Cyber Trolling
Cyber Trolling
Dr. Ritu Gautam
[Cyber Law Expert]
It
has become a frequent feature in the news citing famous personalities being
trolled on various social networking sites like Facebook, Instagram, Twitter
etc. Most of them were female celebrities like Taapsee Panuu, Radhika Apte, Ameesha
Patel, Kangna Raunat, Priyanka Chopra, Sonam Kapoor and who not. I think every
female who speaks her mind or expresses her opinion, is vulnerable to cyber
trolling. Though females are more prone to trolling but even males do not enjoy
any immunity from this behavior and celebrities like Abhishek Bachchan, Varun Dhawan,
Salman Khan even Amitabh Bachchan have been subjected to such trolling.
What is Cyber Trolling?
For
those who are not familiar with this phenomenon developed in last decade due to
the advent of social media, Trolling can be defined as an act or a series
of acts, of intentionally creating discord, insult, mental injury on the
Internet by starting quarrels or upsetting people by posting inflammatory or
off-topic or hateful comment, using offensive language, causing annoyance to
someone, sexually colored remark, menacing character of a person, in an online
community.
Basically,
a social media troll is someone who purposely says something offensive
or controversial in order to provoke or get a rise out of other users. Cyber
trolling can quickly take more devious forms, in the shape of cyber bullying,
cyber harassment or sometime cyber stalking.
Everyone
joins in acknowledging the need of taking some measure to discourage such
offensive behavior, but they are paradoxically equivocal against any
curtailment of speech. The proponents of free speech fiercely argue against any
intervention by government or law enforcement citing it to be their democratic
right. Freedom of expression is the fundamental right provided by the
Constitution (Article 19) to every citizen of India which cannot be infringed
even by the government.
But
its important to understand that no right is an absolute right, and every right
has certain reasonable restrictions along with a duty i.e. duty to respect
privacy, culture, religious beliefs and practices and profession.
Do we have Laws for cyber Trolling?
According
to NCRB reports after “Hacking”, Cyber trolling/bullying/ harassment was the
most invoking section of the Information Technology (Amendment) Act 2008 i.e. “66A.
Punishment for sending offensive messages through communication service, etc. which
stated that
“Any person who sends, by means of a computer
resource or a communication device,—
(a)
any information that is grossly offensive or has menacing character; or
(b)
any information which he knows to be false, but for the purpose of causing
annoyance, inconvenience, danger, obstruction, insult, injury, criminal
intimidation, enmity, hatred or ill will, persistently by making use of such
computer resource or a communication device,
(c)
any electronic mail or electronic mail message for the purpose of causing
annoyance or inconvenience or to deceive or to mislead the addressee or
recipient about the origin of such messages,
shall
be punishable with imprisonment for a term which may extend to three years and
with fine”
But
this section was used as tool by law enforcement and governments to target
individuals on the basis of political affiliations, sexual orientation,
religious or racial profiling. Such arbitrary misuse was brought to the
attention of the judiciary and resultantly Supreme Court of India considered it
to be vague or loosely defined and struck down this section in the case of
Shreya Singhal v. Union of India on March 2015. It’s not to question the
prudence of the judiciary but the critical requirement to make cyberspace
cordial and tolerable.
Trolling is ubiquitous as is internet, so how other countries are
dealing with it?
UK is having a
whole comprehensive piece of legislature over this topic named as “Malicious Communication
Act 2004” which states that “Any person who sends a letter, electronic
communication or article of any description to a person that conveys a message
that is indecent or highly offensive, a threat or false information. If
the reason for that communication was to cause distress or anxiety to the
recipient or to any other person, then the sender is guilty of an offence.” This
includes mobile phones and the Internet (any form of electronic communication).
The offence occurs even though those targeted might not have actually receive
the message and liable for punishment upto two-years of jail sentence.
Australia is having
the law for the same under Part 10.2 of its Criminal code.
United States is having
“Violence against Women Act” and Under federal Law section 47 U.S.C. § 223(a)(1)(A)
specifically deals with cyber harassment and trolling.
New Zealand passed
a similar law in 2015
We
believe that God help those who help themselves and there a very famous legal
maxim under Roman Law which says that, “Vigilantibus et non dormientibus
succurrunt jura” means the law comes to the assistance of those who
are vigilant with their rights, and not those who sleep on their
rights.
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Suprb maam
ReplyDeletegreat writing about a real problem.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteWhy you removed your complaint? I believe criticism is very much necessary for improvement
DeleteNice one mam this is one of the problems most people face in different countries not only in india. 👏👏
ReplyDeleteYes you’re right but various countries have strict laws on the same subject and further making efforts, where as we hv struck down our specific section and not making efforts for amendment and re-enforcement of the same
DeleteSuperb didi...
ReplyDeleteGreat written...
Part of the problem with efforts to legislate "trolling" is the difficulty defining the term. Whereas most of US states still don't have any firm law or regulations on this internet abuse however this exposure of technology is new to common people and may take a while to be regulated. We individually should be help responsible to use our freedom of speech respectfully meanwhile.
ReplyDeleteThank you for you attention and write up on much needed subject.
Great topic and summary. Trolling and cyberbullying seems to be one of those taboo subjects to address. The layers between free-speech, rights, intent, and interpretation make this issue difficult to resolve. Defining intent seems to be one of the biggest hurdles. We all experience words being taken out of context or interpreted in a way the writer did not intend. Perhaps establishing a Universal list of phrases and statements that are clear in their intent and cannot be misconstrued may help get the ball rolling. I dont think too many can argue that a phrase like "please kill yourself" cannot be interpreted in any other way but evil. Apologies for such a harsh example but I'm pretty sure you understand my point.
ReplyDeleteKeep doing your good work and continue exposing this issue. As much as we hope for it to simply go away, we all know that's not going to happen.
Very informative blog Dr. Ritu! Even I have been facing such things whenever I tried to put my individual view on empowerment or political scenario. Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteVery informative blog Dr. Ritu! Even I have been facing such things whenever I tried to put my individual view on empowerment or political scenario. Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDelete