Context:
-
The Union Government has proposed amendments to the Information Technology (IT) Rules, 2021 to clearly define “obscenity” and disallowed online content.
-
The move seeks to extend content regulation across social media, OTT platforms, and digital news media, but has raised concerns about overreach, censorship, and freedom of expression.
Key Highlights:
Government Initiative / Regulatory Proposal
-
Proposal to explicitly define “obscene digital content” by incorporating standards from:
-
Section 67 of the IT Act, 2000
-
Cable Television Networks (Regulation) Act, 1995
-
-
Applicable to:
-
Social media platforms
-
OTT streaming services
-
Digital news platforms
-
Content Standards & Legal Alignment
-
OTT content proposed to be regulated on lines similar to:
-
Cinematograph Act, 1952
-
Content must be suitable for public exhibition
-
-
Ministry of Information & Broadcasting suggests applying the “Community Standard Test” from the Aveek Sarkar v. State of West Bengal (2014) judgment to assess obscenity.
Judicial & Legal Background
-
Bombay High Court has stayed Rules 9(1) and 9(3) of the IT Rules, which enforce the Code of Ethics for digital news and OTT platforms.
-
The matter is currently under consideration by the Delhi High Court.
-
Proposed amendments require judicial scrutiny, including potential approval by the Supreme Court.
Triggering Controversy
-
Proposal gained momentum following controversy involving comedian Samay Raina’s YouTube channel, where a joke by influencer Ranveer Allahbadia sparked public backlash.
-
Renewed debate on limits of satire, humour, and free speech in digital spaces.
Concerns & Criticism
-
Fear of overregulation and discretionary censorship.
-
Potential chilling effect on creative expression and digital journalism.
-
Risk of executive dominance over content moderation without adequate safeguards.
Relevant Prelims Points:
-
Issue: Defining obscenity in rapidly expanding digital media.
-
Existing Framework:
-
IT Rules, 2021
-
IT Act, 2000 (Section 67)
-
-
Key Concepts:
-
Obscenity: Content offending prevailing community standards of decency
-
OTT Platforms: Internet-based content delivery services
-
-
Judicial Reference:
-
Aveek Sarkar case – Community Standard Test
-
-
Impact:
-
Increased regulatory clarity but higher compliance burden
-
Relevant Mains Points:
-
Polity & Constitutional Dimension:
-
Directly impacts Article 19(1)(a) – Freedom of Speech and Expression.
-
Any restriction must satisfy Article 19(2) tests of reasonableness and proportionality.
-
-
Governance & Regulatory Aspect:
-
Shift from self-regulation to tighter executive oversight.
-
Raises concerns over regulatory ambiguity and enforcement discretion.
-
-
Science & Technology Perspective:
-
Challenges of regulating borderless digital platforms.
-
Balancing user safety, ethical standards, and innovation.
-
-
Social Justice & Digital Rights:
-
Overbroad definitions may disproportionately affect independent creators and smaller platforms.
-
-
Way Forward:
-
Ensure narrow, precise, and constitutionally compliant definitions.
-
Strengthen independent self-regulatory bodies.
-
Judicial oversight and transparent grievance redressal mechanisms.
-
Promote media literacy alongside regulation.
-
UPSC Relevance (GS-wise):
-
GS 2: Polity, Governance, Freedom of Expression
-
GS 3: Science & Technology, Digital Regulation
-
Prelims: IT Rules 2021, Obscenity, OTT Platforms
