You are currently viewing Twitter In ‘Final Stages’ Of Appointing Resident Grievance Officer In India

Twitter In ‘Final Stages’ Of Appointing Resident Grievance Officer In India


The company has now appointed California-based global legal policy director Jeremy Kessel as interim new grievance officer for India

Social media platforms with more than 5 Mn users are required to appoint a chief compliance officer, a nodal officer and a grievance officer

So far, Google, Facebook and Instagram have submitted the mandated report in compliance with the new IT rules

Days after Twitter’s interim resident grievance officer Dharmendra Chatur quit his post, the microblogging site on Saturday, July 03, said the company is in its final stages of appointing an executive for the role.

The company has now appointed its California-based global legal policy director Jeremy Kessel as the new grievance officer for India in an attempt to fulfill the criteria under the new Information Technology Rules, 2021. The rules, however, call for an Indian resident for the role.

The centre has also confronted Twitter for deliberate defiance and failure to comply with India’s new IT rules, and not appointing the requisite officers, leading to it losing the ‘safe harbour’ immunity.

Under the new IT rules, social media intermediaries with more than 5 Mn users are required to appoint a chief compliance officer, a nodal officer and a grievance officer and these officials have to be a resident in India.

Non-compliance with the digital rules would result in these platforms losing the intermediary status that provides them immunity from liabilities over any third-party data hosted by them.

So far, Facebook, Google and Instagram have submitted their reports in compliance with the new IT rules. Union IT minister Ravi Shankar Prasad even took to Twitter to praise these tech giants.

“Nice to see significant social media platforms like Google, Facebook and Instagram following the new IT Rules. First compliance report on voluntary removal of offensive posts published by them as per IT Rules is a big step towards transparency.” he tweeted.

Given the severity of the rules, many platforms have announced that they have complied with the terms and conditions of the intermediary guidelines. Even homegrown regional language microblogging platform Koo claimed it had completed its compliance processes and is now ready for operations under the new regime. Since the new rules only apply to significant social media intermediaries — the ones with over 5 Mn users in India — not every platform needs to make changes. Koo claims to have more than 6 Mn users.

However, Twitter is still yet to submit the mandated report. Due to this, the microblogging platform has lost its legal shield as an intermediary in India, becoming liable for users posting any unlawful content.

Interestingly, Twitter has been engaged in a major battle with the central government over ‘manipulated media’ tags on some posts by members of the ruling party Bharatiya Janata Party for over a month now. While the government has told Twitter to delete the tags, Twitter has not acted on the directive. As a result, members of the Delhi Police’s special cell seemingly raided two of Twitter’s offices in India.

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