, Github, Vimeo and some other websites were blocked without being given a chance to contest it.


As long as lower courts don't follow "principles of natural justice" and due process, we'll continue to see such absurd website blocking, especially in cases of copyright complaints, without any way of opposing or correcting them.



Featured Posts
Recent Posts
Archive
Search By Tags
Follow Us
  • Facebook Basic Square
  • Twitter Basic Square
  • Google+ Basic Square

LMRC Market Watch

PAGE HITS

This page contains information from various sources and its contents are provided on an “as is,” “as available” basis, without warranties of any kind. The contents of this page are for information and educational purposes only and Landmark Group companies, including all it's subsidiaries & affiliates disclaim all warranties, express or implied, with respect to the page or any site to which these pages connect and their contents, including, without limitation, any warranties of accuracy, completeness, timeliness, errors, omissions, non-infringement, title, merchantability, or fitness for a particular purposes. By using this page, the user accepts all terms and conditions of any disclaimer notices as may have been made applicable by the original sources, including copyright provisions, exclusions and limitations of liability.  Landmark does not control the content or take responsibility for pages/sites maintained by external providers. Where links to sites have been provided, we do not, by doing so, endorse any information or opinions appearing in them or claim any title or interest in the content of the linked page

bottom of page