In what could be a fresh trouble for OTT streaming platforms, Delhi High Court on Monday reportedly said that there is a need to regulate content with vulgar language on such platforms. While hearing a case filed with regards to the webseries ‘College Romance’, being streamed on SonyLiv, YouTube and TVFPlay, the HC said that the language used in the show is ‘obscene and vulgar’. The court also upheld that the show’s director Simarpreet Singh and actor Apoorva Arora are liable to face action under the Information Technology Act, 2000.
Noting that the bench had to watch the episodes via earphones, the HC was quoted by LiveLaw as saying that the ‘profanity of the language’ cannot have been heard without ‘shocking or alarming the people around’.
The court also directed the Ministry of Information and Technology to take steps to enforce stricter implementation of the IT Rules and also undertake steps to make necessary laws to deal with such issues.
While the Delhi HC upheld the registration of an FIR under the IT Act against TVFPlay, Singh and Arora, it also stated that the direction does not entail arrests of the accused persons.
The HC also pulled up SonyLiv, YouTube and TVFPlay for violating the IT Rules by not giving any warning about excessive use of expletives and no age classification with regards to the webseries. “The web series was available to every age group. Therefore, this web series also stood covered under violation of the Rules of 2021,” the court added.
Describing its rationale behind the order, the HC noted that the concept of morality differs in every country. It also remarked that the issue of use of vulgar language on social media platforms that are open to ‘children of tender age’ needs to be taken seriously.
Noting that even though the freedom to watch any show is with an individual, the Delhi HC remarked that ‘foul language’ used on the webseries cannot ‘take shelter under the argument of the new generation using such language.’
In another major observation, the court also said that the use of ‘obscene words and foul language’ on social media platforms needs to be regulated when it ‘crosses a certain line’. It also said that such words can be a ‘true threat to impressionable minds’ and cannot be guaranteed protection under free speech norms.