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28 Mar 2026

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CAMP-HINDI-GT-01

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28 Mar 2026

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CAMP-HINDI-GT-01

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28 Mar 2026

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GS Test - 13 (V7713)

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28 Mar 2026

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GS Test - 8 (V7708)

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28 Mar 2026

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GS Test - 8 (V7708)

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28 Mar 2026

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Daily MCQ
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27 March 2026 MCQs Test

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19 hours ago

The Analyst Handout 27th March 2026
Current Affairs

Article
27 Mar 2026

Social Media Addiction Trial: Why Meta and YouTube Were Found Liable

Why in news?

A U.S. jury in Los Angeles found Meta and YouTube guilty of designing addictive platforms that harmed a young user.

The companies were deemed negligent and accused of malice and fraud, with $6 million in damages awarded—Meta liable for 70% and YouTube 30%.

What’s in Today’s Article?

  • Background: Landmark Case Links Social Media Design to Youth Harm
  • Overcoming Section 230: The Legal Shift in Social Media Liability
  • Parallel Verdict Highlights Platform Safety Concerns
  • India’s regulatory framework for children on the internet

Background: Landmark Case Links Social Media Design to Youth Harm

  • The case highlights allegations that Meta (Facebook, Instagram) and YouTube intentionally designed addictive platforms that harmed young users.
  • A 20-year-old plaintiff argued that early exposure led to anxiety, depression, and body dysmorphia.
  • The lawsuit treats social media as a product, comparing its design to “digital casinos” that exploit dopamine-driven engagement.

Overcoming Section 230: The Legal Shift in Social Media Liability

  • Past lawsuits against social media companies often failed due to Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, which protects platforms from liability for user-generated content.
  • Plaintiffs bypassed Section 230 by focusing on product design, arguing that harm arose from platform architecture—such as feeds and engagement mechanisms—rather than specific content.
  • The jury examined whether harm stemmed from platform design (not third-party content) and whether companies met negligence criteria: duty of care, breach, causation, and harm.
  • Despite arguments about external factors, the jury applied the “substantial factor” test and concluded that platform design significantly contributed to the harm.
  • The jury found evidence of conscious disregard for user safety, supported by internal research showing companies were aware of risks but continued harmful design practices.

Parallel Verdict Highlights Platform Safety Concerns

  • A New Mexico jury found Meta liable under consumer protection law for misleading users about platform safety, awarding $375 million in damages.
  • The case focused on decisions like expanding end-to-end encryption despite internal warnings about child exploitation risks.
  • Together with the Los Angeles verdict, it signals a broader shift toward holding platforms accountable for design choices and safety practices, not just user content.

India’s regulatory framework for children on the internet

  • Information Technology Act, 2000
    • Prohibits harmful and explicit content involving children.
    • Mandates quick removal (within 2–3 hours) of unlawful content.
    • Requires reporting offences under relevant laws like POCSO.
  • Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023
    • Requires verifiable parental consent for processing children’s data.
    • Prohibits tracking, behavioural monitoring, and targeted advertising directed at children.
  • Information Technology (Reasonable Security Practices and Procedures and Sensitive Personal Data or Information) Rules, 2011, (SPDI Rules)
    • Ensure data is collected for specific purposes with consent.
    • Restrict disclosure of sensitive personal data.
  • Awareness and Capacity Building
    • CERT-In Initiatives - Provides safety advisories, awareness campaigns, and cybersecurity guidance.
    • Information Security Education and Awareness (ISEA) - Conducted thousands of workshops covering lakhs of participants. Trained teachers, police personnel, and volunteers as cybersecurity trainers.
  • Technical and Enforcement Measures
    • Blocking of child sexual abuse material (CSAM) through global databases.
    • Collaboration with international agencies like NCMEC (USA).
    • Promotion of parental control filters and cyber safety awareness.
  • Overall Significance
    • India has adopted a multi-layered approach combining legal provisions, regulatory frameworks, awareness programmes, and institutional mechanisms to mitigate risks from AI and protect children in the digital ecosystem.
Social Issues

Article
27 Mar 2026

India’s Forex Reserves: A Real Cushion or Overstated Comfort

Why in news?

The RBI has stated that India’s forex reserves remain adequate to cushion external shocks, even as heavy foreign investor outflows ($12.1 billion in March) have weakened the rupee to record lows.

Although reserves stand at a robust $710 billion—close to the recent peak of $728 billion—the headline figure needs closer examination to assess true strength.

What’s in Today’s Article?

  • Components of India’s Forex Reserves
  • Dual Strategy for Defending the Rupee
  • RBI’s Forex Reserves: Adjusted Reality Raises Concerns
  • RBI’s Dilemma: Defend the Rupee or Preserve Forex Reserves

Components of India’s Forex Reserves

  • India’s forex reserves comprise four elements:
    • Foreign Currency (FX) Assets
    • Gold Holdings
    • Special Drawing Rights (SDRs)
    • Reserve Tranche Position with the IMF
  • Minor Components: Limited Immediate Use
    • Special Drawing Rights (SDRs)
      • Valued at $18.7 billion
      • Based on a basket of global currencies
      • Serve as a buffer that can be exchanged during crises
    • IMF Reserve Tranche Position
      • Worth $4.8 billion
      • Functions as an emergency credit line with the IMF
  • Major Components: Real Strength of Reserves
    • Foreign Currency (FX) Assets
      • Valued at $556 billion
      • Primary tool for RBI to manage currency volatility
      • Most liquid and usable component
    • Gold Holdings
      • Valued at $131 billion
      • Acts as a long-term store of value
      • Not easily deployable for routine currency defence
    • While total reserves appear large, FX assets are the most relevant measure of the RBI’s ability to defend the rupee in the short term, though even this requires further adjustments.

Dual Strategy for Defending the Rupee

  • The RBI can stop the rupee from falling in two ways.
  • The RBI uses a balanced approach, combining spot and forward interventions to stabilise the rupee while managing liquidity and interest rate pressures in the domestic economy.
  • Spot Market Intervention
    • The RBI sells foreign exchange (FX) in the spot market, immediately reducing forex reserves and supporting the rupee.
    • Impact
      • Strengthens or stabilises the rupee
      • Reduces rupee liquidity in the system
      • Leads to higher domestic interest rates
  • Forward Market Intervention
    • The RBI sells FX in the forward market, agreeing to deliver dollars at a future date rather than immediately.
    • Impact
      • Helps defend the rupee without immediate reserve depletion
      • Avoids tightening of rupee liquidity
      • Prevents upward pressure on interest rates

RBI’s Forex Reserves: Adjusted Reality Raises Concerns

  • Although headline FX assets appear strong, RBI’s net forward sales of $68 billion (as of January) reduce effective reserves to below $500 billion.
  • With continued rupee pressure, this gap may have widened further.
  • Analysts warn that reserve adequacy—measured by import cover—is nearing 2013 BoP stress levels, raising concerns about external vulnerability.

RBI’s Dilemma: Defend the Rupee or Preserve Forex Reserves

  • Despite selling $94 billion in FX since October 2024, the rupee has weakened sharply, highlighting limits of intervention amid global pressures and capital outflows.
  • Analysts warn the rupee could fall to 97–98 if conditions persist.
  • With rising oil prices and investor exits increasing the import bill, economists suggest the RBI may need to allow a controlled depreciation to conserve reserves during a prolonged crisis.
Economics
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