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regular-article-logo Monday, 23 December 2024

Twitter appoints resident grievance officer, publishes first compliance report under IT rules

The US social media giant’s website provided contact details of the new officer and procedure for users to report potential violations of its rules and terms

PTI New Delhi Published 12.07.21, 02:37 AM
Representational image.

Representational image. Shutterstock

Amid tensions with the government, Twitter has appointed a resident grievance officer, days after it designated a chief compliance officer, as it also released its first India Transparency Report to meet the new IT rules.

The US social media giant’s website has listed Vinay Prakash as the new grievance officer, providing contact details and procedure for users to report potential violations of its rules and terms.

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Twitter had previously appointed Dharmendra Chatur as its interim grievance officer for India after the new IT rules came into force on May 26. However, Chatur stepped down within weeks of taking over the key role.

California-based Jeremy Kessel was named as India’s grievance redressal officer, on the platform’s website — although the appointment did not meet the requirements of IT rules that clearly mandate that the key officers — grievance officer, chief compliance officer and nodal officer — to be residents of India.

Twitter’s website on Sunday showed Vinay Prakash as the resident grievance officer. “Twitter can be contacted in India at the following address: 4th Floor, The Estate, 121 Dickenson Road, Bangalore 560 042,” the page further said.

Prakash’s name appears along with Kessel, who is the global legal policy director, and is based in the US.

Twitter did not share additional details of the new resident grievance officer.

Compliance report

Twitter has also published its maiden compliance report. In its India Transparency Report: User Grievances and Proactive Monitoring July 2021 report, Twitter said it had received 94 grievances and “actioned” 133 URLs between May 26 and June 25, 2021.

Twitter said the complaints received during the period included defamation (20), abuse/harassment (6), sensitive adult content (4), impersonation and privacy infringement (3 each), IP-related infringement (1), and misinformation and manipulated media (1).

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