Undefined "Cyberstalking" Creates Business Liability
This provision criminalizes "cyberstalking" including creating or disseminating "false information about a person" with penalties of 1-10 years imprisonment, but fails to define critical terms like "harass," "stalk," or "false information." This creates severe compliance uncertainty for businesses operating online platforms, communication services, or digital businesses—companies cannot develop clear content moderation policies or determine what user conduct violates the law. The broad scope captures legitimate business communications including customer reviews, competitive analysis, and commercial speech, while the severe penalties (up to 10 years) pressure platforms toward aggressive over-moderation. The provision overlaps with the preceding cyberbullying offense 35 but with higher penalties, creating prosecutorial discretion that compounds business uncertainty and raises operational costs.