India3 views
India proposes making government advisories legally binding on tech giants
In new proposed rules on Monday, the government said non-compliance with advisories or guidelines issued by the IT ministry would be treated as a failure to meet the conditions for safe harbour In new proposed rules on…
In new proposed rules on Monday, the government said non-compliance with advisories or guidelines issued by the IT ministry would be treated as a failure to meet the conditions for safe harbour In new proposed rules on Monday, the government said non-compliance with advisories or guidelines issued by the IT ministry would be treated as a failure to…
Key takeaways
Quick scan — what you need to know:
- In new proposed rules on Monday, the government said non-compliance with advisories or guidelines issued by the IT ministry would be treated as a failure to meet the conditions for safe harbour In…
- In new proposed rules on Monday, the government said non-compliance with advisories or guidelines issued by the IT ministry
- would be treated as a failure to meet the conditions for safe harbour In new proposed rules on Monday, the government said
- non-compliance with advisories or guidelines issued by the IT ministry would be treated as a failure to meet the conditions for
Background
What led here, in plain terms:
- ew proposed rules on Monday, the government said non-compliance with advisories or guidelines issued by the IT ministry would be treated as a failure to meet the conditions for safe harbour
- Full context often emerges as officials, markets, or courts add updates.
Why it matters
Why readers and decision-makers should care:
- In new proposed rules on Monday, the government said non-compliance with advisories or guidelines issued by the IT ministry
- would be treated as a failure to meet the conditions for safe harbour In new proposed rules on Monday, the government said
- non-compliance with advisories or guidelines issued by the IT ministry would be treated as a failure to meet the conditions for