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Supreme Court to examine plea against Rules on blocking of online content without notice

Background

  • Supreme Court has sought a response from the government on a plea challenging rules that empower it to block online content without prior notice or fair hearing.

Relevance : GS 2(Governance, Judiciary, Fundamental Rights)

Key Legal Provisions Challenged

  1. IT Rules, 2009 (Rules 8 & 9)
    1. Make it optional for the government to inform the content creator before blocking content.
    2. Rule 9 allows “emergency” blocking without informing the creator.
  • Rule 16
    • Enables blanket confidentiality regarding blocking requests and actions taken.
    • Reduces transparency in content regulation.

Petitioner’s Arguments

  • Rule 9 is arbitrarily used to block content without a clear process for recourse.
  • Lack of prior notice, reasoned order, and grievance redressal violates freedom of speech and expression.
  • Current rules favor intermediaries (social media platforms) over original creators.
  • Safe harbour protection (Section 79, IT Act) ensures intermediaries comply with blocking orders without defending content creators.
  • Suggestion: Replace “or” in Rules 8 & 9 with “and” so that both intermediaries and content creators receive prior notice.

Courts Observations

  • Justice Gavai questioned whether the state has a duty to notify the original creators if they are identifiable.
  • Acknowledged that prior notice and fair hearing are intrinsic to freedom of speech and expression.

Implications

  • If upheld, the petition could enhance transparency and protect digital rights.
  • May limit government discretion in arbitrary content blocking.
  • Could redefine intermediary liability and strengthen legal protections for content creators.

March 2025
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