In its petition before the Delhi High Court, while the fact-checking website says it should be exempted from the Code of Ethics, the court refused to grant a stay on any coercive action taken by the government for non-compliance
In a petition filed before the Delhi High Court, Alt News wants the court to declare that it is not a publisher of news and current affairs.
Are articles published by a fact-checking publication verifying the veracity of publicly available information “news and current affairs content”, as defined under the Information Technology (Intermediary Guidelines and Digital Media Ethics Code) Rules, 2021? According to fact-checking website Alt News, they’re not.
In a petition filed before the Delhi High Court, seeking Part III of the Rules, the Digital Media Code of Ethics—that regulates online news publishers and streaming platforms—to be declared unconstitutional and ultra vires (beyond the mandate) of the Information Technology Act, Alt News also wants the court to declare that Alt News is not a publisher of news and current affairs content and should therefore not be mandated to comply with the code.
Apart from arguing that is not a publisher, Alt News, in the same vein as The Wire, The Quint, The News Minute and Live Law before it, has argued that the Code of Ethics is ultra vires, impinges on freedom of speech and expression, and erodes free media via an adjudicatory mechanism that is headed by the central government.
Calling the rules “sweeping”, “onerous”, “burdensome”, Alt News’s petition says that they impinge on freedom of speech, are “draconian”, “unjust”, where the central government has the final say on complaints filed against content on a news portal, and has the power to “interfere even in the absence of any complaint(s)”.
The vacation bench constituting Justices C Hari Shankar and Subramonium Prasad has tagged Alt News’s petition with those of The Wire and The Quint. Senior Advocate Nitya Ramakrishnan, on behalf of all three publications, today had sought a stay on any coercive action by the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting (MIB) for not complying with the code while the petitions were being heard. The bench asked why the stay was not sought from the regular bench. Ramakrishnan replied that the threat of coercive action was brought up only via a June 18 notice from MIB, at which point the court had already broken for vacation. The bench refused to grant a stay, stating that it was not in agreement with her.