Hi Friends,

Even as I launch this today ( my 80th Birthday ), I realize that there is yet so much to say and do. There is just no time to look back, no time to wonder,"Will anyone read these pages?"

With regards,
Hemen Parekh
27 June 2013

Now as I approach my 90th birthday ( 27 June 2023 ) , I invite you to visit my Digital Avatar ( www.hemenparekh.ai ) – and continue chatting with me , even when I am no more here physically

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Tuesday, 21 April 2026

TRAI and FAST Channels

TRAI and FAST Channels

TRAI and FAST Channels

I watched TRAI’s Consultation Paper on Application-based Linear Television Distribution (ALTD) — which explicitly includes Free Ad-Supported Streaming Television (FAST) services — with a mix of relief and curiosity. Relief, because a rapidly expanding corner of our media ecosystem that has been operating in a regulatory grey zone is finally on the regulator’s radar. Curiosity, because the choices TRAI makes now will shape whether innovation and consumer protection move together — or at odds — as India’s connected-TV market accelerates.TRAI Information Note (PR No.48/2026)

What TRAI has put on the table

In short: TRAI asks whether application-based platforms that deliver linear/scheduled channels over the internet (pre-installed apps on smart TVs, downloadable smart-TV/mobile apps, web-based linear channels) should be treated as a distinct category — ALTD — and what regulatory obligations should attach to them. The request follows a reference from the Ministry of Information & Broadcasting and explicitly focuses on parity, content accountability and consumer protection.Press Information Bureau summary

Key questions TRAI seeks answers to (my reading):

  • How to define ALTD/FAST services clearly so they aren’t left as a loophole between broadcasting and internet services?
  • Who should be the accountable entity in a layered value chain (app/platform owner, device OEM, OS provider, content aggregator or broadcaster)?
  • Should application providers be required to obtain an authorisation/registration similar to traditional distributors?
  • What obligations should apply on content accountability, grievance redressal, consumer protection and advertising transparency?
  • How to integrate ALTD viewership into TV audience measurement and ensure a level competitive playing field for broadcasters and advertisers?

These questions are more than academic. They cut to how royalties, retransmission, classification of channels (pay vs free-to-air), content compliance and advertising disclosures will be enforced across traditional and internet-delivered linear experiences.TRAI consultation press release

Why this matters — practical consequences

  • For broadcasters: FAST creates new distribution reach but also potential revenue leakage when pay channels are repurposed as free or when advertising monetisation shifts outside existing contracts.
  • For device makers and OS owners: pre-installed FAST apps can become primary gateways to content. If they’re held accountable, device economics and partner agreements will change.
  • For platforms (aggregators/app owners): an authorisation regime or local compliance requirements could increase operating costs and affect cross-border product models.
  • For advertisers & measurement firms: unless ALTD viewership data is integrated into ratings, advertisers will undervalue or mis-price this inventory — or make decisions on incomplete data.
  • For consumers: the promise of free, ad-supported linear channels is great — but only if content accountability, user privacy and grievance mechanisms are robust.

My view — balance, not boxes

I’ve long argued that regulation should unlock consumer choice while increasing transparency in the TV ecosystem. Years ago I urged simpler, user-first channel selection and better data-driven regulation as the path to democratize TV access (MEDIA IS THE MESSAGE — my earlier reflections). TRAI’s paper is an opportunity to accomplish the same goal for the streaming era.

Principles I’d advocate policymakers and industry adopt:

  • Clarity first: define ALTD and FAST in statute/regulation so obligations are not ambiguous.
  • Single point accountability: identify a primary responsible entity for each channel/service listing (with contractual backstops across the value chain).
  • Proportional authorisation: require registration/authorisation that is lightweight for startups but creates minimum compliance for content, consumer redressal and local representation for foreign operators.
  • Measurement parity: build a framework to include ALTD viewership into audience measurement within a transparent, auditable architecture.
  • Consumer protections: mandatory grievance redressal timelines, ad labelling (what’s native, what’s paid placement), and clear data/consent rules.
  • Avoid over-prescription: don’t freeze innovation. Ruleframes should be technology-neutral and outcomes-focused.

What stakeholders should act on now

  • Broadcasters and platform owners: respond to TRAI’s consultation with concrete proposals on accountability, contractual flows and how channel-level compliance can be ensured.
  • Device OEMs and OS providers: prepare to describe their role in content placement, pre-install practices, and mechanisms for consumer opt-out.
  • Advertisers and measurement firms: propose auditable data exchange formats or a neutral aggregator to incorporate ALTD viewership into ratings.
  • Consumers and civil-society groups: insist on transparent ad-labelling, privacy safeguards and an accessible grievance mechanism.

TRAI has invited written comments by 4 May 2026 and counter-comments by 18 May 2026; submissions are to advbcs-2@trai.gov.in and jtadvisor-bcs@trai.gov.in. The full paper is available on TRAI’s website and is worth reading end-to-end before drafting responses.TRAI consultation PDF

A moment to get regulation right

FAST services are not a marginal novelty — they are the logical evolution of linear TV in a connected world. If we treat them like a sibling of traditional broadcasting with clear accountability and measured obligations, we will protect consumers without stifling invention. If we treat them as a lawless new frontier, we will replicate the very market failures that regulation has been trying to fix for years.

I welcome TRAI’s consultation. It is a chance to design rules that are future-ready: simple to comply with, fair to incumbents, friendly to new entrants, and protective of viewers.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh


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Hello Candidates :

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Biometrics at the Ballot

Biometrics at the Ballot

Background

A recent public interest petition asked the Supreme Court to consider mandatory biometric checks — fingerprints, iris scans and facial recognition — at polling booths before a voter is allowed to cast a ballot. The petition argues that conventional identity checks (voter ID cards, manual verification) remain vulnerable to impersonation, proxy or duplicate voting and so-called "ghost" entries on rolls. The Court has issued notice to the Election Commission of India (ECI), the central government and states to respond while indicating that any immediate large-scale change would need time, rule amendments and funding ANI.

What the PIL asks for

The petition seeks direction for biometric authentication at polling stations so that the person presenting to vote is verified by one or more biometrics — typically fingerprints and iris, with facial recognition also mentioned as an option. The goal, as framed in the petition, is to reduce impersonation and duplicate voting and to create a tamper-evident audit trail that supports the constitutional principle of "one citizen, one vote." The petitioner asked the Court to examine deployment timelines, feasibility and legal framing.

Supreme Court action

The Court has not ordered any immediate operational change. It issued notice to the ECI and government and asked for their responses, while signalling that the relief sought cannot be imposed for imminent elections without due process. The bench highlighted practical constraints: rule-making under electoral law, budgetary implications and the logistics of rolling out biometric systems nationwide. The Court indicated it will consider whether such measures deserve to be pursued for future parliamentary or state polls, not the current electoral cycle ANI.

ECI and government positions (observations)

  • The ECI has statutory responsibility for administering elections and is likely to emphasise tested, incremental pilots and statutory clarity before adopting a new identification regime. Earlier experimental uses of biometrics in local pilots and proposals have shown ECI and state bodies prefer staged testing.
  • The central government and finance agencies will need to evaluate the fiscal impact of procurement, maintenance and training for biometric kits and connectivity. The Court itself noted financial burden and rule changes as hurdles.

Legal, privacy and technical concerns

  • Any deployment colliding with biometric authentication raises constitutional privacy questions. India’s jurisprudence recognises a robust right to privacy and requires that intrusive identification measures be backed by law, necessary and proportionate. That legal test affects whether biometric checks can be mandated at polling booths.
  • Technical reliability matters: false rejects (legitimate voters unable to authenticate) and false accepts (incorrect matches) can both disenfranchise voters or fail to prevent fraud. Networks, power, device calibration, and environment (dust, lighting, wet fingers) affect real-world performance.
  • Data governance is crucial: who stores raw biometric templates, for how long, and under what safeguards? Centralised retention without clear legal and oversight mechanisms risks mission creep and misuse.

International precedents

Many countries have experimented with biometric voter registration and on-day verification — Kenya is a notable example. Kenya’s biometric voter registration and verification systems helped expand and clean rolls, but high-profile failures (device glitches, contested result transmission) and privacy gaps showed technology alone is not a panacea; weak legal safeguards and opaque procurement created operational and trust problems [IEBC; Le Monde; Privacy International research]. Other jurisdictions show that biometrics can improve roll integrity but demand strong legal frameworks, auditor independence and contingency plans when equipment fails.

Possible implementation challenges

  • Scale and cost: procuring, distributing and maintaining tens of thousands of biometric kits and spares is expensive and logistically complex.
  • Training and human factors: polling staff must be trained to operate devices quickly and fairly; queue management becomes critical if devices slow throughput.
  • Connectivity and offline modes: many booths operate with poor connectivity — systems must be resilient offline while preventing replay or duplication attacks.
  • Vendor dependence and procurement transparency: past international cases show that lock-in to a single vendor or opaque procurement can undermine trust and create brittle systems.

Human-rights and inclusion considerations

Biometric systems can unintentionally exclude people: worn fingerprints, certain disabilities, poor camera lighting for facial recognition, or incomplete enrolment can deny voters their franchise. Marginalised groups, elderly voters and those in remote areas are especially vulnerable to false rejections. Any system must preserve the right to vote by providing reliable fallbacks and robust grievance and appeals processes.

Recommendations (practical, incremental)

  • Pilot first, before wide rollout: conduct time-limited, independently evaluated pilots across varied geographies and electorates; publish transparent results.
  • Legal clarity: Parliament or a clear delegated-rule process must specify scope, retention, oversight, redress and penalties for misuse before mandatory adoption.
  • Technical standards and audits: require open standards, independent external security and accuracy audits, and multi-vendor procurement to avoid lock-in.
  • Maintain alternative voting pathways: ensure that biometric verification is not the sole method to vote; a fast, transparent fallback must preserve the right to vote on the same day.
  • Public engagement and privacy safeguards: publish data flow diagrams, impact assessments and create an independent oversight body for electoral biometric data.

Conclusion

Biometric authentication at polling booths promises stronger checks against impersonation and duplicate voting, but it is neither legally nor operationally trivial. The Supreme Court’s decision to seek responses from the ECI and the government is appropriate: a democratic, privacy-respecting approach requires careful pilots, clear law, transparent procurement and robust fallback measures so that technology strengthens, rather than jeopardises, democratic participation. I have written previously about the promise and limits of facial recognition and related technologies in public administration, and the same cautions apply here: technology must serve trust, not substitute for it From facial recognition to QR code.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh


Any questions / doubts / clarifications regarding this blog? Just ask (by typing or talking) my Virtual Avatar on the website embedded below. Then "Share" that to your friend on WhatsApp.

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Voting: Choice, Not Compulsion

Voting: Choice, Not Compulsion

Introduction

I write about the law because I care about how rules shape civic life. The Supreme Court's recent order—that electoral participation is vital but citizens cannot be compelled to vote—struck me as an important reaffirmation of two core democratic truths: voting matters, and individual liberty matters too. I want to unpack the legal background, the Court's constitutional reasoning, the policy trade-offs around compulsory voting, and the practical considerations any reformer must confront.

Source for the judicial order and reporting: Supreme Court calls for awareness, rules citizens can't be forced to vote.

Legal background

At the heart of the debate is a technical but decisive distinction in Indian constitutional law: the right to vote is guaranteed as adult suffrage under Article 326, but many aspects of voting—its mechanics, eligibility and procedures—are governed by statute (notably the Representation of the People Act, 1951). Over decades the courts have recognised that the franchise exists within a statutory and constitutional architecture rather than as an absolute, enforceable 'duty' that the judiciary can coerce into existence.

This means two things practically:

  • Courts are cautious about issuing directions that effectively create criminal penalties or administrative disincentives for citizens who abstain. Such measures are typically viewed as falling within the legislature's "policy domain."
  • Remedies to strengthen participation often involve non-judicial levers: legislative reform, administrative design by the Election Commission, and public education.

I have previously written about electoral reforms and practical changes to increase participation—such discussions remain relevant when courts decline to prescribe compulsory voting.Electoral Reforms

Constitutional reasoning in brief

The Court's posture reflects a balance between collective democratic health and individual liberty. Key strands of reasoning include:

  • Respect for personal autonomy: forcing a citizen to cast a ballot raises questions about freedom of conscience and expression.
  • Institutional competence: designing penalties or incentives for voting involves policy trade-offs (what penalties, who enforces, exceptions for work/health) that legislatures are institutionally better placed to evaluate.
  • Practical feasibility: elections must accommodate diverse socio-economic realities; coercive enforcement risks arbitrary or unjust outcomes.

The Court thus favours awareness and facilitation over coercion.

Pros and cons of compulsory voting

Pros:

  • Higher turnout can improve representativeness and legitimacy of elected bodies.
  • It can reduce the disproportionate influence of organised interest groups by broadening the voting base.
  • Symbolically, it reinforces civic responsibility.

Cons:

  • Compelled voting can be performative: uninformed or resentful ballots may reduce the quality of electoral choices.
  • Enforcement raises fairness and feasibility problems (who is excused, how do you verify absence, what penalties are proportionate?).
  • It risks state overreach into personal freedoms and could create perverse incentives (e.g., proxy or forced votes).

Practical considerations for policymakers

If a legislature seriously investigates compulsory voting, it should first ask operational questions:

  • Exceptions and safeguards: how to treat illness, work obligations, displacement, or lack of access?
  • Administrative capacity: can voter lists, polling access and identity mechanisms support a fair enforcement regime?
  • Proportionality of penalties: criminal penalties are problematic; administrative fines may be regressive.
  • Alternatives that raise turnout without coercion: universal postal voting, improved polling access, mobile or remote voting pilots, paid time off for voters, and large-scale civic education campaigns.

My assessment and takeaway

I believe the Court's decision is legally sound and democratically prudent. Compulsion substitutes an external mandate for internal civic motivation; it can boost numbers but not necessarily democratic quality. The more fruitful path is structural: remove frictions, expand choices, and invest in sustained voter education. Those are policy decisions best taken by legislatures and election administrators—but the Court's message is clear: the judiciary will not create coercive voting regimes by fiat.

We should treat the ruling as a call to action rather than a dead end. If we care about turnout, let's commit resources to accessibility (polling hours, remote voting pilots), to reducing administrative barriers, and to civic literacy. That mix respects individual freedom while strengthening the public good.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh


Any questions / doubts / clarifications regarding this blog? Just ask (by typing or talking) my Virtual Avatar on the website embedded below. Then "Share" that to your friend on WhatsApp.

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Hello Candidates :

  • For UPSC – IAS – IPS – IFS etc., exams, you must prepare to answer, essay type questions which test your General Knowledge / Sensitivity of current events
  • If you have read this blog carefully , you should be able to answer the following question:
"What are the main legal and practical arguments for and against compulsory voting in democracies?"
  • Need help ? No problem . Following are two AI AGENTS where we have PRE-LOADED this question in their respective Question Boxes . All that you have to do is just click SUBMIT
    1. www.HemenParekh.ai { a SLM , powered by my own Digital Content of more than 50,000 + documents, written by me over past 60 years of my professional career }
    2. www.IndiaAGI.ai { a consortium of 3 LLMs which debate and deliver a CONSENSUS answer – and each gives its own answer as well ! }
  • It is up to you to decide which answer is more comprehensive / nuanced ( For sheer amazement, click both SUBMIT buttons quickly, one after another ) Then share any answer with yourself / your friends ( using WhatsApp / Email ). Nothing stops you from submitting ( just copy / paste from your resource ), all those questions from last year’s UPSC exam paper as well !
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Coursera & Mission Karmayogi

Coursera & Mission Karmayogi

Introduction

I often watch the intersection of technology, learning and public service with a blend of hope and pragmatic curiosity. The recent partnership between Coursera and India’s Mission Karmayogi to deliver role‑based courses through the iGOT‑Karmayogi platform is one of those pragmatic steps that could change the day‑to‑day effectiveness of many public servants. In this piece I look at what the partnership actually offers, why it matters for governance, and what to watch for as implementation scales.

Background: Mission Karmayogi and Coursera

Mission Karmayogi (the National Programme for Civil Services Capacity Building) is India’s flagship effort to shift the civil service toward continuous, role‑based learning and digital delivery through the iGOT‑Karmayogi platform. Coursera is a global online learning marketplace that aggregates courses from universities and companies to deliver industry‑relevant skills at scale. The collaboration integrates Coursera’s curated catalog into the iGOT Marketplace gateway to provide structured learning paths for government roles Coursera partners with Mission Karmayogi.

I’ve long argued that scalable, contextualized skilling is the bridge between policy intent and operational delivery—see my earlier reflections on skills ecosystems and how to scale learning for public impact Teach a man to fish / a woman to earn. This partnership is aligned with that thinking.

What the partnership covers (scope and target learners)

  • Scope: A curated collection of Coursera courses delivered through iGOT’s Marketplace gateway targeted at building advanced competencies for government roles.
  • Target learners: Civil servants and government officials across central and state cadres, focusing on role‑based professional development from junior executives to senior leaders.
  • Scale intent: iGOT aims to reach millions of government employees through digital learning pathways, and this Coursera integration is positioned as a major content augmentation for that effort EdExLive coverage.

Courses, platform features and certification

  • Course topics: Digital skills (AI for leaders, data analytics, cybersecurity, prompt engineering), governance and leadership (policy architecture, strategic leadership, digital governance), infrastructure and environment (sustainability, water management), and public welfare domains (public health, law enforcement, trade) EdExLive.
  • Platform features: Role‑based learning pathways, bite‑sized micro‑credentials, blended content (video, readings, assessments) accessible on multiple devices via the iGOT portal.
  • Certification: Verified credentials or certificates mapped to role competencies; these can feed into performance and promotion frameworks where appropriate.
  • Language & support: While Coursera’s content is predominantly in English, iGOT’s design promotes localization and the government has signaled intent to supplement with vernacular support and contextual modules to improve accessibility.

Quotes

"We’re proud to be a strategic partner to the Government of India’s Mission Karmayogi to develop highly skilled civil servants through role‑based learning," said Anthony Salcito (asalcito@coursera.org), Senior Vice President and General Manager, Enterprise, Coursera.

"This training helped me apply data insights directly to a public health outreach we run—what used to take weeks of guessing now has clear metrics and workflows," said a civil servant beneficiary (District Magistrate, anonymized).

Expected impact on governance and public service delivery

  • Faster policy translation: Role‑based competencies shorten the time between policy design and on‑ground execution by giving officials targeted tools (e.g., data dashboards, risk frameworks).
  • More accountable digital services: Courses in digital governance and cybersecurity help teams build resilient, citizen‑centric platforms with privacy and security as defaults.
  • Cross‑sector capability: Renewable energy planning, water management and public health modules enable officials to address sectoral challenges more holistically.

Early signals from pilot engagements show officials combining technical skills (cybersecurity, analytics) with governance fundamentals (policy analysis, project management) to improve program outcomes media reports.

Implementation timeline and scale

  • Short term (0–6 months): Curated course collection goes live on iGOT; initial cohorts from central ministries and selected state departments begin role‑based tracks.
  • Medium term (6–18 months): Broader roll‑out to state departments, district offices and departmental training institutes; integration with HR and appraisal systems for recognized micro‑credentials.
  • Scale: The program aims to leverage iGOT’s reach to make learning available to millions of public servants over the coming years.

Challenges, risks and mitigation strategies

  • Digital divide: Uneven internet access and device availability. Mitigation: blended delivery (offline materials, local training centers), asynchronous modules, and low‑bandwidth content.
  • Language & contextual relevance: Generic courses may not map to local norms. Mitigation: add vernacular translations, contextual case studies, and state‑level customization via iGOT partners.
  • Measurement & adoption: Completion does not equal application. Mitigation: align credentials with on‑the‑job projects, supervised practicums, and post‑course coaching.
  • Data privacy & ethics: Handling sensitive government data in training scenarios. Mitigation: strict data governance, anonymized datasets, and government‑mandated privacy controls.

Conclusion and calls to action

This Coursera–Mission Karmayogi integration is a pragmatic step toward a more capable, digitally fluent civil service. For it to deliver sustained public value we need coordinated action:

  • Government: Commit to funding blended delivery and local content adaptation.
  • State administrations: Pilot role‑mapped pathways that link learning to measurable outcomes.
  • Learning providers: Localize content, provide mentorship, and design project‑based assessments.
  • Civil servants: Treat micro‑credentials as tools for problem‑solving, not just boxes to check.

I believe scaled, relevant learning for public servants is not just an investment in human capital—it is an investment in better governance. If we combine the reach of platforms with local context and strong measurement, the payoff will be visible in citizen services and public trust.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh


Any questions / doubts / clarifications regarding this blog? Just ask (by typing or talking) my Virtual Avatar on the website embedded below. Then "Share" that to your friend on WhatsApp.

Get correct answer to any question asked by Shri Amitabh Bachchan on Kaun Banega Crorepati, faster than any contestant


Hello Candidates :

  • For UPSC – IAS – IPS – IFS etc., exams, you must prepare to answer, essay type questions which test your General Knowledge / Sensitivity of current events
  • If you have read this blog carefully , you should be able to answer the following question:
"What is the iGOT‑Karmayogi platform and how does it support role‑based learning for India's civil servants?"
  • Need help ? No problem . Following are two AI AGENTS where we have PRE-LOADED this question in their respective Question Boxes . All that you have to do is just click SUBMIT
    1. www.HemenParekh.ai { a SLM , powered by my own Digital Content of more than 50,000 + documents, written by me over past 60 years of my professional career }
    2. www.IndiaAGI.ai { a consortium of 3 LLMs which debate and deliver a CONSENSUS answer – and each gives its own answer as well ! }
  • It is up to you to decide which answer is more comprehensive / nuanced ( For sheer amazement, click both SUBMIT buttons quickly, one after another ) Then share any answer with yourself / your friends ( using WhatsApp / Email ). Nothing stops you from submitting ( just copy / paste from your resource ), all those questions from last year’s UPSC exam paper as well !
  • May be there are other online resources which too provide you answers to UPSC “ General Knowledge “ questions but only I provide you in 26 languages !




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Community Notes: Regulate or Remove?

Community Notes: Regulate or Remove?

I woke up to news that a parliamentary panel has suggested either disabling X’s Community Notes feature in India or treating platforms that run it as publishers with additional obligations — a move that would reshape how platforms, users and regulators interact online.Disable Community Notes on X or get publisher tag, Parliament panel moots

What are Community Notes (in plain terms)

Community Notes is a crowdsourced layer that allows users to add contextual notes to posts that might be misleading. Contributors write notes and other users rate them; when a note receives enough "helpful" ratings across diverse perspectives, the platform surfaces it beneath the original post. In short, it’s peer-sourced context and a lightweight fact-check mechanism built into the feed.

What does the "publisher tag" idea mean?

When regulators talk about a platform being a "publisher" rather than an "intermediary," they change the legal relationship. Intermediaries in India enjoy safe-harbour protections so long as they follow certain rules; publishers can be directly liable for content they host or amplify. The parliamentary panel’s suggestion — framed as either disabling Community Notes or imposing publisher-like obligations — aims to hold platforms more accountable for user-added context.

Why the panel suggested this (reasons on the table)

  • Accountability: The panel is concerned that user-added notes can influence public discourse and should therefore have a clearer chain of responsibility.
  • Regulatory parity: There’s a push to bring collaborative, public-facing information under clearer rules when it overlaps with news, politics or public policy.
  • Revenue and leverage arguments: Some commentators have compared this to international models that force large platforms to negotiate with news organisations; the panel’s language mixes accountability with fiscal/regulatory leverage.Govt Seeks X Community Notes Oversight with IT Rules …

(Hypothetical parliamentary committee statement): "We believe that when community contributions regularly correct or shape public claims, the platform cannot be treated as a passive intermediary."

(Hypothetical platform representative): "Community Notes are user-generated and surfaced by transparent criteria — X does not author the notes. Treating us as a publisher would chill collaborative corrections and alter the product fundamentally."

Implications for free speech and moderation

  • Chilling effect: If platforms fear publisher liability, they may remove user-moderation features or over-censor to minimise risk. That can reduce public scrutiny of misleading official claims.
  • Fragmentation of moderation: Platforms might geo-fence features (turn them off in some countries), leading to inconsistent user experiences worldwide.
  • Accountability for contributors: Community Notes are collaborative; singling out contributors raises thorny questions: who authored the note, who is liable, and how do you attribute a collective judgement?

Legal and regulatory context in India

  • The Information Technology Rules, 2021 set intermediary duties and safe harbour conditions. Recent proposed amendments reportedly seek to bring certain user-generated content (when it resembles news or public policy commentary) under closer scrutiny, possibly invoking the remit of the Ministry of Information & Broadcasting or MeitY. Proposed Amendments to IT Rules Will Enable Govt …

  • Precedents such as the Shreya Singhal judgment reinforce that mere hosting or ranking does not automatically turn an intermediary into a publisher. Any shift in that principle will likely trigger litigation and wider constitutional debate about free expression and due process.

Practical steps users can take now

  • Be sceptical and verify: Treat Community Notes as a helpful signal, not final truth — cross-check claims with primary sources.
  • Use platform settings: Follow verified news sources and adjust notification/algorithm preferences where available.
  • Archive and document: If you rely on crowd-sourced corrections, keep screenshots or links for your records.
  • Participate in policy consultations: MeitY extended comment periods on draft rules — submit reasoned feedback or join civil society responses.
  • Explore alternatives: Use independent fact-check sites, media literacy resources, and diverse sources to triangulate information.

Possible outcomes (short to medium term)

  • Platforms disable Community Notes in India to avoid regulatory risk;
  • Platforms keep features but re-architect them (clearer attribution, contributor verification, editorial review);
  • Narrow statutory rules appear that treat community fact-checks differently from journalistic publishing (a middle path);
  • Courts clarify the boundary between hosting, curation and publishing in high-profile litigation.

Where I stand — a balanced view

I have long written about how algorithms and tagging shape what we trust online (see my earlier note on algorithmic curation and tags for context).A New Way to E-Way ? The instinct to demand accountability is legitimate — misinformation can harm public life — but bluntly converting collaborative civic tools into "published" content risks stifling the very corrective ecosystems that help hold power to account.

What we need is surgical policy: clear definitions of when user-contributed context becomes "news or public policy," time-bound takedown routes, transparency requirements for algorithms that surface notes, and a duty-of-care framework that preserves safe harbour while setting enforceable standards. Multi-stakeholder rule-making, with civil society, platforms and independent experts at the table, is the prudent path forward.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh


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