Shot
‘Obliterates freedom to publish, right to access’: Editors Guild files plea against IT rules amendments
After the Editors Guild of India and the Association of Indian Magazines filed petitions against the April amendment to the IT Rules, the Bombay High Court tagged both petitions to a plea in the same matter filed by comedian Kunal Kamra.
According to LiveLaw, the central government simultaneously extended its stay on notifying the amendment to July 10.
The amendment, originally notified on April 6, said social media companies and other intermediaries must take down content deemed fake by a government fact-check unit. It was widely criticised by press groups, opposition leaders and journalists. Kamra’s plea, filed a few days later, said the rules “have a chilling effect and are enough to chill people”.
The Guild’s petition also challenged the constitutional validity of the amendment for “violating the right to freedom of speech and expression”.
Newslaundry has reported on length on the controversies surrounding the amendment and why it’s a blow for press freedom. Read about it here.
Also Read
-
Two years on, ‘peace’ in Gaza is at the price of dignity and freedom
-
4 ml of poison, four times a day: Inside the Coldrif tragedy that claimed 17 children
-
Delhi shut its thermal plants, but chokes from neighbouring ones
-
Hafta x South Central feat. Josy Joseph: A crossover episode on the future of media
-
Encroachment menace in Bengaluru locality leaves pavements unusable for pedestrians