The regulatory landscape

Media and online content in India are governed by: the IT Act, 2000 and the IT (Intermediary Guidelines and Digital Media Ethics Code) Rules, 2021; the Cinematograph Act, 1952 and the CBFC for theatrical films; the Press Council Act, 1978 for print; the Cable Television Networks (Regulation) Act, 1995; and the new Broadcasting Services (Regulation) Bill, 2023. Defamation is dealt with under Sections 354–357 BNS (earlier 499–502 IPC) and civil law of torts.

Defamation — what content creators need to know

Defamation is both civil (damages and injunction) and criminal (Sections 354–357 BNS, punishable up to 2 years). Truth is a complete defence only if the publication is for public good — Exception 1 to Section 354 BNS. Fair comment on matters of public interest is protected. The Supreme Court in Subramanian Swamy v. Union of India (2016) upheld criminal defamation as constitutional but reaffirmed strict adherence to exceptions.

Takedown of objectionable content

Under Section 79 of the IT Act read with the 2021 Rules, intermediaries (social media platforms, websites) must remove content within 36 hours of a court order or government notification. For grievances, every significant social media intermediary must have a Grievance Officer who must acknowledge in 24 hours and resolve in 15 days. The Bombay HC in Kunal Kamra v. Union of India (2024) struck down the fact-check unit; the law continues to evolve.

OTT and self-regulation

OTT streaming platforms (Netflix, Prime Video, Hotstar, etc.) follow the three-tier grievance mechanism under Part III of the IT Rules, 2021: (i) self-regulation by publisher; (ii) self-regulatory body of multiple publishers; (iii) inter-ministerial committee at the central government. Content classification is mandatory (U, U/A 7+, U/A 13+, U/A 16+, A). The Madras and Bombay HCs have held that pre-censorship of OTT content is impermissible.

Common matters for creators in Kota

(i) Defamation defence / prosecution for YouTube videos, especially political commentary; (ii) copyright strikes and counter-notices; (iii) influencer brand-deal contracts including FTC-style disclosure compliance; (iv) talent/release agreements for actors and crew; (v) music licensing disputes (sync, mechanical, performance); (vi) cease-and-desist for impersonation accounts; (vii) IT Act Section 67 charges for allegedly obscene content.