 He-Mant, thanks for joining us at STTV6 through our partner TV Studio in New Delhi. He-Mant, we all know that India is the world's largest democracy. Its general elections process has already commenced and the voting will continue for almost a month and a half. I think this long polling schedule has shaken up the social media platforms. What's this noise about the messaging service WhatsApp having launched an India-dedicated fact-checking feature? In the recent days in India, the Facebook itself and Facebook-owned messaging service WhatsApp have come under severe criticism for allowing circulation of false and distorted information and rumours feigning some serious mishaps. In fact, Facebook had stated sometime back that in light of the ensuing parliamentary elections, it went ahead and removed several Facebook accounts and FB pages for synchronised fabricated misconduct. Where India has recently diverged that by using the tools of artificial intelligence and machine learning processes, they have been able to remove approximately one million accounts a day. This has been the concern even in the other parts of the world as well, especially during their national elections. Now WhatsApp messaging app has launched this fact-finding service which you were talking about or feature that would curtail fake news and rumour mongering which could adversely affect the election process, perhaps even its outcome. But don't you think that this interferes with the right to access information freely? How does this feature work? No, I don't think this feature is in breach of any prevailing legislation nor does it tend to amount to moral policing because it does not prohibit the flow of information. It merely regulates the information in a way that the users can check the genuineness or truthfulness of the received messages or the messages what they receive on the platform. By forwarding the same to a prescribed WhatsApp account, the response will then specify if the information is true, false, misleading, disputed or out of scope. And commendably indeed WhatsApp will be able to examine even the pictures, video links or texts in different languages, the main language Hindi, English and even vernacular languages like Telugu, Bengali, Malayalam and so on. Thank you, Hemant, for taking the time out of your busy schedule to edify our views. We may leave you again, possibly tomorrow, on another issue.