10-11-2006, 10:00 AM
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->Â <b>PIL against India baiters</b>
KS Manojkumar
Aurangabad, October 10, 2006
The Bombay High Court's Aurangabad bench has served a notice on Google for allowing a hate campaign against India on its social-networking site orkut.com.
The order was issued on Monday in response to a public-interest petition filed by Yugant Marlapalle, an advocate in Aurangabad. Google has six weeks to respond. <b>The petition said a community called âWe Hate Indiaâ â full of anti-India propaganda and with a picture of the Tricolour being burnt â has been created on Orkut. It sought the removal of the community from the site.</b>
<b>The âWe Hate Indiaâ group currently has 103 members, almost all of whom are from Pakistan. The siteâs creator calls himself Miraslov Stankovic and claims he is based in Russia. His other Orkut communities include "Israel Must be Destroyed" and "I Hate Himesh Reshammiya".</b>
Googleâs India spokeswoman Roli Aggarwal said she was aware of the case but declined to comment, saying the response would have to come from the US where Orkut was based.
Supreme Court lawyer Pavan Duggal said Google would be treated as a network-service provider under Indian law. If the site could be viewed and used in India, the country had a legitimate interest in its contents, he said.
<b>Orkut also has 10 communities called "We hate Pakistan", most of whose members are Indians. "It is part of the war between India and Pakistan in cyberspace," said cyber security analyst Subimal Bhattacharjee.</b>
Orkutâs terms of service says it may, but shall have no obligation to, remove materials that it determines in its sole discretion are unlawful and objectionable.
(with inputs from
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KS Manojkumar
Aurangabad, October 10, 2006
The Bombay High Court's Aurangabad bench has served a notice on Google for allowing a hate campaign against India on its social-networking site orkut.com.
The order was issued on Monday in response to a public-interest petition filed by Yugant Marlapalle, an advocate in Aurangabad. Google has six weeks to respond. <b>The petition said a community called âWe Hate Indiaâ â full of anti-India propaganda and with a picture of the Tricolour being burnt â has been created on Orkut. It sought the removal of the community from the site.</b>
<b>The âWe Hate Indiaâ group currently has 103 members, almost all of whom are from Pakistan. The siteâs creator calls himself Miraslov Stankovic and claims he is based in Russia. His other Orkut communities include "Israel Must be Destroyed" and "I Hate Himesh Reshammiya".</b>
Googleâs India spokeswoman Roli Aggarwal said she was aware of the case but declined to comment, saying the response would have to come from the US where Orkut was based.
Supreme Court lawyer Pavan Duggal said Google would be treated as a network-service provider under Indian law. If the site could be viewed and used in India, the country had a legitimate interest in its contents, he said.
<b>Orkut also has 10 communities called "We hate Pakistan", most of whose members are Indians. "It is part of the war between India and Pakistan in cyberspace," said cyber security analyst Subimal Bhattacharjee.</b>
Orkutâs terms of service says it may, but shall have no obligation to, remove materials that it determines in its sole discretion are unlawful and objectionable.
(with inputs from
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