GS III-IT
The IT Act, 2000 is India’s primary legal framework for digital governance, cyber law, and regulation of electronic communication.
Key Objectives:
- Combat cybercrime and protect digital infrastructure.
- Provide legal recognition for digital signatures and electronic records.
- Define responsibilities of intermediaries like social media platforms and search engines.
- Updated through amendments in 2008 and 2015 to reflect emerging digital challenges.
Major Legal Provisions Under the IT Act
Section 69A – Power to Block Content
- Grants the Union Government power to block public access to online content on grounds like:
- Sovereignty & integrity of India
- National security
- Public order
- Prevention of incitement to cognizable offences
- Requires written orders and adherence to procedural safeguards.
- Judicial Endorsement: Upheld in Shreya Singhal vs. Union of India (2015) with emphasis on due process.
Section 79 – Intermediary Liability (Safe Harbour Provision)
- Offers legal immunity to intermediaries (e.g. X, Facebook, YouTube) from liability for user-generated content.
- Condition: Platforms must remain passive and neutral conduits.
Section 79(3)(b):
- Intermediaries lose immunity if they:
- Fail to remove unlawful content after receiving government or court order.
- Violate provisions linked to reasonable restrictions under Article 19(2).
Shreya Singhal Case (2015):
- Clarified that only court or authorized government orders can trigger takedown obligations.
- Asserted intermediary rights under freedom of speech while balancing national interest.