“Toolkit” is set to become the major bone of contention between Google and Indian Government after Greta’s self-goal

delhi police google toolkit

Days after eco-fascist Greta Thunberg mistakenly shared an incriminatory ‘Google Toolkit’ on Twitter and later deleted her tweet, the Delhi Police has now written to Google seeking registration details and activity logs of the account through which the toolkit related to the farmers’ protests was created and uploaded on the social media platform. TFI has already reported how the explosive toolkit intricately describes an anti-India campaign being waged to destabilise the Modi government and defame the country in general. The toolkit, which was not meant for public circulation in India especially, has brought to light an international conspiracy against the Modi government.

According to a statement by the Delhi Police, it has sought the “registration details” and “activity log” of the account through which the “toolkit” document was uploaded. Two e-mail IDs, one Instagram account and one Uniform Resource Locator (URL) were mentioned in the toolkit. “Police has asked for details from the respective platforms,” the Delhi Police statement said. According to the statement, Instagram has also been approached and been asked to furnish details of their account that was mentioned in the toolkit.

It must be remembered that Khalistani organisation Poetic Justice Foundation is on the radar of India’s security agencies, who believe that the toolkit was authored by its founder, Mo Dhaliwal. The Cyber Cell unit of the Delhi Police had on Thursday lodged an FIR against “pro-Khalistan” creators of the “toolkit” for waging a “social, cultural and economic war against the Government of India”.

It would not be an overstatement by far to say that the toolkit is all set to become a major bone of contention between the Modi government and Google. If the Centre’s run-ins with other American big tech companies are anything to go by, Google too will not yield to legitimate requests by the Delhi Police easily. In fact, big tech companies based out of America seem to have made a habit of infuriating the Modi government. Take for example Twitter, which openly defied the Central government’s directive to ban 250 accounts for spreading inflammatory content, resulting in the IT ministry giving it an ultimatum to comply by the orders, or face severe penal action and jail time.

If Google decides to cooperate with the Delhi Police, and as a consequence with the Modi government, in the probe relating to the Republic Day violence and subsequent revelation of an international conspiracy to defame India, it will continue having a smooth run in India. If it decides, however, to play hard to get, the ride may very well get extremely bumpy hereon.

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