Karnataka HC Backs Sahyog Portal As 'Instrument Of Public Good'; What is It? Why Elon Musk's X Is Against It?
Sahyog Portal Controversy: Tech billionaire Elon Musk's X (formerly Twitter) on Monday expressed concern after Karnataka High Court dismissed its plea to challenge Sahyog Portal. The centralised platform is developed by the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA), to issue orders to block offensive content from social media.
While dismissing X plea, Karnataka High Court called 'Sahyog' an 'instrument of public good' and upheld its validity. Justice M Nagaprasanna-led HC bench, on Wednesday, September 26, had mentioned that social media platforms operating in India need regulatory oversight. Karnataka HC, in its order, highlighted that "social media as a modern amphitheatre of ideas cannot be left in a state of anarchic freedom."

Disagreeing with Karnataka HC order, X mentioned that it will challenge the order as it fails to address the core constitutional issues. " We respectfully disagree with the view that we have no right to raise these concerns because of our incorporation abroad-X contributes significantly to public discourse in India and the voice of our users is at the heart of our platform. We will appeal this order to defend free expression," read a statement by X's Global Government Affairs.
As the recent turf between X and Karnataka judiciary has dropped the spotlight on Sahyog portal, let's understand the platform's key functions and its controversy with X.
What is Sahyog Portal?
Launched by the Ministry of Home Affairs in October 2024, Sahyog portal offers a common platform for all the authorised agencies to take swift action against misinformation on online platforms like X, Facebook, etc.
The portal has been developed to automate the process of sending notices to intermediaries by the state government, their IT department or associated agency under IT Act, 2000. The platform lets relevant government agencies to take swift action against online misinformation and facilitate the removal or disabling of access to any information, data or communication.
Why X Is Against Sahyog Portal?
The Karnataka High Court's recent order dismissing X's plea would let millions of police officers to issue arbitrary takedown orders through Sahyog portal, stated X in its public statement.
"This new regime has no basis in the law, circumvents Section 69A of the IT Act, violates Supreme Court rulings, and infringes Indian citizens' constitutional rights to freedom of speech and expression," it added.
Sahyog portal, according to X, enables officers to issue take down orders for online content. As per its statement, the removal can also be "based solely on allegations of "illegality," without judicial review or due process for the speakers, and threatens platforms with criminal liability for non-compliance."
What Karnataka HC Said About Sahyog Portal?
Karnataka HC dismissed plea against Sahyog Portal. In its order, Karnataka HC ruled that the portal is "far from being a constitutional anathema". The HC bench also described it as an "instrument of public good conceived", reported Bar and Bench.
The HC also cited that X, being an American company, can't challenge any regulation citing its 'right to free speech' under Article 19. "Article 19 is luminous in its promise but remains a charter of rights conferred upon citizens only. A petitioner who is not a citizen cannot claim sanctuary under it," Bar and Bench quoted Karnataka HC.
As per the report, HC also pointed out X's ambiguous nature as it follows social media takedown orders in the US, but refuses to do so in India. "Under the 'take down' law of that jurisdiction, it chooses to follow orders criminalising violations. Yet the same platform refuses to comply with take-down directions in this nation. This is sans countenance," Bar and Bench quoted HC bench order.


Click it and Unblock the Notifications



