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regular-article-logo Friday, 15 November 2024

WhatsApp group admins not liable for objectionable posts by members, rules HC

'Administrator does not have physical or any control over what a member of a group is posting thereon'

Our Bureau, PTI Kochi Published 24.02.22, 12:26 PM
The ruling by the high court came while quashing a POCSO case against the admin of a WhatsApp group one of whose members had posted child pornography on it.

The ruling by the high court came while quashing a POCSO case against the admin of a WhatsApp group one of whose members had posted child pornography on it. File picture

The administrators or creators of a WhatsApp group cannot be held vicariously liable for any objectionable content posted on it by any of its members, the Kerala High Court has held.

The ruling by the high court came while quashing a POCSO case against the admin of a WhatsApp group one of whose members had posted child pornography on it.

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The court said that as held by the Bombay and Delhi High Courts, "The only privilege enjoyed by the admin of a WhatsApp group over other members is that he can either add or delete any of the members from the group".

"He does not have physical or any control otherwise over what a member of a group is posting thereon. He cannot moderate or censor messages in a group.

"Thus, Creator or Administrator of a WhatsApp group, merely acting in that capacity, cannot be vicariously held liable for any objectionable content posted by a member of the group," the Kerala HC said.

In the instant matter, the petitioner had created a WhatsApp group called 'FRIENDS' and he had made two other persons also as admins along with him and one of them posted in the group a porn video depicting children engaged in a sexually explicit act.

As a result, police lodged a crime against that person -- also the accused no. 1 -- under the Information Technology Act and the Protection of Children from Sexual Offence (POCSO) Act.

Subsequently, the petitioner was arrayed as accused no. 2 and after the investigation was completed, a final report was filed before the trial court.

The petitioner, in his plea seeking quashing of the proceedings against him, had contended that even if the entire allegations and the material collected are taken together at their face value, they do not indicate that he committed any offense.

The high court agreed with the contention and said, "There is nothing on record to suggest that the petitioner has published or transmitted or caused to be published or transmitted in any electronic form the alleged obscene material or he browsed or downloaded the said material or, in any way, facilitated abusing children online

"Similarly, the prosecution has no case that the petitioner used children in any form of media for his sexual gratification or used them for pornographic purpose or stored, for commercial purpose, any child pornographic material."

The court also said that there was no law by which an admin of any messaging service can be held liable for a post made by a member of a group.

"A WhatsApp Admin cannot bean intermediary under the IT Act. He does not receive or transmit any record or provide any service with respect to such record.

"There is no master-servant or principal-agent relationship between the Admin of a WhatsApp group and its members. It goes against basic principles of criminal law to hold an Admin liable for a post published by someone else in the group," the court said.

It further said that the basic ingredients of the offenses alleged "are altogether absent as against the petitioner" and quashed the entire proceedings in the case against him.

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