Legalizing executive control: on the law of online journalism in India

Nakul Nayak
{"title":"Legalizing executive control: on the law of online journalism in India","authors":"Nakul Nayak","doi":"10.1080/24730580.2023.2266979","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"ABSTRACTThis article critiques the Information Technology (Intermediaries Guidelines and Digital Media Ethics Code) Rules 2021 (“the Rules”) as they relate to online journalism. The Government’s stated objective for making the Rules is to “level the playing field” of online journalism with print journalism. I examine whether and how the Government satisfies this objective. I make two broad claims. First, the Rules fail to “level the playing field”. The objectives, philosophical approach, and substance of the new regulatory scheme are significantly different from those that govern print journalism, and to the disadvantage of online journalism. Second, rather than “levelling the playing field”, the Rules give the Government overwhelming control of online journalism. The Government exercises ultimate control over the regulatory structures and gives itself unprecedented censorship powers over online journalism. If my claims are correct, the Rules will have catastrophic consequences for online journalism and Indian democracy.KEYWORDS: Digital Media Ethics CodePress Council of Indiaonline journalismPress Commissiondigital media ethics AcknowledgmentsFor research support, I am grateful to Arunima Das, Kaustubha Kalidindi, and Ananya Narain. Thanks to Sukumar Muralidharan, Siddharth Narrain, Aakanksha Kumar, Shohini Sengupta, Keerti Pendyal, Ashaawari Datta Chaudhuri, Sandeep Suresh, Rajesh Nayak, and Neytra Nayak for valuable discussions. Errors are mine alone. To Sagarika Nayak, for her unwavering support during good and bad.Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Notes1 A notable exception was the Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Act 2010. Sections 3(1)(g) and 3(1)(h) prohibit “any association or company engaged in the production or broadcast of … current affairs programmes through any electronic mode” or their “correspondent or columnist, cartoonist, editor, owner” from accepting any “foreign contribution”.2 Akriti Gaur, Aniruddh Nigam and Sreyan Chatterjee, “The future of news in India” Vidhi Centre for Legal Policy 33 (30 April 2020) <https://vidhilegalpolicy.in/research/the-future-of-news-in-india/> accessed 6 July 2023.3 The lack of specific regulatory frameworks for DNMs and DNM’s ability to engage in target advertising have resulted in dynamic business models in online journalism. See ibid 18–22.4 Press Information Bureau, “Cabinet approves proposal for Review of FDI policy on various sectors” (28 August 2019) <https://pib.gov.in/PressReleseDetail.aspx?PRID=1583294> accessed 6 July 2023.5 Soumyarendra Barik, “Watch: Why New FDI Rules For Digital Media Companies Are Regressive For The Internet Space In India” Medianama (New Delhi, 5 September 2019) <https://www.medianama.com/2019/09/223-fdi-in-digital-media-regressive/> accessed 6 July 2023.6 Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, ‘Soliciting Suggestions/Comments/Inputs from the Stakeholders on the Draft ”Registration of Press and Periodicals Bill 2019’’’ (25 November 2019) <https://mib.gov.in/sites/default/files/Public%20Notice%20%20for%20RPP%20Bill%2C%202019.pdf> accessed 6 July 2023.7 The PRB Act, s 1(1), defines “newspaper” as “any printed periodical work containing public news or comments on public news”.8 The Bill is ambiguous on whether “digital media” covers exclusively digital media organizations or websites of print newspapers and periodicals or both. The office of the “Registrar of Newspapers in India” is vague. The Bill does not define the office nor gives any detail.9 Aniruddh Nigam, “Draft Press Registration Bill is Nothing but a New Collar on an Old Leash” The Wire (New Delhi, 1 July 2020) <https://thewire.in/media/draft-press-registration-bill-colonial-era-law> accessed 6 July 2023.10 Lata Jha, “OTT, digital news content now under I&B ministry ambit; trigger censorship fears” Livemint (New Delhi, 11 November 2020) <https://www.livemint.com/industry/media/ott-digital-news-content-brought-under-ministry-of-i-b-s-ambit−11,605,072,715,455html> accessed 6 July 2023.11 Press Information Bureau, “Government notifies Information Technology (Intermediary Guidelines and Digital Media Ethics Code) Rules 2021” (25 February 2021) <https://www.pib.gov.in/Pressreleaseshare.aspx?PRID=1700749> accessed 6 July 2023.12 Gaur, Nigam and Chatterjee (n 2) 33; Prannv Dhawan and Vishal Rakhecha, “Regulatory setup for media in India: A look at how existing rules translate to the digital realm” Firstpost (25 January 2021) <https://www.firstpost.com/india/regulatory-setup-for-media-in-india-a-look-at-how-existing-rules-translate-to-the-digital-realm−9,236,421html> accessed 6 July 2023; Niharika Yadav, “The Regulatory Regime for Digital News Media in India – The story so far” The Bastion (18 March 2021) <https://thebastion.co.in/politics-and/tech/the-regulatory-regime-for-digital-news-media-in-india-the-story-so-far/> accessed 6 July 2023.13 Affidavit of the MIB dated 19 September 2020, in Firoz Iqbal Khan v Union of India, Writ Petition (Civil) No 956 of 2020 <https://www.medianama.com/wp-content/uploads/Firoz-Iqbal-Khan-v-Sudarshan-News-MIB-affidavit-21.9.2020.pdf> accessed 6 July 2023.14 ibid [26].15 ibid [21].16 ibid [21]–[28].17 Vasudha Venugopal, “Information and broadcasting ministry looks at regulating online news” The Economic Times (New Delhi, 5 April 2018) <https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/politics-and-nation/information-and-broadcasting-ministry-looks-at-regulating-online-news/articleshow/63619859.cms> accessed 6 July 2023.18 ibid.19 Trisha Jalan, “‘I am a Man Who Believes in Self-Regulation’: I&B Minister Prakash Javadekar on Digital News” Medianama (New Delhi, 28 August 2020) <https://www.medianama.com/2020/08/223-digital-news-self-regulation/> accessed 6 July 2023.20 The Wire Analysis, ‘Internal Government documents reveal that the Government perceives a “bias” in digital news and it is interested in managing the narratives that emerge from DNMs. An Annotated Reading Guide to the Modi Government’s Tool-Kit for Managing the Media’ The Wire (New Delhi, 7 March 2021) <https://thewire.in/media/an-annotated-guide-to-the-modi-governments-tool-kit-for-managing-the-media> accessed 6 July 2023.21 Some, however, have questioned the value of uniform regulation across different media. See comments from N Ram and Justice Ravindran in Nikhil Pahwa, “On Self-Regulation of the Media In India – Notes From the Law Commission Consultation” Medianama (New Delhi, 9 October 2014) <https://www.medianama.com/2014/10/223-media-regulation-india-self-regulation/> accessed 6 July 2023.22 Norms of Journalistic Conduct of the Press Council of India under the Press Council Act 1978.23 Programme Code under section 5 of the Cable Television Networks Regulation Act 1995.24 State of Tamil Nadu v P Krishnamurthy (2006) 4 SCC 517 [15], [16].25 Internal government documents reveal that the law ministry highlighted this concern. See Saurav Das, “2 Modi Govt Advisers Warned New IT Rules Beyond Scope of Law, were Overruled” Article 14 (New Delhi, 17 May 2021) <https://www.article-14.com/post/2-modi-govt-advisers-warned-new-it-rules-beyond-scope-of-law-were-overruled> accessed 6 July 2023 (’… the law ministry only noted there was “no specific provision in the IT Act enabling (sic) to impose any penalty or to take penal action against the intermediaries or digital media”’.).26 A Press Council of India press release dated 14 April 2020 clarified that it has no jurisdiction over DNMs. Press Council of India, “Jurisdiction of the Press Council of India under the Press Council Act, 1978” (14 April 2020) <https://www.livelaw.in/pdf_upload/pdf_upload−373,125pdf> accessed 6 July 2023.27 Agij Promotion of Nineteenonea Media Pvt Ltd v Union of India 2021 SCC Online Bom 2938.28 Digital News Publishers Association v Union of India, Writ Petition Nos 13,055 and 12,515 of 2021 (Madras High Court, 16 September 2021).29 Live Law Media Pvt Ltd v Union of India, Writ Petition (C) No 6272 of 2021 (Kerala High Court, 10 March 2021); News Broadcasters Association v Union of India, 2021 SCC Online Ker 2735.30 Foundation for Independent Journalism v Union of India, Writ Petition (C) No 3125 of 2021 (Delhi High Court).31 Skand Bajpai v Union of India, Writ Petition (C) No 799 of 2020 (Supreme Court, 9 May 2022).32 The Rules, rule 11(2)(a).33 The Rules, rule 12.34 The Rules, rule 14.35 The Rules, rule 14(2)(b).36 The Rules, rule 14(5).37 The Rules, rule 14(6).38 For a critique of press self-regulation, see The Hon Ray Finkelstein and Rodney Tiffen, “When Does Press Self-Regulation Work?” (2015) 38 Melbourne University Law Review 944, 952.39 Nireekshak, “Decorative Press Council” (1974) 9(25) Economic and Political Weekly 978; Statement by DC Sharma, Press Council Bill, Lok Sabha (29 September 1964) (“if the Press Council is coming into being only for the purpose of censuring some persons, it is not going to achieve much. […] I think that unless we are told about the procedure of this censure, this Press Council will be a body without any teeth. It will be just a kind of advisory body, a body which will pass harmless resolutions, and which will do things which will not carry journalism very far.”).40 Rajeev Dhavan, “On the Law of the Press in India” (1984) 26(3) Journal of the Indian Law Institute 288, 328–29.41 ibid; Nireekshak (n 39).42 AG Noorani, “The Press Council: An Expensive Irrelevance” (2009) 44(1) Economic and Political Weekly 13, 15; Statement by DC Sharma (n 39) (“I feel that the number allotted to working journalists is very very meagre”.); Statement by Shri Warior, Press Council Bill, Lok Sabha (30 September 1964) (“The word working journalist is there but his representation will be a microscopic minority in the Council”.).43 Nireekshak (n 39).44 Sukumar Muralidharan, “Press Council as Bully Pulpit: A Debate on Media That Could Go Nowhere” (2011) 46(47) Economic and Political Weekly 14, 17.45 Noorani (n 42).46 ibid; Nireekshak (n 39).47 See Cable Television Networks (Amendment) Rules 2021, framed under the Cable Television Networks (Regulation) Act 1995. Some minor differences exist. Broadcasters are only subject to the Programme Code while DNMs are subject to the Programme Code as well as the Press Norms.48 The Commission wrote two authoritative reports, in 1954 and 1982, about the history of the Indian Press, state of the contemporaneous press, and directions that future reform should take.49 The First Press Commission, “Report of the Press Commission” (1954) 339.50 ibid 358.51 ibid 359. The Press’ democratic role is well-recognized. See Finkelstein and Tiffen (n 38) 952.52 The First Press Commission (n 49) 359. Similar to “moral” rights, BG Verghese has conceptualized the journalist’s right to free expression as a “social right” and a “social responsibility”. See BG Verghese, “The media in a free society” (1977) 12(18) Economic and Political Weekly 731, 733.53 The First Press Commission (n 49) 360.54 ibid 352.55 ibid 353.56 ibid.57 Statement by Indira Gandhi, Press Council Bill, Lok Sabha (30 September 1964).58 The First Press Commission (n 49) 353–354.59 ibid 360.60 For a list of dates and titles of the debates in both houses of Parliament to the PCI Act 1965, see Dhavan (n 40) fns 346–347.61 In the Rajya Sabha, substantive debates on the PCI Act 1965 took place between 17 August 1965 and 26 August 1965.62 Statement by Vidya Charan Shukla, Statutory Resolution Re. Disapproval of Press Council (Repeal) Ordinance 1975 and Press Council (Repeal) Bill, Lok Sabha (28 January 1976).63 As noted above, parliamentary debates on the PCI Act 1965 took place over two years, while debates on the PCI Act 1978 took place over six months between 1 March 1978 and 31 August 1978. See Dhavan (n 40) fns 346, 347.64 Brownen Morgan and Karen Yeung, An Introduction to Law and Regulation (CUP 2007) 80. On command and control regulation, see Robert Baldwin, Martin Cave and Martin Lodge, Understanding Regulation (2nd edn, OUP 2012) 106–111.65 The Rules, rule 13(1)(a).66 On the other hand, the Government did follow some consultation processes (including inviting comments and counter-comments) for the Rules as they related to intermediary liability. See Trisha Jalan, “MeitY Seeks Public Comments on Changes To IT Rules Till 15 January” Medianama (3 January 2019) <https://www.medianama.com/2019/01/223-meity-it-rules-public-comments/> accessed 6 July 2023.67 Cellular Operators Association of India v Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (2016) 7 SCC 703 [80]–[94].68 Letter from PK Malhotra to all Secretaries to the Government of India (5 February 2014) <https://dot.gov.in/sites/default/files/o%26m1.pdf> accessed 6 July 2023, stating that “[t]he Department/Ministry concerned might, in addition to placing the proposal in public domain, also hold consultations with all stakeholders”.69 “Indian Press Council” (Accountable Journalism) <https://accountablejournalism.org/ethics-codes/india-press-council-of-india> accessed 6 July 2023, citing Dr Sathyanarayanan Dave v Indian Express (1989–90) AR 111 and Lalit Mohan Gautam v Indian Express (1990–91) AR 1 22.70 The Press Council (Procedure for Inquiry) Regulations 1979, reg 3(1)(f)(i).71 ibid.72 Common Cause v Union of India (2018) 13 SCC 440 [11] (“ … we are of the view, that the Central Government, having framed Rules in the nature of Cable Television Networks Rules, 1994, would be well advised, to frame similar Rules … to formalize the complaint redressal mechanism, including the period of limitation within which a complaint can be filed … ”).73 The Press Council (Procedure for Inquiry) Regulations 1979, reg 3.74 ibid.75 John Pavlik, Journalism and New Media (Columbia University Press 2001) ×ii <https://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.7312/pavl11482/html> accessed 7 July 2023.76 Robert Darnton, “The True History of Fake News” (The New York Review, 13 February 2017) <https://www.nybooks.com/daily/2017/02/13/the-true-history-of-fake-news/> accessed 6 July 2023.77 Pavlik (n 75) 89–92.78 ibid.79 Jonathan Zittrain, John Bowers and Clare Stanton, “The Paper of Record Meets an Ephemeral Web: An Examination of Linkrot and Content Drift within The New York Times” 2021 Library Innovation Lab at Harvard Law School <https://nrs.harvard.edu/URN-3:HUL.INSTREPOS:37367405> accessed 15 August 2023.80 Press Council of India (n 26).81 The Rules, rule 13(1)(a).82 The PCI Act 1978, s 13(2)(b).83 ibid, s 13(2)(a).84 ibid, s 13(2)(c).85 ibid, s 13(2)(d).86 Reporters Without Borders, “Online Harassment of Journalists: Attack of the Trolls” (July 2018) <https://rsf.org/sites/default/files/rsf_report_on_online_harassment.pdf> accessed 6 July 2023; Swati Chaturvedi, I am a Troll: Inside the Secret World of the BJP’s Digital Army (Juggernaut 2016).87 Tarunabh Khaitan, “Killing a Constitution with a Thousand Cuts: Executive Aggrandizement and Party-state Fusion in India” (2020) 14(1) Law & Ethics of Human Rights 49, 88–90.88 The Working Journalists and other Newspaper Employees (Conditions of Service) and Miscellaneous Provisions Act 1955; Working Journalists (Fixation of Rates of Wages) Act 1958.89 Anumeha Yadav, ‘Modi’s labour law “reforms” will dilute your rights as a journalist’ Newslaundry (New Delhi, 22 July 2019) <https://www.newslaundry.com/2019/07/22/modis-labour-law-reforms-will-dilute-your-rights-as-a-journalist> accessed 6 July 2023.90 Preamble to the Maharashtra Media Persons and Media Institutions (Prevention of Violence and Damage or Loss to Property) Act 2019.91 Priyal Shah and Aakanksha Chaturvedi, “Laws for Journalists in India: An Overview” (Social & Political Research Foundation, April 2021) <https://sprf.in/wp-content/uploads/2021/04/SPRF-2021_Journalism-Paper_Curated-Voices_Final.pdf> accessed 6 July 2023.92 ibid.93 The Rules, rule 14(2)(b).94 Robert Audi, “The Function of the Press in a Free and Democratic Society” (1990) 4(3) Public Affairs Quarterly 203, 207.95 ibid.96 Lara Felden, “Regulating the Press: A Comparative Study of International Press Councils” (Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism, April 2012).97 Angela J Campbell, “Self-Regulation and the Media” (1999) 51(3) Federal Communications Law Journal 711, 713.98 The First Press Commission (n 49) 352.99 These institutions respectively are the University Grants Commission, the Bar Council of India, and India’s National Academy of Letters.100 cf Noorani (n 42) 15. Noorani claims that Supreme Court judges have been “ignorant” in discharging their duties.101 The Rules, rule 14(5(f).102 The Rules, rule 15(2).103 The Rules, rule 16.104 An “Authorised Officer” is “an officer of the [MIB] not below the rank of a Joint Secretary to the Government of India” who is empowered to issue directions under the Rules. See The Rules, rule 13(2).105 The Rules, rule 16(2).106 Article 19(2) of the Constitution subjects the right to freedom of expression to any “law” that amounts to “reasonable restrictions … in the interests of the sovereignty and integrity of India, the security of the State, friendly relations with foreign States, public order, decency or morality, or in relation to contempt of court, defamation or incitement to an offence”.107 Shreya Singhal v Union of India (2015) 5 SCC 1.108 Information Technology (Procedure and Safeguards for Blocking for Access of Information by Public) Rules 2009.109 Freedom House, “Freedom on the Net 2021: India” <https://freedomhouse.org/country/india/freedom-net/2021#footnoteref29_e0dzq58> accessed 6 July 2023.110 The Wire Analysis, “In Sum and Substance, New Digital Media Rules Establish a Confusing Playing Field” The Wire (New Delhi, 28 February 2021) <https://thewire.in/government/new-digital-media-rules-confusing-playing-field-newspapers-tv-channels> accessed 6 July 2023 (“ … there has been so far no publicly documented instance of Section 69A of the IT Act being used to remove a news article or media report”.).111 Ministry of Information & Broadcasting, “No new provision added on blocking of content” (27 February 2021) <https://mib.gov.in/sites/default/files/Press%20Release%20dated%2027.2.2021.pdf> accessed 6 July 2023.112 The Wire Staff, “Govt Blocked Over 25,000 Web Pages, Sites, Social Media Pages From 2014–2021” The Wire (17 March 2022) <https://thewire.in/government/govt-blocked-over−25,000-web-pages-sites-social-media-pages-from-2014–2021> accessed 6 July 2023.113 Press Information Bureau, “Ministry of I&B blocks 22 YouTube channels for spreading disinformation related to India’s national security, foreign relations and public order” (5 April 2022) <https://pib.gov.in/PressReleaseIframePage.aspx?PRID=1813603> accessed 6 July 2023.114 The Rules, rule 14(5)e.115 Chinmayi Arun and Sarvjeet Singh, “Online Intermediaries in India” (2015) NOC Online Intermediaries Case Series 24–26 <https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2566952> accessed 6 July 2023.116 I am grateful to an anonymous reviewer for sharing this insight.117 KA Abbas v Union of India (1970) 2 SCC 780.118 ibid [9].119 ibid.120 ibid.121 The PCI Act 1978, s 14(1).122 ibid, s 14(2).123 Dhavan (n 40).124 Magistrates may “direct any person to abstain from a certain act … if such Magistrate considers that such direction is likely to … [lead to] a disturbance of the public tranquillity, or a riot, or an affray”. See Code of Criminal Procedure 1973, s 144.125 See, for example, the facts leading up to Virendra v The Punjab State AIR 1957 P&H 1.126 State of Uttar Pradesh v Lalai Singh Yadav (1977) 1 SCR 616.127 Ramlila Maidan Incident v Home Secretary Union of India (2012) 5 SCC 1; Anuradha Bhasin v Union of India (2020) 3 SCC 637.128 For a recent critique, see Gautam Bhatia, “The Meesha Judgment: Book Bans and the Supreme Court’s Dangerous Grandstanding” Indian Constitutional Law and Philosophy Blog (5 September 2018) <https://indconlawphil.wordpress.com/2018/09/05/the-meesha-judgment-book-bans-and-the-supreme-courts-dangerous-grandstanding/> accessed 6 July 2023. For a discussion of the important case law around this section, see Chinmayi Arun, Arpita Biswas and Parul Sharma, “Hate Speech Laws in India” Centre for Communication Governance (April 2018) 57–65 <https://drive.google.com/file/d/1pDoIwlusnM3ys-1GAYbnTPmepU22b2Zr/view> accessed 6 July 2023.129 The Review Committee, set up under Rule 419A of the Indian Telegraph Rules 1951, comprises three members: the Cabinet Secretary, Secretary to the Government of India in charge, Legal Affairs, and Secretary to the Government of India, Department of Telecommunications.","PeriodicalId":13511,"journal":{"name":"Indian Law Review","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-10-16","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Indian Law Review","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1080/24730580.2023.2266979","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
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Abstract

ABSTRACTThis article critiques the Information Technology (Intermediaries Guidelines and Digital Media Ethics Code) Rules 2021 (“the Rules”) as they relate to online journalism. The Government’s stated objective for making the Rules is to “level the playing field” of online journalism with print journalism. I examine whether and how the Government satisfies this objective. I make two broad claims. First, the Rules fail to “level the playing field”. The objectives, philosophical approach, and substance of the new regulatory scheme are significantly different from those that govern print journalism, and to the disadvantage of online journalism. Second, rather than “levelling the playing field”, the Rules give the Government overwhelming control of online journalism. The Government exercises ultimate control over the regulatory structures and gives itself unprecedented censorship powers over online journalism. If my claims are correct, the Rules will have catastrophic consequences for online journalism and Indian democracy.KEYWORDS: Digital Media Ethics CodePress Council of Indiaonline journalismPress Commissiondigital media ethics AcknowledgmentsFor research support, I am grateful to Arunima Das, Kaustubha Kalidindi, and Ananya Narain. Thanks to Sukumar Muralidharan, Siddharth Narrain, Aakanksha Kumar, Shohini Sengupta, Keerti Pendyal, Ashaawari Datta Chaudhuri, Sandeep Suresh, Rajesh Nayak, and Neytra Nayak for valuable discussions. Errors are mine alone. To Sagarika Nayak, for her unwavering support during good and bad.Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Notes1 A notable exception was the Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Act 2010. Sections 3(1)(g) and 3(1)(h) prohibit “any association or company engaged in the production or broadcast of … current affairs programmes through any electronic mode” or their “correspondent or columnist, cartoonist, editor, owner” from accepting any “foreign contribution”.2 Akriti Gaur, Aniruddh Nigam and Sreyan Chatterjee, “The future of news in India” Vidhi Centre for Legal Policy 33 (30 April 2020) accessed 6 July 2023.3 The lack of specific regulatory frameworks for DNMs and DNM’s ability to engage in target advertising have resulted in dynamic business models in online journalism. See ibid 18–22.4 Press Information Bureau, “Cabinet approves proposal for Review of FDI policy on various sectors” (28 August 2019) accessed 6 July 2023.5 Soumyarendra Barik, “Watch: Why New FDI Rules For Digital Media Companies Are Regressive For The Internet Space In India” Medianama (New Delhi, 5 September 2019) accessed 6 July 2023.6 Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, ‘Soliciting Suggestions/Comments/Inputs from the Stakeholders on the Draft ”Registration of Press and Periodicals Bill 2019’’’ (25 November 2019) accessed 6 July 2023.7 The PRB Act, s 1(1), defines “newspaper” as “any printed periodical work containing public news or comments on public news”.8 The Bill is ambiguous on whether “digital media” covers exclusively digital media organizations or websites of print newspapers and periodicals or both. The office of the “Registrar of Newspapers in India” is vague. The Bill does not define the office nor gives any detail.9 Aniruddh Nigam, “Draft Press Registration Bill is Nothing but a New Collar on an Old Leash” The Wire (New Delhi, 1 July 2020) accessed 6 July 2023.10 Lata Jha, “OTT, digital news content now under I&B ministry ambit; trigger censorship fears” Livemint (New Delhi, 11 November 2020) accessed 6 July 2023.11 Press Information Bureau, “Government notifies Information Technology (Intermediary Guidelines and Digital Media Ethics Code) Rules 2021” (25 February 2021) accessed 6 July 2023.12 Gaur, Nigam and Chatterjee (n 2) 33; Prannv Dhawan and Vishal Rakhecha, “Regulatory setup for media in India: A look at how existing rules translate to the digital realm” Firstpost (25 January 2021) accessed 6 July 2023; Niharika Yadav, “The Regulatory Regime for Digital News Media in India – The story so far” The Bastion (18 March 2021) accessed 6 July 2023.13 Affidavit of the MIB dated 19 September 2020, in Firoz Iqbal Khan v Union of India, Writ Petition (Civil) No 956 of 2020 accessed 6 July 2023.14 ibid [26].15 ibid [21].16 ibid [21]–[28].17 Vasudha Venugopal, “Information and broadcasting ministry looks at regulating online news” The Economic Times (New Delhi, 5 April 2018) accessed 6 July 2023.18 ibid.19 Trisha Jalan, “‘I am a Man Who Believes in Self-Regulation’: I&B Minister Prakash Javadekar on Digital News” Medianama (New Delhi, 28 August 2020) accessed 6 July 2023.20 The Wire Analysis, ‘Internal Government documents reveal that the Government perceives a “bias” in digital news and it is interested in managing the narratives that emerge from DNMs. An Annotated Reading Guide to the Modi Government’s Tool-Kit for Managing the Media’ The Wire (New Delhi, 7 March 2021) accessed 6 July 2023.21 Some, however, have questioned the value of uniform regulation across different media. See comments from N Ram and Justice Ravindran in Nikhil Pahwa, “On Self-Regulation of the Media In India – Notes From the Law Commission Consultation” Medianama (New Delhi, 9 October 2014) accessed 6 July 2023.22 Norms of Journalistic Conduct of the Press Council of India under the Press Council Act 1978.23 Programme Code under section 5 of the Cable Television Networks Regulation Act 1995.24 State of Tamil Nadu v P Krishnamurthy (2006) 4 SCC 517 [15], [16].25 Internal government documents reveal that the law ministry highlighted this concern. See Saurav Das, “2 Modi Govt Advisers Warned New IT Rules Beyond Scope of Law, were Overruled” Article 14 (New Delhi, 17 May 2021) accessed 6 July 2023 (’… the law ministry only noted there was “no specific provision in the IT Act enabling (sic) to impose any penalty or to take penal action against the intermediaries or digital media”’.).26 A Press Council of India press release dated 14 April 2020 clarified that it has no jurisdiction over DNMs. Press Council of India, “Jurisdiction of the Press Council of India under the Press Council Act, 1978” (14 April 2020) accessed 6 July 2023.27 Agij Promotion of Nineteenonea Media Pvt Ltd v Union of India 2021 SCC Online Bom 2938.28 Digital News Publishers Association v Union of India, Writ Petition Nos 13,055 and 12,515 of 2021 (Madras High Court, 16 September 2021).29 Live Law Media Pvt Ltd v Union of India, Writ Petition (C) No 6272 of 2021 (Kerala High Court, 10 March 2021); News Broadcasters Association v Union of India, 2021 SCC Online Ker 2735.30 Foundation for Independent Journalism v Union of India, Writ Petition (C) No 3125 of 2021 (Delhi High Court).31 Skand Bajpai v Union of India, Writ Petition (C) No 799 of 2020 (Supreme Court, 9 May 2022).32 The Rules, rule 11(2)(a).33 The Rules, rule 12.34 The Rules, rule 14.35 The Rules, rule 14(2)(b).36 The Rules, rule 14(5).37 The Rules, rule 14(6).38 For a critique of press self-regulation, see The Hon Ray Finkelstein and Rodney Tiffen, “When Does Press Self-Regulation Work?” (2015) 38 Melbourne University Law Review 944, 952.39 Nireekshak, “Decorative Press Council” (1974) 9(25) Economic and Political Weekly 978; Statement by DC Sharma, Press Council Bill, Lok Sabha (29 September 1964) (“if the Press Council is coming into being only for the purpose of censuring some persons, it is not going to achieve much. […] I think that unless we are told about the procedure of this censure, this Press Council will be a body without any teeth. It will be just a kind of advisory body, a body which will pass harmless resolutions, and which will do things which will not carry journalism very far.”).40 Rajeev Dhavan, “On the Law of the Press in India” (1984) 26(3) Journal of the Indian Law Institute 288, 328–29.41 ibid; Nireekshak (n 39).42 AG Noorani, “The Press Council: An Expensive Irrelevance” (2009) 44(1) Economic and Political Weekly 13, 15; Statement by DC Sharma (n 39) (“I feel that the number allotted to working journalists is very very meagre”.); Statement by Shri Warior, Press Council Bill, Lok Sabha (30 September 1964) (“The word working journalist is there but his representation will be a microscopic minority in the Council”.).43 Nireekshak (n 39).44 Sukumar Muralidharan, “Press Council as Bully Pulpit: A Debate on Media That Could Go Nowhere” (2011) 46(47) Economic and Political Weekly 14, 17.45 Noorani (n 42).46 ibid; Nireekshak (n 39).47 See Cable Television Networks (Amendment) Rules 2021, framed under the Cable Television Networks (Regulation) Act 1995. Some minor differences exist. Broadcasters are only subject to the Programme Code while DNMs are subject to the Programme Code as well as the Press Norms.48 The Commission wrote two authoritative reports, in 1954 and 1982, about the history of the Indian Press, state of the contemporaneous press, and directions that future reform should take.49 The First Press Commission, “Report of the Press Commission” (1954) 339.50 ibid 358.51 ibid 359. The Press’ democratic role is well-recognized. See Finkelstein and Tiffen (n 38) 952.52 The First Press Commission (n 49) 359. Similar to “moral” rights, BG Verghese has conceptualized the journalist’s right to free expression as a “social right” and a “social responsibility”. See BG Verghese, “The media in a free society” (1977) 12(18) Economic and Political Weekly 731, 733.53 The First Press Commission (n 49) 360.54 ibid 352.55 ibid 353.56 ibid.57 Statement by Indira Gandhi, Press Council Bill, Lok Sabha (30 September 1964).58 The First Press Commission (n 49) 353–354.59 ibid 360.60 For a list of dates and titles of the debates in both houses of Parliament to the PCI Act 1965, see Dhavan (n 40) fns 346–347.61 In the Rajya Sabha, substantive debates on the PCI Act 1965 took place between 17 August 1965 and 26 August 1965.62 Statement by Vidya Charan Shukla, Statutory Resolution Re. Disapproval of Press Council (Repeal) Ordinance 1975 and Press Council (Repeal) Bill, Lok Sabha (28 January 1976).63 As noted above, parliamentary debates on the PCI Act 1965 took place over two years, while debates on the PCI Act 1978 took place over six months between 1 March 1978 and 31 August 1978. See Dhavan (n 40) fns 346, 347.64 Brownen Morgan and Karen Yeung, An Introduction to Law and Regulation (CUP 2007) 80. On command and control regulation, see Robert Baldwin, Martin Cave and Martin Lodge, Understanding Regulation (2nd edn, OUP 2012) 106–111.65 The Rules, rule 13(1)(a).66 On the other hand, the Government did follow some consultation processes (including inviting comments and counter-comments) for the Rules as they related to intermediary liability. See Trisha Jalan, “MeitY Seeks Public Comments on Changes To IT Rules Till 15 January” Medianama (3 January 2019) accessed 6 July 2023.67 Cellular Operators Association of India v Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (2016) 7 SCC 703 [80]–[94].68 Letter from PK Malhotra to all Secretaries to the Government of India (5 February 2014) accessed 6 July 2023, stating that “[t]he Department/Ministry concerned might, in addition to placing the proposal in public domain, also hold consultations with all stakeholders”.69 “Indian Press Council” (Accountable Journalism) accessed 6 July 2023, citing Dr Sathyanarayanan Dave v Indian Express (1989–90) AR 111 and Lalit Mohan Gautam v Indian Express (1990–91) AR 1 22.70 The Press Council (Procedure for Inquiry) Regulations 1979, reg 3(1)(f)(i).71 ibid.72 Common Cause v Union of India (2018) 13 SCC 440 [11] (“ … we are of the view, that the Central Government, having framed Rules in the nature of Cable Television Networks Rules, 1994, would be well advised, to frame similar Rules … to formalize the complaint redressal mechanism, including the period of limitation within which a complaint can be filed … ”).73 The Press Council (Procedure for Inquiry) Regulations 1979, reg 3.74 ibid.75 John Pavlik, Journalism and New Media (Columbia University Press 2001) ×ii accessed 7 July 2023.76 Robert Darnton, “The True History of Fake News” (The New York Review, 13 February 2017) accessed 6 July 2023.77 Pavlik (n 75) 89–92.78 ibid.79 Jonathan Zittrain, John Bowers and Clare Stanton, “The Paper of Record Meets an Ephemeral Web: An Examination of Linkrot and Content Drift within The New York Times” 2021 Library Innovation Lab at Harvard Law School accessed 15 August 2023.80 Press Council of India (n 26).81 The Rules, rule 13(1)(a).82 The PCI Act 1978, s 13(2)(b).83 ibid, s 13(2)(a).84 ibid, s 13(2)(c).85 ibid, s 13(2)(d).86 Reporters Without Borders, “Online Harassment of Journalists: Attack of the Trolls” (July 2018) accessed 6 July 2023; Swati Chaturvedi, I am a Troll: Inside the Secret World of the BJP’s Digital Army (Juggernaut 2016).87 Tarunabh Khaitan, “Killing a Constitution with a Thousand Cuts: Executive Aggrandizement and Party-state Fusion in India” (2020) 14(1) Law & Ethics of Human Rights 49, 88–90.88 The Working Journalists and other Newspaper Employees (Conditions of Service) and Miscellaneous Provisions Act 1955; Working Journalists (Fixation of Rates of Wages) Act 1958.89 Anumeha Yadav, ‘Modi’s labour law “reforms” will dilute your rights as a journalist’ Newslaundry (New Delhi, 22 July 2019) accessed 6 July 2023.90 Preamble to the Maharashtra Media Persons and Media Institutions (Prevention of Violence and Damage or Loss to Property) Act 2019.91 Priyal Shah and Aakanksha Chaturvedi, “Laws for Journalists in India: An Overview” (Social & Political Research Foundation, April 2021) accessed 6 July 2023.92 ibid.93 The Rules, rule 14(2)(b).94 Robert Audi, “The Function of the Press in a Free and Democratic Society” (1990) 4(3) Public Affairs Quarterly 203, 207.95 ibid.96 Lara Felden, “Regulating the Press: A Comparative Study of International Press Councils” (Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism, April 2012).97 Angela J Campbell, “Self-Regulation and the Media” (1999) 51(3) Federal Communications Law Journal 711, 713.98 The First Press Commission (n 49) 352.99 These institutions respectively are the University Grants Commission, the Bar Council of India, and India’s National Academy of Letters.100 cf Noorani (n 42) 15. Noorani claims that Supreme Court judges have been “ignorant” in discharging their duties.101 The Rules, rule 14(5(f).102 The Rules, rule 15(2).103 The Rules, rule 16.104 An “Authorised Officer” is “an officer of the [MIB] not below the rank of a Joint Secretary to the Government of India” who is empowered to issue directions under the Rules. See The Rules, rule 13(2).105 The Rules, rule 16(2).106 Article 19(2) of the Constitution subjects the right to freedom of expression to any “law” that amounts to “reasonable restrictions … in the interests of the sovereignty and integrity of India, the security of the State, friendly relations with foreign States, public order, decency or morality, or in relation to contempt of court, defamation or incitement to an offence”.107 Shreya Singhal v Union of India (2015) 5 SCC 1.108 Information Technology (Procedure and Safeguards for Blocking for Access of Information by Public) Rules 2009.109 Freedom House, “Freedom on the Net 2021: India” accessed 6 July 2023.110 The Wire Analysis, “In Sum and Substance, New Digital Media Rules Establish a Confusing Playing Field” The Wire (New Delhi, 28 February 2021) accessed 6 July 2023 (“ … there has been so far no publicly documented instance of Section 69A of the IT Act being used to remove a news article or media report”.).111 Ministry of Information & Broadcasting, “No new provision added on blocking of content” (27 February 2021) accessed 6 July 2023.112 The Wire Staff, “Govt Blocked Over 25,000 Web Pages, Sites, Social Media Pages From 2014–2021” The Wire (17 March 2022) accessed 6 July 2023.113 Press Information Bureau, “Ministry of I&B blocks 22 YouTube channels for spreading disinformation related to India’s national security, foreign relations and public order” (5 April 2022) accessed 6 July 2023.114 The Rules, rule 14(5)e.115 Chinmayi Arun and Sarvjeet Singh, “Online Intermediaries in India” (2015) NOC Online Intermediaries Case Series 24–26 accessed 6 July 2023.116 I am grateful to an anonymous reviewer for sharing this insight.117 KA Abbas v Union of India (1970) 2 SCC 780.118 ibid [9].119 ibid.120 ibid.121 The PCI Act 1978, s 14(1).122 ibid, s 14(2).123 Dhavan (n 40).124 Magistrates may “direct any person to abstain from a certain act … if such Magistrate considers that such direction is likely to … [lead to] a disturbance of the public tranquillity, or a riot, or an affray”. See Code of Criminal Procedure 1973, s 144.125 See, for example, the facts leading up to Virendra v The Punjab State AIR 1957 P&H 1.126 State of Uttar Pradesh v Lalai Singh Yadav (1977) 1 SCR 616.127 Ramlila Maidan Incident v Home Secretary Union of India (2012) 5 SCC 1; Anuradha Bhasin v Union of India (2020) 3 SCC 637.128 For a recent critique, see Gautam Bhatia, “The Meesha Judgment: Book Bans and the Supreme Court’s Dangerous Grandstanding” Indian Constitutional Law and Philosophy Blog (5 September 2018) accessed 6 July 2023. For a discussion of the important case law around this section, see Chinmayi Arun, Arpita Biswas and Parul Sharma, “Hate Speech Laws in India” Centre for Communication Governance (April 2018) 57–65 accessed 6 July 2023.129 The Review Committee, set up under Rule 419A of the Indian Telegraph Rules 1951, comprises three members: the Cabinet Secretary, Secretary to the Government of India in charge, Legal Affairs, and Secretary to the Government of India, Department of Telecommunications.
行政控制合法化:论印度网络新闻法
摘要本文对《2021年信息技术(中介机构指南和数字媒体道德准则)规则》(“规则”)进行了批评,因为它们与在线新闻有关。政府制定《规则》的既定目标是为网络新闻与印刷新闻“创造公平的竞争环境”。我研究政府是否及如何达到这个目标。我有两大主张。首先,这些规则未能“创造公平的竞争环境”。新监管计划的目标、哲学方法和实质与管理印刷新闻的计划有很大不同,这对在线新闻来说是不利的。其次,这些规则并没有“公平竞争”,而是赋予了政府对网络新闻的压倒性控制权。政府对监管机构实行最终控制,并赋予自己对在线新闻空前的审查权力。如果我的说法是正确的,这些规则将对在线新闻和印度民主产生灾难性的后果。关键词:数字媒体伦理守则印度新闻委员会在线新闻新闻委员会数字媒体伦理致谢对于研究支持,我要感谢Arunima Das, Kaustubha Kalidindi和Ananya Narain。感谢Sukumar Muralidharan, Siddharth Narrain, Aakanksha Kumar, Shohini Sengupta, Keerti Pendyal, Ashaawari Datta Chaudhuri, Sandeep Suresh, Rajesh Nayak和Neytra Nayak的宝贵讨论。都是我的错。感谢萨加里卡·纳亚克,无论顺境还是逆境,她始终不渝的支持。披露声明作者未报告潜在的利益冲突。注1一个明显的例外是《2010年外国捐款(管理)法》。第3(1)(g)和第3(1)(h)条禁止“通过任何电子方式制作或播放时事节目的任何协会或公司”或其“通讯员或专栏作家、漫画家、编辑、所有者”接受任何“外国捐款”Akriti Gaur, Aniruddh Nigam和Sreyan Chatterjee,“印度新闻的未来”,Vidhi法律政策中心33(2020年4月30日),2023.3缺乏针对DNM的具体监管框架以及DNM从事目标广告的能力导致了在线新闻的动态商业模式。见同上18-22.4新闻新闻局,“内阁批准检讨各行业外商直接投资政策的建议”(2019年8月28日),20223年7月6日查阅。为什么针对数字媒体公司的新的外国直接投资规则对印度的互联网空间是倒退的?”Medianama(2019年9月5日,新德里)查阅2023.6信息和广播部,“征求利益相关者对《2019年新闻和期刊注册法案》草案的建议/意见/投入”(2019年11月25日)查阅2023.7月6日《新闻和期刊注册法案》第1(1)条将“报纸”定义为“任何包含公共新闻或对公共新闻评论的印刷期刊作品”条例草案对“数码媒体”是否只包括数码媒体机构或纸媒及期刊的网站,或两者兼而有之,释义含糊。“印度报纸注册局”的办公室是模糊的。该法案没有界定该办公室,也没有提供任何细节Aniruddh Nigam,“新闻注册法案草案只不过是旧链子上的新链子”,The Wire(2020年7月1日,新德里)于2023.7月6日访问了Lata Jha,“OTT,数字新闻内容现在属于I&B部的范围;引发审查恐惧”Livemint(新德里,2020年11月11日)查阅2023.7月6日新闻新闻局,“政府通知2021年信息技术(中介准则和数字媒体道德准则)规则”(2021年2月25日)查阅2023.7月6日Gaur, Nigam和Chatterjee (n 2) 33;Prannv Dhawan和Vishal Rakhecha,“印度媒体的监管设置:看看现有规则如何转化为数字领域”,Firstpost(2021年1月25日),2023年7月6日访问;Niharika Yadav,“印度数字新闻媒体的监管制度-迄今为止的故事”,堡垒(2021年3月18日)查阅了2023年7月6日。2020年9月19日MIB的宣誓书,Firoz Iqbal Khan诉印度联邦,2020年第956号书面请愿书(民事)查阅了2023年7月6日。15同上[21]。16同上[21]- [28]《经济时报》(2018年4月5日,新德里)访问2023.7月6日,同上。19 Trisha Jalan,“我是一个相信自我监管的人”I&B部长Prakash Javadekar在数字新闻“Medianama”(2020年8月28日,新德里)访问了2023.7月6日的Wire Analysis,“内部政府文件显示,政府认为数字新闻中存在“偏见”,并有兴趣管理dmm出现的叙述。《莫迪政府媒体管理工具包注释阅读指南》(the Wire, 2021年3月7日,新德里),2023年7月6日。 21 .然而,有些人质疑跨不同媒介统一管理的价值。参见N Ram和Justice Ravindran在Nikhil Pahwa的评论,“关于印度媒体的自我监管-法律委员会咨询的注释”Medianama(2014年10月9日,新德里)于2023年7月6日查阅。《印度新闻委员会1978年新闻委员会法案下的新闻行为规范》;《1995年有线电视网络监管法案第5节下的节目法典》;24泰米尔纳德邦诉P Krishnamurthy (2006) 4 SCC 517 [15], [16].25政府内部文件显示,法务部强调了这一担忧。见Saurav Das,“两名莫迪政府顾问警告称,新的IT规则超出了法律范围,被驳回”,第14条(2021年5月17日,新德里)于2023年7月6日查阅(“……法律部门只指出,“IT法案中没有具体规定允许(原文如此)对中介机构或数字媒体施加任何惩罚或采取刑事行动”)印度新闻委员会于2020年4月14日发布的新闻稿澄清说,它对dnm没有管辖权。印度新闻委员会,“根据1978年新闻委员会法,印度新闻委员会的管辖权”(2020年4月14日)于2023.7月6日查阅。27 agj推广公司诉印度联盟2021年SCC在线Bom 2938.28数字新闻出版商协会诉印度联盟,2021年第13,055号和12,515号令状请愿书(马德拉斯高等法院,2021年9月16日)Live Law Media Pvt Ltd诉印度联邦,2021年第6272号诉状(C)(喀拉拉邦高等法院,2021年3月10日);31 .新闻广播协会诉印度联盟,2021年SCC Online Ker 2735.30独立新闻基金会诉印度联盟,2021年(德里高等法院)第3125号诉状32 . Skand Bajpai诉印度联邦,2020年第799号诉状(C)(最高法院,2022年5月9日规则第11(2)(a)条。33规则、第12.34条、第14.35条、第14(2)(b)条规则,第14(5)条规则,第14(6)条。38有关媒体自我监管的批评,请参阅雷·芬克尔斯坦和罗德尼·蒂芬的著作《媒体自我监管何时起作用?》(2015) 38墨尔本大学法律评论944,952.39 Nireekshak,“装饰出版社理事会”(1974)9(25)经济与政治周刊978;人民院新闻委员会法案夏尔马议员的声明(1964年9月29日)(“如果新闻委员会的成立只是为了谴责某些人,那么它不会取得多大成就。我认为,除非我们被告知这次谴责的程序,否则这个新闻委员会将是一个没有牙齿的机构。它将只是一个咨询机构,一个通过无害决议的机构,它所做的事情不会使新闻业走得太远。Rajeev Dhavan,“论印度的新闻法”(1984)26(3),《印度法律研究所学报》288,328-29.41同上;尼瑞克沙克(n 39).42AG Noorani,“新闻委员会:一个昂贵的无关紧要”(2009)44(1)经济与政治周刊13,15;夏尔马议员的发言(第39号)(“我觉得分配给在职记者的人数非常非常少”);43 .人民院新闻委员会法案Shri Warior的声明(1964年9月30日)(“有工作记者一词,但他在委员会中的代表将是极少数”尼瑞克沙克(n . 39).44Sukumar Muralidharan,“作为讲坛的新闻委员会:关于媒体的辩论无处可去”(2011)46(47)经济与政治周刊14,17.45 Noorani (n 42)。46如上;尼瑞克沙克(n 39).47参见根据1995年有线电视网络(管理)法制定的《2021年有线电视网络(修订)规则》。存在一些细微的差别。广播公司只受《节目守则》的约束,而dnm则受《节目守则》和《新闻规范》的约束。委员会在1954年和1982年撰写了两份权威报告,内容涉及印度新闻界的历史、当时新闻界的状况以及未来改革应采取的方向第一新闻委员会,“新闻委员会的报告”(1954)339.50同上358.51同上359。新闻界的民主作用是公认的。参见Finkelstein和Tiffen (n 38) 952.52第一新闻委员会(n 49) 359。与“道德”权利类似,Verghese将记者自由表达的权利定义为“社会权利”和“社会责任”。参见BG Verghese,“自由社会中的媒体”(1977)12(18)经济和政治周刊731,733.53第一新闻委员会(第49期)360.54同上352.55同上353.56同上57英迪拉·甘地的声明,新闻委员会法案,人民院(1964年9月30日)第一新闻委员会(第49号)353-354.59同上360.60关于议会两院对1965年PCI法令的辩论日期和标题的清单,见Dhavan(第40号)fns 346-347.61在联邦上院,关于1965年PCI法令的实质性辩论在1965年8月17日至1965年8月26日之间进行。 63 .不赞成《1975年新闻局(废除)条例》及《人民院新闻局(废除)条例草案》(1976年1月28日)如上所述,议会对1965年PCI法的辩论进行了两年多,而对1978年PCI法的辩论在1978年3月1日至1978年8月31日期间进行了六个月。《法律与法规概论》(2004年第1期),第7页。关于指挥和控制规则,见Robert Baldwin, Martin Cave和Martin Lodge,《理解规则》(第二版,OUP 2012) 106-111.65《规则》,规则13(1)(a).66另一方面,由于《规则》涉及中间责任,政府确实遵循了一些协商程序(包括征求意见和反意见)。参见Trisha Jalan,“MeitY在1月15日之前征求公众对IT规则变更的意见”Medianama(2019年1月3日)于2023年7月6日访问。67印度蜂窝运营商协会诉印度电信监管局(2016)7 SCC 703 [80] - [94].68PK Malhotra致印度政府所有秘书的信(2014年2月5日)于2023年7月6日查阅,其中指出“有关部门/部除了将提案置于公共领域外,还可以与所有利益相关者进行磋商”“印度新闻委员会”(问责新闻)于2023年7月6日查阅,引用Dr Sathyanarayanan Dave诉Indian Express (1989-90) AR 111和Lalit Mohan Gautam诉Indian Express (1990-91) AR 1 22.70《1979年新闻委员会(调查程序)条例》第3(1)(f)(i)条。71同上。72 Common Cause v Union of India (2018) 13 SCC 440[11](“……我们认为,中央政府在制定1994年有线电视网络规则性质的规则时,最好制定类似的规则……以正式确定申诉补救机制,包括可提出申诉的时效期限……”)1979年新闻委员会(调查程序)条例,reg 3.74同上。75约翰·帕夫利克,新闻和新媒体(哥伦比亚大学出版社2001年)×ii访问2023.7月76罗伯特·达恩顿,“假新闻的真实历史”(纽约评论,2017年2月13日)访问2023.7月6日。77帕夫利克(n 75) 89-92.78同上。79乔纳森·兹特兰,约翰·鲍尔斯和克莱尔·斯坦顿,“记录的纸遇到了一个短暂的网络:《纽约时报》2021年哈佛法学院图书馆创新实验室对Linkrot和内容漂移的研究》于2023.8月15日访问,印度新闻理事会(n 26)。81规则,第13(1)(a).82条1978年PCI法案第13(2)(b)条。83同上,第13(2)(a)条。84同上,第13(2)(c)条。85同上,第13(2)(d)条记者无国界,《记者的网络骚扰:喷子的攻击》(2018年7月),2023年7月6日;Swati Chaturvedi,我是一个巨魔:在人民党数字军队的秘密世界里(Juggernaut 2016)tarunh Khaitan,“千刀万剐地扼杀宪法:印度的行政扩张和党国融合”(2020)14(1)人权法律与伦理49,88 - 90.88《1955年工作记者和其他报纸雇员(服务条件)和杂项规定法》;Anumeha Yadav,“莫迪的劳动法”改革“将削弱你作为记者的权利”,《新闻周刊》(2019年7月22日,新德里)2023.90年7月6日《2019年马哈拉施特拉邦媒体人和媒体机构(防止暴力和财产损害或损失)法》序言Priyal Shah和Aakanksha Chaturvedi,“印度记者的法律:《概览》(社会与政治研究基金会,2021年4月),2023.92年7月6日查阅,同上,《规则》第14(2)(b)条罗伯特·奥迪,“新闻在自由民主社会中的作用”(1990)4(3),《公共事务季刊》第203期,207.95,同上。96 Lara Felden,“新闻监管:国际新闻理事会的比较研究”(路透社新闻研究所,2012年4月),97安吉拉·J·坎贝尔,《自我监管与媒体》(1999)51(3)《联邦通讯法杂志》711,713.98第一新闻委员会(第49期)352.99这些机构分别是大学教育资助委员会、印度律师协会和印度国家文学院。100 cf Noorani(第42期)15。Noorani声称最高法院的法官在履行职责时是“无知的”《规则》第14条第5款(f).102《规则》,第15(2)条《规则》第16.104条“授权官员”是指“不低于印度政府联合秘书级别的[MIB]官员”,有权根据《规则》发布指示。见《规则》第13(2)条。105规则,第16(2)条。
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