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Google, Facebook remove content deemed offensive in India

Indian protestors hold placards and flowers outside the residence of India's telecommunications minister Kapil Sibal as they protest against the government plans to screen websites for derogatory content in New Delhi, India, Wednesday, Dec. 7, 2011. (AP Photo)
Indian protestors hold placards and flowers outside the residence of India's telecommunications minister Kapil Sibal as they protest against the government plans to screen websites for derogatory content in New Delhi, India, Wednesday, Dec. 7, 2011. (AP Photo)

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Date: Monday Feb. 6, 2012 1:12 PM ET

NEW DELHI — Google India has removed web pages deemed offensive to Indian political and religious leaders to comply with a court case that has raised censorship fears in the world's largest democracy, media reported Monday.

The action follows weeks of intense government pressure for 22 Internet giants to remove photographs, videos or text considered "anti-religious" or "anti-social."

A New Delhi court Monday gave Facebook, Google, YouTube and Blogspot and the other sites two weeks to present further plans for policing their networks, according to the Press Trust of India.

For India's more than 100 million Internet users, the government says, U.S. Internet standards are not acceptable.

The case highlights the difficulty India faces in balancing conservative religious and political sentiments with its hope that freewheeling Internet discourse and technology will help spur the economy and boost living standards for its 1.2 billion people.

Google India did not say Monday which sites were removed but had said it would be willing to go after anything that violated local law or its own standards.

Indian officials have been incensed by material insulting to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, ruling Congress party leader Sonia Gandhi and religious groups, including illustrations showing Singh and Gandhi in compromising positions and pigs running through Mecca, Islam's holiest city.

"There is no question of any censorship," Communications Minister Sachin Pilot said in Bangalore. "They all have to operate within the laws of the country. ... There must be responsible behaviour on both sides."

Anyone hurt by online content should be able to seek legal redress, he said. The government has warned it has evidence to prosecute 21 sites for offences of "promoting enmity between classes and causing prejudice to national integration."

The government has asked the sites to set a voluntary framework to keep offensive material off the Internet.

Facebook India submitted a compliance report to the court Monday, but it also joined Yahoo and Microsoft in questioning its inclusion in the case, saying no specific complaints had been presented against them, PTI reported. The sites did not immediately comment after the hearing.

Prosecutors, who sued on behalf of a Muslim religious leader who accused companies of hosting pages that disparage Islam, said they would provide the companies with all relevant documents. The court gave the companies 15 more days to report back.

India is Facebook's third-fastest growing market, after the U.S. and Indonesia. The California-based company, with $3.7 billion in revenues last year, has seen its hoped-for launch in China held back by rules requiring censorship of material seen by the Chinese government as objectionable or obscene.

The issue of country-specific censorship sparked global outcry in recent weeks, after Twitter said it would allow tweets to be deleted in countries where the content breaks local law.

Twitter insisted the new policy would help freedom of expression and transparency by preventing the entire site from being blocked. But dissidents and activists who have embraced Twitter in their campaigns accused the site of betraying free speech.

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Jonathan from Saskatoon
said
0 0

So a few Indian Muslims are offended by free and fair comment and such content has to be eliminated from the entire internet? How did we allow such dictatorship from a global backwater? They claim to be a democracy, yet are the most restrictive and oppressive regime in the Commonwealth.


Cambob in Toronto
said
0 0

One of the many contributions of social media was playing a major part in the "Arab Spring" uprisings. It would seem that draconian measures are needed to keep the faithful held hostage to outdated cruel religious and political doctrine in some parts of the world. After all, if the people knew there was a better life than the never ending slavery of organized religion, how would the clerics, immams, priests, rabbis, etc, be able to whip their slaves into submission?


christopher owen sound
said
0 0

OMG people this "RIGHT" and tree hugging issue is way outta hand...Grow up seems people have nothing to do except complain. Especially these TYPES ..


SUE
said
0 0

Don't look if you don't like it. Nobody is forcing anyone too.


Warren
said
0 0

Here we go again. Religion trying to keep it's followers safe from from free thought. Too much thinking is the road to Hell you know.


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