💥Join UPSC 2027,2028 Mentorship (June Batch) + XFactor Notes & Microthemes PDF

Social media and encrypting messaging services pose a serious security challenge. What measures have been adopted at various levels to address the security implications of social media? Also suggest any other remedies to address the problem.

India has second-largest social media market with 491 million active users. However, in 2025, these platforms are central to “Grey Zone Warfare” as their architecture creates a “security paradox”

Challenges Posed by Social Media & Encrypted Messaging

Social Media Challenges

Algorithmic Echo Chambers creating polarized “digital silos”. (India Hate Lab report)

Cognitive Warfare- Eg- “Bot-farms” to build anti-India narratives

Cyber Stalking and Harassment – Eg- Women targeted through doxxing and revenge porn.

Online Radicalisation – Eg- ISIS recruitment through social media.

Encrypted Messaging Challenges

Traceability Paradox- End-to-end encryption prevents law enforcement from identifying the “first originator”

Operational Backbone for Terror- Eg- ISIS and LeT using Telegram or Signal

Serve as the front-end for darknet markets dealing in narcotics and illegal firearms.

Shadow Financial Hubs- Eg- use of “self-destructing” messages for “Digital Arrest” extortions

Measures Adopted at Various Levels

Legal and Regulatory Framework

IT Rules, 2021 – mandate Traceability, requiring significant social media intermediaries to identify the “first originator” on court orders.

DPDP Act- Requires data breach notifications to the Data Protection Board within 72 hours.

Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita Section 353 penalizes the spread of misinformation causing public fear.

Institutional and Operational Measures

I4C acts as the national nodal point for identifying and removing unlawful content.

CyberDome Project (Kerala) to monitor the Darknet and social media for criminal patterns.

“Operation Blackface” of Maharashtra Police Cyber Department for crack down on Child Sexual Abuse Material (CSAM)

Global and Social Initiatives

India actively participates in the UN Convention against Cybercrime (2024) and the Christchurch Call to eliminate extremist content.

Initiatives like Cyber Swachhta Kendra and the 1930 Helpline promote “Digital Hygiene.”

Suggested Remedies to Address the Problem

Metadata Analysis over Decryption- By analyzing “who talks to whom, when, and from where” (metadata), to identify criminal clusters.

Mandating social media platforms to undergo independent audits of their “Recommendation Engines.”

Implementing mandatory Digital Watermarking for all AI-generated content (deepfakes).

Establishing an independent, statutory Digital Ombudsman to provide a “Single-Window” grievance redressal mechanism for citizens

Mandatory SIM-Binding for messaging apps to prevent the use of international virtual numbers in local scams like “Digital Arrests.”

Integrating “Cognitive Defense” and digital civics into school and college curricula.

Formalizing a real-time data-sharing bridge between the I4C and tech giants to instantly “freeze” fraudulent financial flows during the Golden Hour.

Community Fact-Checking Models- Empowering certified organizations with “Priority Reporting” status on platforms to flag virally dangerous misinformationce.

Push for a Global Cyber-Extradition Framework to ensure that criminals operating from “Safe Haven” countries can be prosecuted.

Sovereign Messaging Alternatives- Eg- apps like Sandes for government communication.

Adopting global best practices

“Duty of Care” Principle (UK)- Shifting burden of safety from the user to the platform.

EU’s Digital Services Act for Algorithmic Transparency

Estonia’s e-residency program using Blockchain

For “Safe and Trusted Cyberspace” there is need for a “Whole-of-Nation” approach

Border Management and Security Forces