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YouTube, Twitter Told to Remove a Deodorant Ad Derogatory to Women

Realistic Detailed 3d Antiperspirant Deodorant Composition Ads Promotion and Advertising Concept Card on a Red. Vector illustration of Cosmetic Beauty Product

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NEW DELHI, June 4: The Union Information and Broadcasting Ministry on Saturday asked YouTube and Twitter to immediately take down from their platforms the videos of an advertisement of a deodorant derogatory and detrimental to the portrayal of women.

The Ministry sent emails to both the social media platforms, drawing their attention to the video uploaded on Friday. It had registered close to a million viewers on YouTube and was also being circulated on Twitter.

“The above mentioned video is detrimental to the portrayal of women in the interest of decency or morality, and in violation of the rule 3(1)(b)(ii) of the Information Technology (Intermediary Guidelines and Digital Media Ethics Code) Rules, 2021, which inter-alia provides that the users shall not host, display, upload, modify, publish, transmit, store, update or share any information which is insulting or harassing on the basis of gender,” said the Ministry. The advertisement had also been broadcast on TV prompting the Advertising Standards Council of India to direct the advertiser to suspend the advertisement immediately.

The action was taken after the Delhi Commission for Women (DCW) wrote a letter to the I&B minister Anurag Thakur seeking an action against the deodorant brand for “misogynistic advertisement” that promoted “gang-rape culture.” The Commission also issued a notice to the Delhi Police to register a First Information Report and get the content removed from the mass media.

DCW chairperson Swati Maliwal, in the letter, said the advertisement was offensive to women and promoted violence against women and girls. She asked for a robust system that kept a check on such advertisements. The Commission has also demanded a heavy penalty on the deodorant brand so that other companies refrained from playing such “dirty tactics for cheap publicity.” It has asked for an action taken report from the Delhi Police by June 9.

“Are you making perfume ads or promoting gang rape mentality? What level of inferiority is being sold by hiding it under the guise of creativity,” the chairperson Maliwal tweeted.

(Manas Dasgupta)