The Tharoor-led committee questioned top executives of Facebook and Twitter in India if the platforms had the right to restrict free speech and ban political figures, like former US President Donald Trump
Image: Burhaan Kinu/ Hindustan Times via Getty Images
Facebook and Twitter’s ban on former US President Donald Trump’s social media accounts and WhatsApp’s now-deferred privacy policy update dominated the discussion during Information Technology Parliamentary Committee’s meeting on Thursday (January 21). The role of intermediaries in moderating free speech was debated at length in the Shashi Tharoor-led committee, Forbes India has learnt after talking to multiple sources aware of the proceedings.
Facebook-owned WhatsApp was represented by its Public Policy Director in India, Shivnath Thukral, who was accompanied by Facebook’s Associate General Counsel Saanjh Purohit. Twitter was represented by Mahima Kaul, Twitter’s Director in India and the head of public policy and government partnerships in the country, along with Ayushi Kapoor, Twitter’s legal counsel for India.
The three-hour meeting saw submissions by the IT Ministry, followed by Facebook and WhatsApp, and Twitter. Although the committee was scheduled to discuss the draft report on 5G preparedness in India on January 22, the session did not convene due to a lack of quorum. According to the rules of procedure, attendance of one-third of the total members is required for quorum which, in the case of this 31-member committee, is 11 members.
Below is a gist of the key issues discussed:
Did Facebook and Twitter have the right to de-platform Trump?