NEW DELHI: Forced by severe criticism of his statements, communications minister Kapil Sibal on Friday said he would call for a roundtable on December 15 for evolving guidelines on the issue of censorship for social media sites.
He said that he was compelled to think of guidelines for barring objectionable content on social networking sites after they declined to do anything about the issue.
"It was not my intent ever to interfere with the social media. I wanted them to evolve their own guidelines. But if somebody throws up their hands, we will have to evolve some guidelines," Sibal reiterated.
Though Sibal did not name who all have been invited to the roundtable, it is understood that the primary discussions would be held with senior representatives of Google and Facebook again.
"I wanted a solution, a dialogue with them and deal with this issue in a sensible responsible manner," the minister said in a TV interview.
The Internet world was in an uproar earlier this week after a news report said that Sibal had asked sites Facebook and Google, which operates the social video platform Youtube, to censor content which was offensive to religious sentiments and degrading to some individuals.
The minister also clarified he and his ministry officials had met representatives of the sites as many as six times since September, but the companies had not come up with any solutions.
"Orally, they agreed to do something, didn't agree with some other issues. But they did not commit on anything. On December 5, they threw up their hands saying 'we can't deal with any of this at our end and we will apply US community standards'," said Sibal.
Sibal claimed he did not want platforms to screen content before it was uploaded, but only wanted them to check for objectionable content.
As the controversy raged, Google has said there is a need to differentiate between what is controversial and what is illegal, adding that anything that went against the statute was removed by their team, including content that went against their strict terms and conditions.
"But it also means that when content is legal but controversial, we don't remove it because people's differing views should be respected, so long as they are legal," a Google spokesperson said in a statement.
In his
response to this, Sibal said: "We have no problem with that except that
they themselves accept that this content cannot be legal. They were
failing to live up to the laws that they are enforcing in their own
country by their own community standards."
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