Updated October 16th, 2019 at 18:25 IST

Man detained for posting derogatory comments on FB

A man was detained by police in Meghalayas West Jaintia Hills district for allegedly posting derogatory comments against a Catholic priest on his facebook wall

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A man was detained by police in Meghalayas West Jaintia Hills district for allegedly posting derogatory comments against a Catholic priest on his facebook wall, a senior police officer said Wednesday. The man identified as Rimialson Daw was detained after a complaint was lodged against him for posting derogatory comments against Archbishop of Shillong Rev Dominic Jala on Monday night, Superintendent of Police, Lakador Syiem said.

Jaladied in a car accident in California, US, recently. Daw was brought to the Jowai Police Station for questioning and was later sent for medical examination as his relatives claimed he was mentally unstable, Syiem said. The SP said investigation into the case is in progress even as Daw's family members have tendered a public apology on his behalf. According to the family members, Daw is suffering from Schizophrenia. He was earlier arrested for posting derogatory remarks against a woman minister in 2013.

Govt requests for FB user data rises globally by 7%; India 2nd after US

Government requests for Facebook user data increased globally by seven per cent in the second half of 2018 with India being on the second spot after the US in the list of nations asking the social networking giant to divulge details, a top executive of the company has said. California-headquartered Facebook, sharing its latest transparency report on Thursday, said it seriously takes the commitment to transparency at the company. Guy Rosen, Facebook VP of Integrity, said that in the second half of 2018, government requests for user data increased globally by seven per cent from 103,815 to 110,634.

"This increase reflects normal growth for the second half as compared to previous reporting periods," he said in a statement on the company's website.

Of the total volume, the US continues to submit the highest number of requests, followed by India, the UK, Germany and France, Rosen said. He said that during the second half of 2018, the volume of content restrictions based on local law increased globally by 135 per cent from 15,337 to 35,972.

"This increase was primarily driven by 16,600 items we restricted in India based on a Delhi High Court order regarding claims made about PepsiCo products," he said.

"We've added a new breakout of content restrictions by product - Facebook and Instagram - and their content types - like Pages, profiles and comments - for each platform," the top executive said.

The report also monitors and reports on identified, temporary internet disruptions that impact the availability of Facebook products.

"In the second half of 2018, we identified 53 disruptions of Facebook services in nine countries, compared to 48 disruptions in eight countries in the first half of 2018. This half, India accounted for 85 per cent of total new global disruptions," Rosen added.

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Published October 16th, 2019 at 17:51 IST