Twitter failed to appoint all 3 legal officers in India – News2IN
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Twitter failed to appoint all 3 legal officers in India

Twitter failed to appoint all 3 legal officers in India
Written by news2in

New Delhi: Although repeated reminders from the government, Twitter has failed to appoint the three law officers mandated under the new rules.
The company has been asked to “explain non-compliance”, especially because it has not offered real reasons for delay after the original deadline to get the officers ended on May 25.
The company currently faces a series of legal and criminal cases.
in a country.
Read the Alsotwitter Interim Grievance Officer for India only stopped a few weeks after Interm Interm Interm Complaints officer for India Dharmendra Chatur has resigned, leaving micro-blogging sites without complaint officials as mandated by new rules to overcome complaints from Indian customers, according to sources.
The social media company website has no failure to appoint legal officers to come even though Twitter convinced the previous government that they had appointed a head compliance head, and also in the process of falling in line with wider guidelines.
“Twitter has failed to appoint the three officers set by law, and must explain the reason now,” said Sumber Toi.
Read AlSotwitter Loss Law Shield in India for the 3rd party containteTwitter has lost the “safe harbor” immunity which is coveted in India for his failure to appoint legal officers for the role of the company in line with the new rules, including the country.
Implementing Director, can now face criminal questions and obligations under the IPC Overan Interim Grievance RedRessal Officer, Dharmendra Chatur, has also resigned.
Twitter has received the Director of Global Legal Policy Jeremy Kessel for this position as another temporary step, although this appointment is not in line with the guidelines because complaint officers need to be based on India.
Twitter so far a non-committee on this problem, especially when officers must be based in India and are in rolls of the parent company (US headquarters) than the Indian mandate.
It is understood that the government looked into the wrong depiction of the Indian map on Twitter, mainly because it was not issued by third-party users but by the company itself.
The government sees this as a publisher error than an intermediary.
Read the AlSotwitter said the service returned after falling because some userStwitter experienced blackouts on Thursday with many users who reported problems when posting, searching and sharing content through micro-blogging sites.
However, social media sites later said that the service has now been restored after a brief disturbance.

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