HC restrains misuse of Ramdev’s name, image
HC Restrains Misuse of Ramdev's Name, Image — UPSC Study Note
1. At a Glance
- The Delhi High Court (Justice Jyoti Singh) issued an ex-parte ad interim injunction in February 2026 barring the unauthorised use of Swami Ramdev's name, image, voice, and personality attributes across all platforms, including AI-generated deepfakes. [S1][S2]
- The order is a landmark extension of personality rights / right of publicity jurisprudence in India to cover generative AI, deepfakes, and metaverse environments. [S2]
- Relevant for GS-II (governance/judiciary), GS-III (technology/AI regulation), and GS-IV (ethics of AI/privacy); also a Prelims fact for IP law and IT Act provisions.
- India has no standalone statute on personality rights — courts have constructed the doctrine through constitutional law, tort law, and judicial creativity. [S4]
2. Why in the News
- February 2026: Delhi HC granted Ramdev an ex-parte injunction restraining Google, Meta, X Corp., Amazon, and "John Doe" defendants from exploiting his persona via deepfakes, fake product endorsements, voice-cloned audio, and unauthorised merchandise. [S1]
- The order directed platforms to remove offending content within 72 hours of receiving the order. [S1][S3]
- The case is part of a wider judicial trend: Bombay HC granted Akshay Kumar similar interim protection over personality rights (October 2025); actors including Aishwarya Rai Bachchan and Chiranjeevi filed similar complaints in 2025. [S4][S5]
- AAP MP Raghav Chadha filed a personality-rights plea before Delhi HC (May 2026), which the court questioned — indicating the doctrine's boundaries are still being tested. [S6]
3. Background & Evolution
- Origin of Personality Rights in India: No dedicated statute; doctrine evolved via courts drawing on Article 21 (right to life/dignity/privacy) and tort principles.
- Key milestones:
- ICC Development (Cricket) Ltd. v. Arvee Enterprises (2003) — Delhi HC first clearly articulated the "right of publicity" in India.
- Shivaji Rao Gaikwad (Rajinikanth) v. Varsha Productions (2015) — Madras HC recognised a celebrity's right over their persona.
- Anil Kapoor v. Simply Life India (2023) — Delhi HC granted sweeping personality-rights injunction covering AI/deepfakes for the first time in India; precedent for subsequent celebrity cases. [S4]
- Akshay Kumar case (October 2025) — Bombay HC extended protection to e-commerce platforms and AI content creators. [S4]
- Ramdev case (February 2026) — Delhi HC expressly extended protection to metaverse environments, voice-cloned audio, and AI-generated images. [S1][S2]
4. Core Static Facts
| Parameter | Detail |
|---|---|
| Court & Judge | Delhi High Court; Justice Jyoti Singh |
| Order type | Ex-parte ad interim injunction |
| Date of order | ~25 February 2026 |
| Petitioner | Swami Ramdev (Yoga guru; co-founder, Patanjali Ayurved) |
| Respondents | Google, Meta, X Corp., Amazon, unnamed "John Does" |
| Protected attributes | Name, image, voice, likeness, personality attributes |
| Platforms covered | All digital platforms, AI-generated content, deepfakes, voice clones, metaverse |
| Takedown window | 72 hours of receipt of order |
| Applicable legal provisions | IT Act 2000 §66D (personation), §67, §67A; Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita relevant provisions; Article 21 (Constitution); common law tort of passing off |
| Doctrine invoked | Personality rights / Right of publicity |
| Standalone statute? | None in India as of 2026 |
| Nodal ministry for IT governance | Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY) |
| IT (Intermediary Guidelines and Digital Media Ethics Code) Rules | 2021 — require platforms to act on complaints; relevant for takedown compliance |
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Legal / Constitutional
- Article 21 (right to dignity and privacy) is the constitutional anchor for personality rights in India; the Supreme Court in K.S. Puttaswamy v. Union of India (2017) affirmed privacy as a fundamental right, reinforcing the doctrine. [S4]
- Courts apply the "right of publicity" (economic dimension) and "right of privacy" (personal dignity dimension) as twin arms of personality rights.
- The IT Act, 2000 provides partial coverage: Section 66D (cheating by personation using computer resource), Section 67/67A (obscene electronic material) — but no specific anti-deepfake provision exists in Indian statute. [S4]
- The Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS), 2023 (replacing IPC) includes provisions on defamation, cheating, and impersonation that courts now invoke alongside the IT Act.
Ethical / Governance
- Commercial exploitation without consent raises issues of informed consent, data dignity, and the commodification of identity by AI systems trained on scraped images/voices.
- The case highlights the "John Doe" / Ashok Kumar order mechanism in Indian IP litigation — injunctions against unknown defendants to cover future infringers. [S1]
- The 72-hour takedown mandate tests platform accountability under IT Rules 2021's grievance redressal framework.
Scientific / Technological
- Deepfake technology uses Generative Adversarial Networks (GANs) and large multimodal models to synthesise realistic audio-visual content of real persons.
- Voice cloning (separate from video deepfakes) is now explicitly covered by the HC order — a doctrinal expansion over the 2023 Anil Kapoor precedent. [S2]
- Metaverse inclusion signals that personality rights must follow the person into virtual/augmented environments — a first in Indian jurisprudence. [S2]
Economic
- Unauthorised celebrity endorsements distort consumer choice, constitute unfair trade practice (Competition Act angle), and deprive the celebrity of endorsement revenue (economic dimension of right of publicity).
- Patanjali Ayurved's brand is directly tied to Ramdev's persona — fake endorsements for rival products cause measurable commercial harm.
Administrative
- Enforcement depends on platform compliance (Meta, Google et al.) with takedown orders — a perennial challenge given platforms' extraterritorial nature and volume of content.
- No dedicated Deepfake Regulatory Authority exists; MeitY has issued advisories but no binding regulations as of mid-2026. [S4]
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- October 2025: Bombay HC grants Akshay Kumar urgent interim protection over personality rights; restrains AI content creators, social media, and e-commerce platforms. [S4]
- 2025: Aishwarya Rai Bachchan petitions Delhi HC over AI-generated deepfake pornographic images — one of the first such cases involving non-consensual intimate deepfakes of a celebrity. [S5]
- 2025: Chiranjeevi files complaint over deepfake videos on adult websites under IT Act provisions. [S5]
- February 2026: Delhi HC order in Ramdev case — broadest scope yet (metaverse, voice cloning, AI-generated content, 72-hour takedown). [S1][S2]
- May 2026: Delhi HC questions Raghav Chadha's personality rights plea, indicating courts are scrutinising the scope carefully to prevent doctrine from being overly expansive. [S6]
7. Prelims Hooks
- The Delhi High Court, not Supreme Court, issued the Ramdev personality rights injunction in February 2026.
- Presiding judge: Justice Jyoti Singh of the Delhi High Court.
- The order covered AI-generated content, deepfakes, voice-cloned audio, and metaverse environments — all in one injunction.
- Platforms directed to remove content within 72 hours of receiving the order.
- In India, no standalone statute governs personality rights / right of publicity as of 2026.
- Section 66D of the IT Act, 2000 deals with cheating by personation using a computer resource — primary IT Act peg for deepfake impersonation.
- The IT (Intermediary Guidelines and Digital Media Ethics Code) Rules, 2021 obligate platforms to act on user complaints — relevant to takedown compliance.
- The Anil Kapoor v. Simply Life India (2023) case was the first Delhi HC judgment covering AI/deepfakes under personality rights — the precedent for the Ramdev order.
- K.S. Puttaswamy v. Union of India (2017) (9-judge bench) recognised privacy as a fundamental right under Article 21 — constitutional foundation of personality rights.
- A "John Doe" / Ashok Kumar order is used in Indian IP law to restrain unnamed/unknown future infringers.
- Right of publicity (economic) and right of privacy (personal dignity) are the two components of personality rights in Indian jurisprudence.
- Bombay HC granted Akshay Kumar similar personality rights protection in October 2025.
- MeitY (Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology) is the nodal ministry for deepfake regulation and intermediary guidelines.
8. Mains Relevance
GS Papers & Syllabus headings: - GS-II: Judiciary; Statutory, regulatory, and quasi-judicial bodies; Citizens' rights; Role of social media in governance. - GS-III: Awareness in IT; Challenges and issues in cybersecurity; Intellectual property rights. - GS-IV: Information sharing and transparency in governance; Ethics in use of technology.
Plausible Mains question stems: 1. "Personality rights in India have evolved largely through judicial creativity in the absence of a dedicated statute. Critically examine the adequacy of the existing legal framework to address threats posed by generative AI and deepfake technology." 2. "In the context of rising deepfake misuse of public figures, evaluate the role of intermediary platforms and the regulatory gaps in India's IT Act framework." 3. "The right of publicity is an emerging dimension of Article 21. Discuss its evolution through Indian case law and the challenges in enforcement in the digital age."
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| IT Act 2000 and Amendments | Statutory base for online content regulation; deepfake provisions |
| IT (Intermediary Guidelines) Rules 2021 | Platform takedown obligations; grievance redressal |
| Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita 2023 | Replacement for IPC; impersonation, defamation, cheating provisions |
| Right to Privacy (Puttaswamy judgment) | Constitutional foundation of personality rights |
| Digital Personal Data Protection Act 2023 | Data consent framework; intersection with identity exploitation |
| Intellectual Property Rights in India | Trade marks, passing off — legal siblings of personality rights |
| AI Governance & Regulation in India | MeitY's AI advisory; absence of a comprehensive AI law |
| Consumer Protection Act 2019 | Fake endorsements violate advertising standards; CCPA angle |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- Wrong court: Aspirants may attribute the order to the Supreme Court — it is the Delhi High Court (Division: single bench of Justice Jyoti Singh).
- Confusing right of publicity with copyright: Personality rights ≠ copyright. Copyright protects original creative works; personality rights protect identity/persona. They may overlap but are legally distinct.
- Assuming a statute exists: India has no dedicated Personality Rights Act or Publicity Rights Act — the doctrine is judge-made, rooted in Article 21 and tort law. Confusing with the US Lanham Act or state-level Right of Publicity statutes is a trap.
- Wrong IT Act section: Section 66C covers identity theft (password/digital signature misuse); Section 66D covers cheating by personation — the latter is relevant to deepfakes. Do not conflate the two.
- Conflating MeitY with MIB: The Ministry of Information and Broadcasting (MIB) handles TV/OTT content; MeitY governs IT Act and intermediary rules — the nodal ministry for deepfake/AI regulation is MeitY, not MIB.
11. Sources
- [S1] Personality Rights Trump AI Deepfakes: Delhi HC Grants Ex-Parte Injunction to Swami Ramdev — https://supremetoday.ai/personality-rights-trump-ai-deepfakes-delhi-hc-grants-ex-parte-injunction-to-swami-ramdev-against-unauthorized-exploitation-20260225004 — (Tier 4 equivalent / legal news)
- [S2] Delhi High Court protects Swami Ramdev's Personality Rights; directs take down of AI-generated deepfakes — https://www.scconline.com/blog/post/2026/02/27/delhi-hc-protects-swami-ramdevs-personality-rights/ — (Tier 4 equivalent / legal journal)
- [S3] HC restrains misuse of Ramdev's name, image — The Hindu, 26 February 2026 (Article content provided as primary source) — (Tier 4)
- [S4] Deepfakes & Cyber Law; Personality Rights India context — https://ascl.substack.com/p/deepfakes-and-cyber-law — (reference/legal commentary)
- [S5] Aishwarya Rai leads Bollywood fight against deepfakes — https://www.aol.com/articles/aishwarya-rai-leads-bollywood-fight-112600611.html — (Tier 4 equivalent)
- [S6] Delhi HC questions Raghav Chadha's personality rights plea — https://www.medianama.com/2026/05/223-delhi-hc-raghav-chadha-personality-rights-plea/ — (Tier 4 equivalent)
- [S7] Bombay HC grants Akshay Kumar interim protection over personality rights — https://www.newsonair.gov.in/bombay-hc-grants-akshay-kumar-interim-protection-over-personality-rights/ — (Tier 1: newsonair.gov.in / AIR / Government of India)