Home Ministry sends 290 takedown notices a day


MHA Sends 290 Takedown Notices a Day — UPSC Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Detail
Implementing Agency Indian Cyber Crime Coordination Centre (I4C), MHA
Parent Ministry Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA)
Legal Basis Section 79(3)(b), IT Act 2000
Designation Date March 13, 2024
Portal Sahyog Portal (operational: October 2024)
Takedown Volume 1,11,185 URLs/accounts blocked (Mar 13, 2024 – Mar 31, 2025)
Daily Average ~290 notices/day
Compliance Window Intermediaries must act within 3 hours of receipt
Safe Harbour Provision Section 79(1) IT Act — shields intermediaries from liability
Shield Removal Condition Section 79(3)(b) — shield lapses on non-compliance with government notice
Content Types Targeted Investment scams, deepfakes, digital arrest scams, separatist content, electoral manipulation
Platforms Covered WhatsApp, Instagram, YouTube, Google, Telegram, Facebook, X
Annual Report Source MHA Annual Report 2024-25
Suspect Registry Launch September 10, 2024 — 18.43 lakh suspect identifiers; 24.67 lakh mule accounts [S4]
Transactions Blocked 8,031.56 crore via Suspect Registry [S4]

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Legal / Constitutional

Governance / Ethical

Administrative

Security / Strategic

Scientific / Technological


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. I4C was designated under Section 79(3)(b) of IT Act on March 13, 2024. [S2]
  2. Total content blocked under Section 79(3)(b) by March 31, 2025: 1,11,185 URLs/accounts. [S1]
  3. Daily average of takedown notices issued by I4C: ~290. [S1]
  4. Platform intermediaries must comply with I4C notices within 3 hours. [S1]
  5. Safe harbour for intermediaries is under Section 79(1) of the IT Act, 2000. [S1]
  6. Safe harbour is lost under Section 79(3)(b) if the intermediary fails to act on government notification. [S1]
  7. Sahyog Portal enables state police to send takedown notices via a common platform; operational since October 2024. [S3]
  8. I4C falls under the Ministry of Home Affairs (not MeITY). [S2]
  9. X's challenge to Sahyog Portal and Section 79(3)(b) was heard and dismissed by the Karnataka High Court in 2025. [S1]
  10. I4C's Suspect Registry was launched on September 10, 2024. [S4]
  11. Suspect Registry: 18.43 lakh suspect identifiers received from banks; 24.67 lakh mule accounts shared. [S4]
  12. Transactions blocked via Suspect Registry: ₹8,031.56 crore. [S4]
  13. Significant Social Media Intermediary (SSMI): platform with more than 50 lakh registered users (under IT Rules 2021). [S3]
  14. The MHA Annual Report disclosing the 290-notices figure is for the year 2024-25. [S1]
  15. Nearly one-third of the 66 I4C notices sent to X targeted content about Union Ministers/Central government agencies. [S1]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Syllabus Heading
GS-II Government policies and interventions; Statutory bodies; Role of civil services; Fundamental Rights
GS-III Cybersecurity; Role of media and social networking sites; Challenges to internal security
GS-IV Ethical issues in governance; Transparency and accountability

Plausible Mains Question Stems:

  1. "The designation of I4C under Section 79(3)(b) of the IT Act represents a significant shift in India's cybersecurity governance architecture. Critically examine the implications for intermediary liability and free speech." (GS-II/GS-III, 250 words)

  2. "The Sahyog Portal enables state police to issue online content takedown notices without judicial pre-clearance. Discuss the constitutional concerns and the safeguards needed to prevent misuse." (GS-II, 15 marks)

  3. "Rising cybercrime in India demands a robust institutional response. Evaluate the structure and effectiveness of the Indian Cyber Crime Coordination Centre (I4C) in addressing the challenge." (GS-III, 250 words)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
IT (Intermediary Guidelines and Digital Media Ethics Code) Rules, 2021 Broader regulatory framework within which Section 79(3)(b) operates; compliance obligations for SSMIs
National Cyber Security Policy 2013 (and proposed update) Strategic backdrop for I4C's establishment and mandate
Cybercrime statistics (NCRB Annual Report) Quantitative data on cybercrime trends; frequently tested in Prelims
Section 69A, IT Act Government's parallel blocking power (MeITY route vs. MHA/I4C route) — important distinction
Fundamental Rights: Article 19(1)(a) and reasonable restrictions Constitutional dimension of government-ordered content removal
Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 Intersects with data handling by platforms responding to government notices
National Cyber Coordination Centre (NCCC) MeITY's parallel coordination body; confusion with I4C (MHA) is a common trap

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Wrong Ministry: I4C is under MHA, not MeITY. The parallel blocking route under Section 69A (used for banning apps like TikTok) is a MeITY power. Confusing the two is a frequent error.
  2. Wrong Section: Section 79(1) = safe harbour (protection). Section 79(3)(b) = loss of safe harbour (obligation to act). Do not conflate the two.
  3. Sahyog vs. NCCC: Sahyog Portal (MHA/I4C, police-facing, Section 79(3)(b)) ≠ National Cyber Coordination Centre (MeITY, threat intelligence scanning). Both are cyber coordination tools but under different ministries with different mandates.
  4. Compliance window confusion: The 3-hour window applies to I4C/Section 79(3)(b) notices. The 36-hour window applies under IT Rules 2021 for court/government orders on SSMIs more broadly. Exams may test which window applies to which mechanism.
  5. 290 notices/day ≠ 290 URLs blocked/day: The 290 figure is notices issued; each notice can cover multiple URLs. Total URLs blocked = 1,11,185 over ~383 days (Mar 13, 2024 – Mar 31, 2025).

11. Sources