THE CHANGING ROLE OF INTERMEDIARIES IN THE INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY ERA
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Abstract
Modern era may aptly be described as the Information Technology era where the use of electronic or digital devices has increased manifold. Netizens are active on various platforms on the internet. The word Intermediary had been defined in the Information Technology Act, 2000. Prior to Amendment of 2009, Intermediary with respect to any particular electronic message, meant any person who on behalf of another person receives, stores or transmits that message or provides any service with respect to that message. In the 2009 amendment, this definition was further extended. It says that Intermediary with respect to any electronic records means any person acting on behalf of another person receives, stores or transmits that record or provides any service in that regard. It includes telecom service providers, network service providers, internet service providers, web-hosting service providers and many more. Thus, the word ' intermediary & #39; has been defined in the Information Technology Act, 2000. However, there is no separate classification of the intermediaries in the Act itself, In 2021, for the first time, a separate classification for the social media intermediaries was introduced by the Information Technology (Intermediary Guidelines and Digital Media Ethics Code) Rules, 2021. This clearly specified the government's intent to make the intermediaries more responsible. The basic idea behind this change was that intermediaries don't have control over the content posted on their platform. Hence, they enjoy a legal immunity against third party content posted on their platform, as long as they adhere to certain due diligence requirements, termed as & #39; safe harbour & #39;. But such regulations in regard to other intermediaries are not available, including e- commerce sites, fact-checking portals etc. presently.
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