New Delhi: The Indian government condemned Wikipedia on Monday for publishing incorrect information on cricketer Arshdeep Singh's page that connected him to the separatist Khalistani movement, claiming that such provocation is not acceptable.
After dropping a key catch in an exciting Super 4 Asia Cup match between India and Pakistan on Sunday in Dubai, Singh came under venomous criticism from certain users on social media.
His Wikipedia page was updated to include a connection to the separatist Khalistani movement following the missed catch.
Rajeev Chandrasekhar, minister of state for information technology, criticised such a move on Twitter.
"No intermediary operating in India can permit this type of misinformation (a)n(d) deliberate efforts to incitement (a)n(d) user harm - violates our govt's expectations of safe and trusted internet," he said.
It was also said the Ministry of Electronics and IT has summoned executives from Wikipedia to explain the false post but officials denied any such move.
According to the edit history of the cricketer's Wikipedia page, an unregistered user replaced the words "India" with "Khalistan" at several places on the profile and his name was changed to "Major Arshdeep Singh Bajwa".
But the changes were reversed within 15 minutes by Wikipedia editors.
The slanderous linking of him to the Khalistani movement was said to have been done by elements in Pakistan.
Big social media firms have drawn flak in the past over hate speech, misinformation and fake news circulating on their platforms.
The government had last year notified new IT rules to make digital intermediaries more accountable and responsible for content hosted on their platforms.
The rules required social media companies to take down contentious content quicker, appoint grievance redressal officers and assist in investigations, PTI reported.
Significant social media intermediaries — those with more than 50 lakh users — have to follow additional due diligence, including the appointment of a chief compliance officer, a nodal contact person and a resident grievance officer and all three officials will have to be residents in India.
The IT ministry, in June, circulated the draft rules that propose a panel to hear user appeals against inaction on complaints made, or against content-related decisions taken by grievance officers of social media platforms.
At present, "there is no appellate mechanism provided by intermediaries nor is there any credible self-regulatory mechanism in place", the ministry had said.
Several cricketers and politicians have backed Arshdeep Singh saying anyone can make a mistake in a high-pressure game.
Pakistan needed 34 runs to win when Ravi Bishnoi came in to bowl the 18th over.
Arshdeep Singh dropped a relatively easy catch of Asif Ali on the third ball of the over, which led to a massive momentum shift and Pakistan winning by five wickets.
Pacer Arshdeep Singh was called in to bowl the final over but was unable to defend seven runs.