http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/India/Recipe_for_killing_Internet_in_India/articleshow/2464971.cms

Recipe for killing Internet in India
17 Oct 2007, 0127 hrs IST,Manoj Mitta,TNN

   NEW DELHI: There is a clear and present danger to internet in
India. If the recommendations of the parliamentary standing committee
were to go through, you might as well pull the shutters down on the
net in the country, because the committee seeks to raise the liability
of internet service providers for any third party content in a manner
that it will become difficult to run the service and stay away from
jail.

   This isn't an exaggeration. Over 85% of internet deals with third
party content. This includes search engines, mail services,
messengers, blogs, communication and community sites. If they were to
be held responsible for the sites searched, mails sent, blogs filed or
scraps on community sites then service providers would be hauled up by
the police for acts they are not even faintly responsible for.

   Why, then, is the committee proposing this insanity? The answer is
simple — the committee has failed to understand the internet. Frankly,
there's no difference between the phone and the postal service and the
net — it's just that one delivers voice or post and the other data.
Both deal with third party content which is impossible to verify.

   How would a mail service know, for instance, if two friends
exchange copyright material? Or, how would a search engine track if
someone accesses sites spreading hatred, or worse, promoting terror?
It's all out there — the responsibility of who fetches what should be
that of the individual, not the service provider. Therefore, what the
standing committee is seeking to do is something like making a postal
service responsible for every mischievous mail it delivers — perhaps
by a drug dealer giving details of a consignment or a student sending
photocopies of a book and hence infringing on copyright. Or, something
like making a phone service, such as MTNL or BSNL, responsible for
every bit of dirty talk or criminal conspiracy over its wires.

   Perhaps the committee is confusing internet with media like TV or
print. In the latter, content is either self-generated or by
designated news or TV agencies. The content goes through several
layers of vetting and checks. This is not true of internet sites that
provide mail service, aggregation of communities, picture sharing,
etc. This is possibly why in its report last month on the Information
Technology (Amendment) Bill 2006, the committee headed by Congress MP
Nikhil Kumar has called upon the government to abandon the proposal to
reduce the liability of service providers or intermediaries in the
wake of industry outrage over the 2004 arrest of Baazee.com's CEO for
the auction of a CD containing an infamous student porn MMS.

   The bone of contention is Section 79 of the IT Act 2000 which says
that no service provider shall be liable for any third party
information if he proves that the offence was committed "without his
knowledge or that he had exercised all due diligence" to prevent the
commission of such contravention.

   Since the existing safeguard failed to save Baazee.com CEO Avnish
Bajaj from being subjected to the ignominy of arrest and detention,
the government sought to reduce the liability further in its 2006
Bill. The Bill raises the bar for taking action against ISPs by
stipulating that they are not liable unless it is proved that they
have conspired or abetted in the commission of the unlawful act.

   T his is really how the law is in both Europe and in the US. To the
industry here, the proposed amendment seemed a fair safeguard. But the
standing committee, far from endorsing the change, has recommended
that the existing Section 79 should be strengthened by casting "a
definite obligation" on the service providers to ensure that the third
party information was within the parameters of the law especially
because "it is very difficult to establish conspiracy or abetment" on
their part.

   The committee also took objection to the Bill's proposal to relieve
the service providers of the burden of demonstrating that they had
exercised due diligence to prevent the third parties from misusing
online market places and auction sites. "The committee are of the firm
opinion that if explicit provisions about blocking of objectionable
material through various means are not codified, expecting
self-regulation from the intermediaries, who basically work for
commercial gains (sic), will just remain a pipedream," it said.

   For all its efforts to make out a case for increasing the liability
of service providers, the committee glossed over the fact that the
Bill was in tune with the approach adopted by advanced countries that
have given sufficient thought before framing their Internet laws.
Take, for instance, the relevant law in the European Union. It says
that a service provider storing third party information is liable to
criminal action only when he "by intent is storing illegal information
or assisting in illegal activities."

   What is even more contrary to the committee's report is the express
clarification in the European law that its provisions "do not impose a
general obligation on service providers to monitor the information,
which they transmit, or store on the request of a recipient for the
service, nor a general obligation to seek facts or circumstances
indicating illegal activities." Similarly, in the US, both courts and
legislation broadly seek to reduce the liability of service providers
on charges such as copyright infringement and defamation.

   The Digital Millennium Copyright Act, for instance, spells out the
criteria for establishing liability and makes it difficult to sue
service providers vicariously for copyright infringement committed by
third parties. So, which way should Indian laws go? The way the
advanced countries have gone, or in accordance with the wishes of some
misinformed MPs that would spell the death of Internet in India?

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