All about WhatsApp vs Center dispute and why is the former threatening to exit India

All about WhatsApp vs Center dispute and why is the former threatening to exit India
All about WhatsApp vs Center dispute and why is the former threatening to exit India
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The Delhi High Court on Thursday listed for hearing on August 14 the petitions by WhatsApp LLC and its parent company Facebook Inc, now Meta, challenging the 2021 Information Technology (IT) rules for social media intermediaries requiring the messaging app to trace chats and make provisions to identify the first originator of information.

The Information Technology (Intermediary Guidelines and Digital Media Ethics Code) Rules, 2021 announced by the government on February 25, 2021, require large social media platforms like Twitter, Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp to comply with the latest norms.

What is the WhatsApp vs Center dispute?

WhatsApp and its parent company Meta have challenged the IT Rule 2021 that requires them to identify where messages originate from on the platform. “As a platform, we are saying, if we are told to break encryption, then WhatsApp goes,” a report in The Times of India quoted the platform’s counsel as saying.

What does the Center have to say?

The Center says that the law empowers it to expect such entities to create safe cyberspace and counter “illegal content” either themselves or by assisting the law enforcement agencies.

The Center has told the court that Section 87 of the Information Technology Act gave it power to formulate Rule 4(2) of the Intermediary Rules which mandates a significant social media intermediary to enable the identification of the first originator of an information in “legitimate state interest” of curbing the menace of fake news and offenses concerning national security and public order as well as women and children.

The Center has also stated that if a platform does not have the means to trace the first originator without breaking the encryption then it is the platform which “ought to develop such mechanism” in larger public duty.

What is WhatsApp’s argument?

In its petition filed in 2021, WhatsApp had said that the requirement of intermediaries enabling the identification of the first originator of information in India upon government or court order puts end-to-end encryption and its benefits “at risk”.

The plea said the traceability requirement forces the company to break end-to-end encryption on its messaging service, as well as the privacy principles underlying it, and infringes upon the fundamental rights to privacy and free speech of the hundreds of millions of citizens using WhatsApp to communicate privately and securely.

WhatsApp LLC has urged the high court to declare Rule 4(2) of the intermediary rules as unconstitutional, ultra vires the IT Act and illegal and sought that no criminal liability be imposed on it for any alleged non-compliance with Rule 4(2) which requires enabling the identification of the first originator of information.

During the recent hearing, WhatsApp’s counsel said steps had been taken to “contain virality” and it was possible to trace the originator “traditionally” by examining the sequence of senders of a message.

The counsel also informed the court that all platforms would have to comply with the new data protection law, which deals with collection, processing and sharing of data, once the relevant rules are framed.

WhatsApp said the traceability provision is unconstitutional and against the fundamental right to privacy.

What is end-to-end encryption?

End-to-end encryption is a method where only communicating users can participate in the conversation, hence ensuring privacy. Here, the message is encrypted at the sender’s device and decrypted only at the receiver’s device, disabling the internet service provider (ISP), application service provider, hacker or any other entity or service to read it.

What did the Delhi High Court rule?

A bench headed by Acting Chief Justice Manmohan asked if the issue had been considered in any other country.

“There is no such rule anywhere else in the world. Not even in Brazil,” the lawyer appearing for WhatsApp said, adding that the requirement was against the privacy of users and the rule was introduced without any consultation.

The bench, also comprising Justice Manmeet PS Arora, said privacy rights were not absolute and “somewhere balance has to be done.”

The bench ordered that the matter be listed for hearing on August 14 to await the transfer of all other petitions challenging several aspects of the 2021 IT Rules to it pursuant to a Supreme Court order.

(With PTI inputs)

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