Big Tech’s Violation of Indian Public Health Laws

Syllabus: Issues relating to development and management of Social Sector/Services relating to Health, Education, Human Resources

Context of the Issue

  • Big Tech platforms routinely violate Indian drug advertisement laws causing serious public health concerns. They publish misleading advertisements for ayurvedic, homeopathic products claiming therapeutic effects for prohibited conditions.

Legal Framework

  • Drug Advertisement Regulation
    • Drugs and Magic Remedies (Objectionable Advertisements) Act (DMRA), 1954 enacted after 27-year deliberation.
    • Prohibits advertisements of drugs (approved/unapproved) for 54 medical conditions like diabetes, cancer.

Big Tech’s Violations

  • No Big Tech platform warns advertisers against submitting advertisements violating DMRA provisions.
  • Search engines, social media, marketplaces display “sponsored” ads for ayurvedic/homeopathic products treating prohibited conditions.
  • Platforms feature godman videos claiming disease cures, cow-urine cancer treatment ads violating DMRA.
  • None of these advertisements run in United States as the platforms have elaborate compliance mechanisms there.

Reasons for Non-Compliance

  • Systemic Issues
    • Traditional contempt by American corporations (Union Carbide precedent) showing disregard for Indian lives.
    • Systemic racism in American corporate management not valuing Indian lives equally with Americans.
  • Legal Immunity and Evasion
    • Big Tech escaped punishment for violating PNDT Act, 1994 (sex determination advertisement prohibition).
    • Platforms claimed “intermediary” status and not “publisher” despite actively pitching advertisements, signing contracts, accepting payments.
    • US government won’t extradite managerial personnel for prosecution in India and the Indian subsidiaries cannot be prosecuted as different legal entities from US parent companies.

Proposed Reforms

  • Register criminal complaints against platform management in competent Indian courts immediately.
  • Create regulatory mechanisms ensuring managerial personnel responsible for policies are Indian citizens in India.
  • Mandate personnel answerable to Indian courts; jail time threat necessary for Big Tech compliance.
  • Revoke intermediary immunity under Indian law if Big Tech fails compliance with public health laws.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top