The Gujarat High Court has issued notices to the Central and State governments on a PIL highlighting misuse of AI to create deepfake content targeting Constitutional authorities. The Court also sought the Gujarat DGP’s response and will consider action against platforms like Meta, Google and X after government replies.
The Centre has amended the IT Rules to regulate AI-generated content and shorten takedown timelines for unlawful material. Notified by MeitY on February 10, the new provisions will take effect from February 20, 2026.
Raj Shamani has approached the Delhi High Court seeking protection of his personality rights and removal of AI-generated content misusing his identity. He wants strict action against platforms using his name, image and voice without permission.
A Public Interest Litigation (PIL) has been filed in the Supreme Court seeking a comprehensive regulatory framework for Artificial Intelligence tools in India. The petition emphasizes urgent action to curb deepfakes and protect individuals from impersonation.
The Delhi High Court has protected journalist Sudhir Chaudhary’s personality rights, ordering the removal of AI-generated and deepfake content from social media. Uploaders have 48 hours to comply, failing which Google and Meta will act.
The Delhi High Court has restrained anyone from using Telugu actor Nagarjuna’s name, image, or likeness without permission, including AI-generated content. The court also ordered blocking of infringing URLs to safeguard his reputation and goodwill.
Delhi High Court permits Greenopolis Welfare Association to withdraw petition after it was found to cite fabricated and non-existent judgments. The case raises concerns over AI-generated content in legal filings.
Today, On 25th September, The Supreme Court slammed the Madhya Pradesh government and the CBI in a custodial death case, stating “All your efforts are eyewash,” as both failed to suspend absconding policemen despite knowing they were on the run since April.
Delhi High Court is set to pass an order protecting Telugu actor Nagarjuna’s rights after he raised concerns that his personality rights were violated by the unauthorised use of his image in social media content and merchandise.
The Delhi High Court issued a temporary order protecting the intellectual property of the 1994 film Andaz Apna Apna, prohibiting over 30 parties from unauthorized use of its name, characters, and dialogues. The ruling addresses misuse including merchandise and digital content while emphasizing the film’s enduring popularity and the need for copyright enforcement.
