
Digital Media Ethics: Need & Challenges
- The Uttarakhand High Court warned journalists must follow digital media ethics, emphasising legal consequences for violations and promoting responsible online journalism.
Need for Ethical Digital Media
- Trust Building: Ethical reporting restores public trust. E.g., only 36% of Indian news users trust media (Reuters Digital News Report, 2025).
- Misinformation Control: Verified content curbs viral fake news. E.g., false death rumors of actor Dharmendra spread widely in 2025.
- Protect Vulnerable: Ethics safeguard children and crime victims. E.g., Arunachal Press Club apologized after unethically publishing minor’s abuse interview, 2025.
- Democracy Preservation: Accurate news ensures informed voters. E.g., ECI flagged digital outlets for publishing exit polls during 2025–26 State Elections.
Digital Landscape
|
Ethical Dilemmas Faced by Digital Social Media
- Freedom of Expression vs. Harmful Content: Platforms must balance free speech with preventing obscenity, hate speech, misinformation, and violence. E.g., Ranveer Allahabadia’s YouTube controversy.
- Privacy vs. Data Monetisation: User data is exploited for targeted advertising, raising concerns of consent and surveillance. E.g., Facebook–Cambridge Analytica scandal.
- Anonymity vs. Accountability: Anonymous accounts enable dissent but also facilitate trolling and abuse. E.g., Coordinated cyberbullying campaigns.
- Censorship vs. Free Speech: Content moderation risks silencing dissent while curbing harm. E.g., Takedown of posts critical of authorities.
- Equality vs. Algorithmic Bias: Biased algorithms reinforce stereotypes and discrimination. E.g., Mar-ginal voices suppressed by engagement-based ranking.
Key Laws Regulating Social Media in India
|
Behavioural Challenges to Ethical Digital Media
- Click-Driven Sensationalism: Prioritizing viral content over accuracy, leading to misinformation and exaggerated reporting. E.g., Fake celebrity death hoaxes trending on Twitter for clicks.
- Confirmation Bias: Sharing content that reinforces personal beliefs, ignoring verification or opposing views. E.g., Dr. K. A. Paul’s COVID‑19 “miracle cure” circulated online.
- Neglect of Verification: Rushing to publish without fact-checking, driven by speed and competition for attention. E.g., Misleading posts about Uttarakhand flood casualties shared without verification, 2021.
- Online Abuse: Using anonymity to harass, troll, or manipulate audiences without accountability. E.g., Coordinated trolling of journalist Rana Ayyub on Twitter, 2025.
Way Forward
- Platform Accountability: Hold social media companies legally responsible for harmful content, especially targeting children and vulnerable groups.
- Formal Registration: All digital news publishers and social media platforms must register with MIB for accountability.
- Digital Literacy Programs: Educate users, including children and parents, on responsible online behaviour and misinformation detection.
- Ethics Training: Conduct regular workshops for journalists, creators, and platform moderators on digital ethics and legal provisions.
“Freedom of speech is not freedom from responsibility.” Strengthening ethics, accountability, and regulation ensures digital media remains democracy’s credible fourth pillar.
Reference: Times of India
PMF IAS Pathfinder for Mains – Question 556
Q. How does the rise of digital and social media content affect journalistic integrity and public trust? Examine ethical risks and measures for responsible reporting. (150 Words) (10 Marks)
Approach
- Introduction: Write a brief introduction about the digital and social media content affect journalistic.
- Body: Write how rise of digital and social media content affects journalistic integrity and public trust, their ethical risk, and measures for responsible reporting.
- Conclusion: Emphasis on an ethical digital media to strengthen the fourth pillar of democracy.
















