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AI-Generated Deepfakes and the Law in India: Regulation, Challenges, and the Road Ahead

Headline: AI-Generated Deepfakes and the Law in India: Regulation, Challenges, and the Road Ahead

To the Point

Artificial Intelligence (AI) is revolutionising content creation, but it also fuels the alarming rise of deepfakes—hyper-realistic synthetic media that can manipulate images, videos, and voices. This emerging threat to privacy, dignity, democracy, and national security has sparked urgent debate on the adequacy of India’s legal framework. This article examines the current legal position, recent developments, and the way forward.

Abstract

The proliferation of deepfakes represents a complex challenge at the intersection of technology, law, and fundamental rights. While deepfakes can be used creatively, their malicious use threatens individual privacy, reputation, election integrity, and national security. This article analyses India’s existing legal framework under the Information Technology Act, 2000, the IPC, 1860, and tort law; discusses key recent cases; critically examines gaps; and evaluates the proposed Digital India Act, 2025. Finally, it outlines recommendations for a balanced legal response protecting both free speech and human dignity.

Use of Legal Jargon

The Proof

Case Laws

X v. Instagram LLC & Ors., 2024 SCC OnLine Del 1598

A Delhi High Court case where a woman sought an injunction against the circulation of an AI-generated nude video. The Court granted a dynamic injunction, directing intermediaries and social media platforms to remove existing and future uploads of the content.

Legal Significance:

Deepak Kumar v. State (NCT of Delhi), 2023 SCC OnLine Del 4210

Accused created a deepfake video of a colleague to blackmail him. Court denied bail, observing that such crimes pose “grave risks to public trust in digital media.”

Sabu Mathew George v. Union of India, (2018) 3 SCC 229

While not directly about deepfakes, this case recognised the State’s obligation to direct intermediaries to proactively filter illegal content—in this case, advertisements for sex-selective procedures.

Legal Significance:

Existing Legal Framework

Information Technology Act, 2000 (IT Act)

 Indian Penal Code, 1860

 Tort Law

Constitution

Critical Gaps

  1. No clear definition of deepfakes in Indian law.
  2. Existing laws mostly penalise distribution, not creation.
  3. Lack of prompt takedown mechanisms and uniform notice-and-action framework.
  4. Civil remedies inadequate given the viral nature of digital content.
  5. Low digital literacy and absence of victim compensation frameworks.

The Digital India Act, 2025 (Draft) – A Ray of Hope?

Comparative Perspective

Conclusion

Deepfakes pose a formidable challenge to individual dignity, democratic processes, and public trust. India’s current legal framework, though partially effective, remains fragmented. The proposed Digital India Act marks progress but must be accompanied by:

A multi-stakeholder approach—combining law, technology, and education—is essential to tackle this 21st-century threat.

FAQ

Q1: Are deepfakes always illegal?
No. Deepfakes used for satire, parody, or art may be legal if they do not harm reputation, privacy, or national security.

Q2: Can victims of deepfakes approach Indian courts?
Yes. Victims can file criminal complaints, civil suits, and seek injunctions against circulation.

Q3: What punishment exists under current Indian law?
Depending on context: imprisonment up to 3 years (Section 66E), 5 years (Section 67A), or more if other IPC sections apply.

Q4: Will AI-generated election deepfakes be banned?
Under the draft Digital India Act, election-related deepfakes designed to mislead voters may be criminalised.

Q5: What should platforms do?
They must act promptly on takedown requests, label AI-generated content, and follow due diligence obligations under IT Rules, 2021.

By: Samriddha Ray,3rd Year, St. Xavier’s University, Kolkata

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