City
Epaper

Jack Dorsey saga: How Elon Musk learnt fast to respect strict Indian laws

By IANS | Updated: June 13, 2023 18:40 IST

New Delhi, June 13 As former Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey created a storm by claiming that the Indian ...

Open in App

New Delhi, June 13 As former Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey created a storm by claiming that the Indian government threatened to shut down the platform and conducted raids on its employees which the Centre has vehemently rejected, Elon Musk has rather understood the law of the land much better.

In April, Musk said that he would comply with the law of the land in India rather than send his people to jail as the country has "strict social media laws".

In a Twitter Spaces interview with the BBC, he was asked about the micro-blogging platform taking down links related to the BBC's controversial documentary on Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

"India has very strict social media laws. If it's a choice between complying with the laws or going to jail, I'd rather comply with laws than have any of my people go to jail," he was quoted as saying.

"We cannot go beyond the law of the country," the Twitter CEO stressed.

The first part of the two-part BBC documentary series, "India: The Modi Question" raised a storm not just in India but also among the diaspora across the world.

Looking at the sensitive nature of the documentary, the Indian government banned it from being shown on social media, including Twitter, and elsewhere in the country.

Earlier in the day, the Centre lashed out at Dorsey for his claims, saying it is an attempt to "brush out that very dubious period of Twitter's history".

Reacting to Dorsey who alleged in an interview with YouTube channel Breaking Points that the threats came as Twitter refused to comply with the government's demands to block accounts during the farmers' protests in early 2021, Union Minister of State for Electronics and IT, Rajeev Chandrasekhar, said that no one went to jail nor was Twitter shut down in the country.

"This is an outright lie by @jack perhaps an attempt to brush out that very dubious period of Twitter's history. Twitter under Dorsey and his team were in repeated and continuous violations of the India law," Chandrasekhar said in a tweet.

The Minister said that as a matter of fact, Twitter was in non-compliance with law repeatedly from 2020 to 2022 "and it was only June 2022 when they finally complied".

"To set the record straight, no one was raided or sent to jail. Our focus was only on ensuring the compliance of Indian laws. Dorsey's Twitter regime had a problem accepting the sovereignty of Indian law. It behaved as if the laws of India did not apply to it," Chandrasekhar noted.

"All social media intermediaries operating in India have to comply with laws to ensure that the internet is safe, trusted and accountable," said the Minister.


na/vd

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: TwitterJack DorseyNarendra ModiindiacentreDisney IndiaNew DelhiAll India Majlis E Ittehadul MuslimeenCommunist Party Of India MarxistIndia TodayAir Asia IndiaAsia IndiaFifa U 17 World Cup India
Open in App

Related Stories

MumbaiMumbai: Gold Sales Cross ₹12,000 Crores Nationwide on Akshaya Tritiya; Mumbai MMR Sees ₹800 Crores Trade

NationalAkshaya Tritiya 2025: Gold Market Sees Huge Footfall Despite Price Hike (Watch Video)

NationalPM e-Drive Scheme: Know How to Apply Subsidy for Electric Two-Wheelers in Just 5 Days

MaharashtraOver 10,000 Pakistani Nationals Traced in Maharashtra and Delhi Post-Palgham Terror Attack

MumbaiViral Sighting of Tesla Cybertruck Near Mumbai Stirs EV Enthusiasm (Photos)

Technology Realted Stories

Technology‘WAVES 2025’ brings spotlight on India’s vibrant media and entertainment sector

TechnologyApple logs highest-ever shipment volume in India at 29 pc growth in March quarter

Technology75 pc of Indian businesses localise data as AI becomes core to strategy: Report

TechnologyPunjab starts first-of-its-kind B.Tech programme

TechnologyDynamic curriculum, continuous evolution of training modules key to stay relevant: Jitendra Singh