Millions of Social Media Users in India Set to Lose Their Anonymity

India’s proposed new rules cover all social media and messaging apps with more than 5 million users.

Advertisement
By Saritha Rai, Bloomberg | Updated: 13 February 2020 12:18 IST
Highlights
  • Facebook, YouTube, Twitter, TikTok will have to reveal users’ identities
  • The new rules are expected to be published later this month
  • India proposed these guidelines in December 2018

The rules cover all social media and messaging apps with more than 5 million users

Photo Credit: Bloomberg

Facebook, YouTube, Twitter, and TikTok will have to reveal users' identities if Indian government agencies ask them to, according to the country's controversial new rules for social media companies and messaging apps expected to be published later this month. The requirement comes as governments around the world are trying to hold social media companies more accountable for the content that circulates on their platforms, whether it's fake news, child porn, racist invective or terrorism-related content. India's new guidelines go further than most other countries' by requiring blanket cooperation with government inquiries, no warrant or judicial order required.

India proposed these guidelines in December 2018 and asked for public comment. The Internet and Mobile Association of India, a trade group that counts Facebook, Amazon.com, and Alphabet's Google among its members, responded that the requirements “would be a violation of the right to privacy recognized by the Supreme Court.”

But the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology is expected to publish the new rules later this month without major changes, according to a government official familiar with the matter.

Advertisement

“The guidelines for intermediaries are under process,” said N.N. Kaul, the media adviser to the minister of electronics & information technology. “We cannot comment on the guidelines or changes till they are published.”

The provisions in the earlier draft had required platforms such as Google's YouTube or ByteDance's TikTok, Facebook or its Instagram and WhatsApp apps, to help the government trace the origins of a post within 72 hours of a request. The companies would also have to preserve their records for at least 180 days to aid government investigators, establish a brick-and-mortar operation within India and appoint both a grievance officer to deal with user complaints and a government liaison. The Ministry is still finalising the language and content.

The rules cover all social media and messaging apps with more than 5 million users. India, with 1.3 billion people, has about 500 million Internet users. It isn't clear whether the identities of foreign users would be subject to the Indian government's inquiries.

Advertisement

Law enforcement agencies around the world have been frustrated by tech companies that have refused to identify users, unlock devices or generally cooperate with government investigations, particularly in cases relating to terrorism.

In India, where the Internet -- and fake news -- are still relatively new phenomenon, a false report of rampant child abduction and organ harvesting circulated widely via WhatsApp, leading to mob violence and over three dozen fatal lynchings in 2017 and 2018.

Advertisement

WhatsApp refused a request from the government to reveal the origins of the rumours, citing its promise of privacy and end-to-end encryption for its 400 million Indian users. It instead offered to fund research into preventing the spread of fake news and mounted a public education campaign in the country, its biggest global market.

WhatsApp will “not compromise on security because that would make people less safe,” it said in a statement Wednesday, adding its global user base had reached over 2 billion. “For even more protection, we work with top security experts, employ industry leading technology to stop misuse as well as provide controls and ways to report issues — without sacrificing privacy.”

Advertisement

At the same time, tech companies and civil rights groups say the new rules are an invitation to abuse and censorship, as well as a burdensome requirement on new and growing companies.

In an open letter to IT minister Ravi Shankar Prasad, executives from Mozilla, GitHub, and Cloudflare said the guidelines could lead to “automated censorship” and “increase surveillance.“ In order to be able to trace the originator of content, platforms would basically be required to surveil their users, undermine encryption, and harm the fundamental right to privacy of Indian users, they said.

Companies such as Mozilla or Wikipedia wouldn't fall under the new rules, the government official said. Browsers, operating systems, and online repositories of knowledge, software development platforms, are all exempt. Only social media platforms and messaging apps will be covered.

© 2020 Bloomberg LP

 

Catch the latest from the Consumer Electronics Show on Gadgets 360, at our CES 2026 hub.

Further reading: Facebook, YouTube, Twitter, TikTok
Advertisement

Related Stories

Popular Mobile Brands
  1. OTT Releases of the Week (Jan 12 - Jan 18): Taskaree, 120 Bahadur, and More
  2. Apple May Launch M5 Pro and M5 Max MacBook Pro Models This Month
  3. iPhone 17e Launch Timeline Leaked Again Alongside Key Specifications
  4. Nothing Confirms Bengaluru as Location for India's First Flagship Store
  5. Here's When the Motorola Signature Will Launch in India
  6. Realme P4 Power 5G Will be Launched in India Soon: See Expected Specs
  7. iQOO Z11 Turbo With 200-Megapixel Camera Arrives in China at This Price
  8. Amazon Great Republic Day Sale 2026: Best Deals on iQOO, Vivo Phones
  9. Civilization VII Coming to iPhone, iPad as Part of Apple Arcade Next Month
  10. Amazon Sale: Best Deals on Galaxy S25 Ultra and More Samsung Phones
  1. NASA Says the Year 2025 Almost Became Earth's Hottest Recorded Year Ever
  2. Wicked: For Good OTT Release: Know When, Where to Watch the Musical Fantasy
  3. Paul McCartney: Man on the Run OTT Release: When, Where to Watch the Biographical Music Documentary
  4. Civilization VII Coming to iPhone, iPad as Part of Apple Arcade in February
  5. Anantha Streaming Now: Everything You Need to Know About the Tamil Spiritual Drama
  6. Him Is Streaming Online: Know Where to Watch Jordan Peele's Psychological Horror
  7. OpenAI’s Hardware Pivot: Rejecting Apple to Focus on Jony Ive-Designed AI Wearables
  8. iQOO Z11 Turbo Launched With 7,600mAh Battery, 200-Megapixel Camera: Price, Specifications
  9. Silent Truth Is Now Streaming: Know Where to Watch the Japanese Crime Mystery Online
  10. Google Photos App Could Soon Bring New Battery Saving Feature, Suggests APK Teardown
Gadgets 360 is available in
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2026. All rights reserved.