I'm Indian, yes.
I disagree with that bill because it demands prior registration/intimation (which can be denied by the ruling party) and adherence to 'ethical code' laws (which can clearly be govt influenced - I would have liked if the CECs were allowed to be truly independent, but they won't be if the executive continues to have power over these codes). That's basically the ruling party being able to curtail free speech any way it likes.
I understand balancing free speech vs regulating hate speech and misinformation is not an easy task. For instance, the UK seems to be
considering changes to its Online Safety Act in the wake of the recent riots but they are struggling with the implementation - the way the Tories approached it was clearly different than the way Labour would like to - the UK posters may know better. Of course you don't want to lean too much towards regulation and control (China, North Korea, Singapore, Saudi Arabia), but simply letting all conversation go unchecked is not the solution either. The US clearly loves the First Amendment very fiercely, and Fox News and Sinclair have clearly enjoyed their freedom while destroying the country in recent years. "All animals are equal , but some are
more equal than the others."
What I would like is the equivalent of
European Hate Speech laws - where hate-motivated speech is illegal by law and enforced by the European Commission. What India is trying to implement enables the incumbent government (executive) to legalize their interpretation of what is hate speech, the latter lets an independent body (or the judiciary in non-EU states) make the call. Unless I'm wrong, Musk could not have sat down and broadcast hate speech against Macron by Le Pen, or vice-versa.
EDIT: Or the Digitial Services Act mentioned in the tweet just above ^.
I understand that in India, the judiciary is currently in the pocket of the BJP anyways, so hopes of achieving the EU commission equivalent are limited. But there has to be a step one - even in the US. There has to be some means of stopping Musk from sitting down with Trump again and encouraging election-denier claims to the whole country while hate mongering against Democrats if Harris ends up winning. Otherwise, this not only continues to erode trust in democracy in the US, but also becomes a template for wannabes to copy in other countries - just like
election denialism spread like wildfire across the world after Jan 6 (guess which billionaire social media owner was enabling it in Brazil?).