
In India, at least 900,000 unborn girls die each year through feticide, said George, who is a social activist associated with organizations fighting for the rights of young girls in India. As activists have succeeded in stopping sex-selection advertising in the print medium, Indian and foreign advertisers have moved to the Internet, George said. Unlike the print medium, Internet search engines allow for very targeted advertising, he added. "These companies are making money by breaking Indian laws," George said.
The country’s Ministry of Health and Family Welfare and Ministry of Communications and IT have also been made respondents in this case, because they did not take any action against the three companies after the offenses were brought to their attention, George said. In India, search engines, video-sharing sites and social networking sites, including Google’s Orkut and YouTube, have been sued for objectionable content or copyright violations.
Google has in the past objected to provisions in India’s Information Technology Act 2000 that make intermediaries like ISPs, Web site hosting companies, search engines, e-mail services and social networks liable for their users’ content. Section 79 of the Act holds network service providers liable unless they can prove that the offense or contravention was committed without their knowledge or that they had exercised all due diligence to prevent the commission of such offense or contravention.
"We don’t hold the telephone company liable when two callers use the phone lines to plan a crime," Rishi Jaitly, a policy analyst at Google India, said in a Google blog post in October. "For the same reasons, it’s a fundamental principle of the Internet that you don’t blame the neutral intermediaries for the actions of their customers," Jaitly added.
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