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Why is an Indian court order determining what you can read on the internet?
On Nov. 16, 2023, Reuters published a deeply-reported investigation about an Indian company named Appin, which the report alleged 鈥済rew from an educational startup to a hack-for-hire powerhouse that stole secrets from executives, politicians, military officials and wealthy elites around the globe.鈥
The piece alleged Appin 鈥渉acked on an industrial scale,鈥 acting as a 鈥減remier provider of cyberespionage services for private investigators working on behalf of big business, law firms and wealthy clients.鈥 But you won鈥檛 find this story online. , and some other outlets have followed suit.
The orchestrators of this disappearing act? A against Reuters and its journalists secured in India by a group operating under the Appin name.
But this isn鈥檛 just affecting what can be read in India. Globally, even in the United States, people are unable to read reports about Appin because a court order from half a world away limits 别惫别谤测辞苍别鈥檚 access to online news and information.
This is a serious threat to free speech. It may hint at what鈥檚 increasingly the future of censorship online 鈥 and a weak spot for free expression, even in countries with extensive protections for it.
A lawsuit in India and its global consequences
The story begins in June 2022, when Reuters published an about India鈥檚 emerging hacking industry that mentioned Appin as an alleged example. A lawsuit followed that November in India Reuters and three of its journalists by the Association of Appin Training Centers, a group operating under the Appin franchise name, whose authenticity Reuters has reportedly , citing its incorporation 鈥渙nly months after it named itself as the plaintiff suing Reuters.鈥
The suit鈥檚 claims include defamation, 鈥渕ental harassment, stalking, sexual misconduct, and trauma.鈥 The AOATC objected to the fact that ex-employees or ex-students of the training centers were contacted by reporters of the opposite sex 鈥 an alleged 鈥済ender-biased鈥 act. In other words: basic reporting. AOATC further complained that the reporters鈥 methods weren鈥檛 just upsetting to individuals to whom they reached out, they also harmed India鈥檚 national security. The suit also named LinkedIn, WhatsApp owner Meta, and the Indian job recruiter site Naukri as defendants, on grounds Reuters reporters used those services to contact their sources. AOATC sought an order requiring those sites to block the reporters鈥 existing and future accounts.
On Dec. 1, 2022, Judge Rakesh Kumar Singh of New Delhi鈥檚 North West district court enjoined Reuters from 鈥減ublishing any defamatory article鈥 regarding Appin, its students, or its employees. An order followed in October 2023 clarifying that the injunction encompassed only defamatory material, and nothing else.
Reuters, confident in its reporting about the firm, published the November 2023 article that led, two and a half weeks later, to a New Delhi North West district court directing Reuters to take down the story, with wide-reaching ramifications.
Blunt censorship by courts, government officials, and litigious individuals is a serious threat in the digital age. But so is self-censorship. After all, you can鈥檛 censor what isn鈥檛 said in the first place.
The district judge, Rakesh Kumar Singh, held he was 鈥減rima facie satisfied鈥 the article was 鈥渋ndicative of defamation鈥 and should not be available in the 鈥減ublic domain.鈥 His order also directed Google to remove it from search result pages until further notice. (FIREreached out to Google to ask how it responded to the order, but didn鈥檛 get a response.)
As anyone searching for the article now knows, Reuters complied. An has replaced it on their page:
Reuters has temporarily removed the article 鈥淗ow an Indian startup hacked the world鈥 to comply with a preliminary court order issued on Dec. 4, 2023, in a district court in New Delhi, India.
Reuters stands by its reporting and plans to appeal the decision.
The article, published Nov. 16, 2023, was based on interviews with hundreds of people, thousands of documents, and research from several cybersecurity firms.
The order was issued amid a pending lawsuit brought against Reuters in November 2022. As set forth in its court filings, Reuters disputes those claims.
While websites or social media platforms receiving legal notices about disputed expression often geo-block the content 鈥 meaning it鈥檚 banned or censored only in countries governed by the courts or administrations sending those notices 鈥 Reuters went a different route: It removed the story everywhere. Suddenly, as a result of a ruling in one court, in one country, the entire world鈥檚 access to a significant story was severely limited. In a deeply globalized world, even countries with extensive speech protections are susceptible to this kind of censorship, the ripple effects of which can be alarming.
This challenged Reuters story is at the center of what鈥檚 since become a nesting doll of censorship, where new threats keep adding more and more outer layers. It鈥檚 not just the original reporting that鈥檚 on the chopping block 鈥 authors of stories about the reporting, or even about the removals of it, face pressure now, too.
Who else has removed coverage of Appin? And who hasn鈥檛?
Indian outlets, including and , have also taken down reporting on Appin and Appin co-founder Rajat Khare. But what is unusual and concerning is that, now, outlets outside India 鈥 that, unlike Reuters, lack offices or employees in India 鈥 are complying with an interim court order, in a lawsuit to which they are not parties, in legal systems that do not govern them.
Readers hoping to review the original Reuters piece for themselves have few options. They can find it at , a nonprofit website that shares whistleblowers鈥 leaks, and via screenshots on . But other options are scarce.
Khare succeeded in having outlets remove stories about him before the censored 2023 Reuters investigation. In 2022, his legal team reportedly a court order in Switzerland against Swiss papers reporting on his and Appin鈥檚 activities. That same year, SRF, an outlet within the Swiss Broadcasting Corporation, Khare鈥檚 name from an investigative piece about the Qatari government鈥檚 intelligence operation against FIFA officials ahead of the World Cup, because of 鈥渁n interim court order.鈥 Khare also to secure post-publication edits at outlets in Luxembourg and the United Kingdom, including in an investigation by The Sunday Times.
While AOATC pursued legal action against Reuters in 2022 in India, Khare independently the services of lawyers 鈥 including American defamation firm 鈥 who have reportedly sent legal demands to Reuters, , and , suggestions that Khare was tied to hacking 鈥渇alse鈥 or 鈥渇undamentally flawed.鈥
Turning back to the Reuters piece, while it was temporarily available on Internet Archive鈥檚 Wayback Machine, it鈥檚 notably even there 鈥 from a tool meant to preserve access to web pages across the Internet. As recounted from Mark Graham, the Wayback Machine鈥檚 director and recipient of a December takedown demand from Khare鈥檚 attorneys: 鈥淲e were faced with the decision of either keeping the article available and risking having legal action taken against us, and incurring a costly defense in an unfamiliar venue, or disabling the material and staying abreast of the case and whether the defamation claim ultimately prevails.鈥
Sentinel One, a U.S. cybersecurity firm, also took down its coverage of the story, replacing it with an explaining it was temporarily down 鈥渋n light of a pending court order鈥 and 鈥渙ut of an abundance of caution.鈥 Legal and national security commentary site Lawfare their coverage of Reuters鈥 reporting so that all quotes from the piece were replaced with 鈥淸XXXXX]鈥 after receiving a letter that 鈥渄emanded鈥 they do so. And podcast appears to have two recent episodes about Khare and Appin.
Not everyone is complying, however.
When the AOATC sent a to Professor Ronald Deibert, director at The University of Toronto鈥檚 Citizen Lab, because he to the Reuters report, he with a notice of sorts, too 鈥 in the form of middle-finger emojis.
Techdirt鈥檚 Mike Masnick, who about the court order against Reuters, and MuckRock, which to primary source material relied on in Reuters鈥 reporting, also reportedly received letters. AOATC鈥檚 to MuckRock, which was not signed by an attorney, pushed for removal of 鈥渄efamatory content鈥 and warned that the Appin-related documents were 鈥渃ontemptuous not only to the Plaintiffs concerned鈥 but also 鈥渄erogatory to the entire Indian Nation.鈥 But MuckRock and Techdirt are represented by David Greene at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, who the AOATC: 鈥淭he order is in no way the global takedown order your correspondence represents it to be.鈥
Another piece that remains available online is by The New Yorker鈥檚 David Kirkpatrick, who Appin and Khare while covering India鈥檚 hacking industry 鈥 but whether that will change remains to be seen. Kirkpatrick and The New Yorker, along with Google, were also in India by the AOATC for defamation, and Clare Locke has warned The New Yorker on Khare鈥檚 behalf in the United States.
The future of censorship and self-censorship
What鈥檚 happening with Reuters and Appin 鈥 where local laws or courts affect speech on a global scale 鈥 is not an isolated incident.
Increasingly, would-be censors realize they have means to thousands of miles away using local or foreign laws, police, or courts. Hong Kong鈥檚 , for example 鈥 written to apply even to expression outside Hong Kong by people who are not residents 鈥 offers a grim reminder of what it can look like when this kind of censorship is codified into law.
EFF鈥檚 Greene says efforts to make local law international are developing into a trend. 鈥淲e鈥檝e seen a lot of efforts to use local court orders as global takedown orders over the years, and have filed intervening briefs in cases in European courts when that seems to be either the party鈥檚 or the court鈥檚 intention,鈥 Greene told me. 鈥淭he phenomenon of libel tourism is well established and the SPEECH Act was passed expressly to address it.鈥
The enacted in 2010, bars American courts from enforcing foreign defamation judgements that do not align with U.S. First Amendment standards. But the SPEECH Act cannot protect targets against enforcement in other countries.
Some will fight back against this increasing tide 鈥 but others will comply without resistance, even when not required to do so by law, because they鈥檒l deem it simply not worth the trouble.
It also may not just be government force that compels silence, but corporate self-censorship. As companies expand globally and encounter varying speech restrictions in countries in which they operate, they may decide that standing up for free expression 鈥 whether in journalism, social media, or arts and entertainment 鈥 is just not worth the trouble or threat to their bottom line.
Take AI image generator Midjourney, for example, which users from making satirical images of Xi Jinping, but not other world leaders, because its founder and CEO David Holz wanted to ensure the product鈥檚 availability in China. Holz chose to make that the policy for everyone, not just potential users in China, because 鈥渢he ability for people in China to use this tech is more important than your ability to generate satire.鈥
There鈥檚 also the case of media company , whose partnership deal with the Saudi Arabian state-owned media outlet MBC Group has 鈥渆normous sums of money now flowing from Saudi Arabia.鈥 Journalists at Vice claim senior managers at the company their piece about trans rights in Saudi Arabia, purportedly to protect the company and its employees in the country.
It鈥檚 clear now that even on the Internet, where it often seems nothing truly ever disappears, it鈥檚 possible for someone with the requisite means and motivation to use threats or coercion to impose their will and make information as hard as possible to access.
These factors not only contribute to an environment that puts public knowledge at further risk, they could also encourage media outlets and other industries to shy away from sensitive investigations or controversial material altogether. Some will fight back against this increasing tide 鈥 but others will comply without resistance, even when not required to do so by law, because they鈥檒l deem it simply not worth the trouble.
Blunt censorship by courts, government officials, and litigious individuals is a serious threat in the digital age. But so is self-censorship.
After all, you can鈥檛 censor what isn鈥檛 said in the first place.
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