The Core Issue
• The Union government’s increasing censorship of lawful online speech is highlighted as a significant threat to India’s democracy and the fundamental right to free expression.
• Under the guise of combating AI-generated content, broad powers are being utilized to silence independent voices and restrict the internet’s role as a platform for everyday concerns.
The Mechanisms of Censorship
• The government is leveraging the IT Rules, 2021, along with Sections 69A and 79(3)(b) of the IT Act, 2000, to enforce content removal.
• Social media platforms like Meta and X are subjected to strict three-hour takedown timelines.
• Platforms face immense pressure to comply, threatened with the loss of “safe harbour” protections and potential personal criminal liability for their employees.
• The Sahyog portal has been opened to police officials nationwide, supercharging takedown requests and bypassing standard legislative processes.

The Impact on Public Discourse
• This infrastructure has led to the wholesale deletion of Opposition accounts, independent media outlets, and critical commentators.
• The system distorts public conversation to favor the ruling party and operates under a veil of secrecy, with no meaningful data published regarding the true scale of these takedowns.
The Legal and Platform Context
• Clear Supreme Court precedents, such as the Shreya Singhal vs Union of India ruling on what constitutes “actual knowledge” of online illegality, are reportedly being ignored or mocked.
• Most social media platforms have failed to act as a check on these powers, choosing instead to automatically process takedown notices to avoid conflict.
• While X (formerly Twitter) continues to resist the Sahyog portal, it faces mounting pressure from proceedings in both the Karnataka and Delhi High Courts.
Future Implications
• The precedent set by these actions has long-term consequences for political discourse. • Opposition-ruled states are already beginning to leverage the Sahyog portal’s capabilities, suggesting that any future government will likely utilize this same infrastructure for censorship