Telegram has evolved into new dark web, govt. tells HC

Sufficient facts gathered from Tier 1 (MHA, PIB, MeitY, IndiaCode) and Tier 4 (Business Standard) sources. Composing the study note now.


UPSC Study Note — Telegram as the "New Dark Web": Government Submissions Before Delhi HC (June 2026)


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Event
2000 Information Technology Act, 2000 enacted; Section 69A (inserted by IT Amendment Act, 2008) empowers Central Government to block public access to online content.
2009 IT (Procedure and Safeguards for Blocking of Access of Information by Public) Rules, 2009 notified under Section 69A — the operative procedural framework. [S5]
2013 Shreya Singhal v. Union of India (SC, 2015): Section 66A struck down; Section 69A upheld as constitutional, subject to procedural safeguards.
2018–20 I4C Scheme approved (2018); I4C inaugurated January 10, 2020 under MHA's Cyber & Information Security (CIS) Division. [S7][S8]
2020 onwards MeitY invokes Section 69A to block Chinese apps (TikTok, 59+ apps, June 2020), citing sovereignty and security.
2022 Delhi HC directed Telegram to disclose details of channels violating copyright law (copyright infringement cases). [S9]
2024–26 I4C identifies Telegram as a growing hub for dark web links, fraud, and exam-leak networks.
June 2026 First known platform-wide temporary block of Telegram in India; Delhi HC hearing on proportionality. [S1][S6]

4. Core Static Facts

Section 69A — IT Act, 2000 - Inserted by IT (Amendment) Act, 2008. - Empowers the Central Government to issue directions to block public access to any information through any computer resource in the interest of: sovereignty/integrity of India, defence, security of State, friendly relations with foreign states, public order, or prevention of incitement to cognisable offences. [S5] - Blocking orders must follow IT Blocking Rules, 2009 (procedural safeguard: designated officer, review committee, 48-hour emergency blocking). [S5] - Penalty for non-compliance by intermediary: up to 7 years imprisonment + fine. [S10]

Indian Cyber Crime Coordination Centre (I4C) - Parent body: Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA), Cyber & Information Security (CIS) Division. [S7] - Inaugurated: January 10, 2020. [S8] - 7-pronged scheme components: National Cybercrime Threat Analytics Unit (TAU), National Cybercrime Reporting Portal (cybercrime.gov.in), Platform for Joint Cybercrime Investigation Team (JCIT), National Cybercrime Forensic Laboratory, National Cybercrime Training Centre (NCTC), Cybercrime Ecosystem Management Unit, National Cyber Research & Innovation Centre. [S8] - SAHYOG Portal: Managed by I4C; enables automated, centralized content-removal notices to intermediaries across India. [S8]

Telegram — key facts - Cloud-based, end-to-end encrypted (in secret chats) messaging platform; HQ: Dubai (UAE). - Founded: 2013, by Pavel Durov. - Indian user base (per Durov): ~150 million (as of June 2026). [S4] - Ban operative: Section 69A IT Act + IT Blocking Rules, 2009; implementing authority: MeitY. [S1][S5] - Trigger for ban: NTA request linked to NEET-UG 2026 re-exam (June 21). [S1]


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Legal / Constitutional

Geopolitical / Strategic

Technological / Scientific

Governance / Ethical

Administrative

Social


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. Section 69A of the IT Act, 2000 (inserted by IT Amendment Act, 2008) empowers the Central Government — not courts — to issue website/platform blocking orders. [S5]
  2. Procedural safeguard for Section 69A orders: IT (Procedure and Safeguards for Blocking of Access of Information by Public) Rules, 2009. [S5]
  3. I4C (Indian Cyber Crime Coordination Centre) was inaugurated on January 10, 2020 under the Ministry of Home Affairs. [S7][S8]
  4. I4C is a 7-pronged scheme; its nodal reporting platform is cybercrime.gov.in. [S8]
  5. SAHYOG Portal (managed by I4C) enables automated content-removal notices to intermediaries. [S8]
  6. The Telegram ban (June 2026) was triggered by a request from the National Testing Agency (NTA), under the Ministry of Education. [S1]
  7. Implementing ministry for Section 69A blocking orders: MeitY (Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology). [S1][S5]
  8. Telegram's India block was operative until June 22, 2026; message-editing feature disabled until June 30, 2026. [S1]
  9. Telegram CEO Pavel Durov claimed the ban affected over 150 million Indian users. [S4]
  10. The Supreme Court upheld Section 69A as constitutionally valid in Shreya Singhal v. Union of India (2015), while striking down Section 66A. [S5]
  11. Non-compliance with a Section 69A blocking order by an intermediary carries a penalty of up to 7 years' imprisonment. [S10]
  12. The dark web uses overlay networks (e.g., Tor) not accessible via standard browsers; Telegram operates on the open web but can aggregate links to dark/deep web content. [S6]
  13. India's first major Section 69A mass-blocking action: 59 Chinese mobile apps (including TikTok) blocked in June 2020. [S1]
  14. The Delhi HC's proportionality challenge to the Telegram ban invokes Article 19(1)(a) (free speech) read with Article 19(2) (reasonable restrictions). [S6]

8. Mains Relevance

Detail
GS Paper GS-II (Governance, Polity, Rights) + GS-III (Internal Security, Cybersecurity, Technology)
Syllabus Headings GS-II: Government policies and interventions; Statutory bodies; Role of judiciary. GS-III: Cybersecurity; Linkages between organized crime and terrorism; Challenges to internal security through communication networks.

Plausible Mains Questions: 1. "The temporary blocking of Telegram under Section 69A of the IT Act, 2000 raises questions about the proportionality of state power versus individual rights in the digital age. Critically examine." (GS-II/GS-III) 2. "Examine the role of the Indian Cyber Crime Coordination Centre (I4C) in India's cybersecurity architecture. How effective are existing legal provisions in countering the misuse of encrypted messaging platforms?" (GS-III) 3. "Dark web and open-platform misuse present overlapping but distinct challenges for law enforcement. Discuss with reference to recent developments in India's regulatory approach to messaging platforms." (GS-III)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
IT (Intermediary Guidelines and Digital Media Ethics Code) Rules, 2021 Defines due diligence obligations of platforms like Telegram; directly relevant to non-compliance argument.
Shreya Singhal v. Union of India (2015) The foundational SC ruling on Section 69A's constitutionality and free-speech limits.
NEET-UG 2024 Paper Leak Controversy & NTA Reforms Background to why exam security triggered the Telegram ban; same political-institutional context.
Dark Web & Cybercrime Ecosystem in India Conceptual understanding needed to evaluate I4C's assessment of Telegram as a "dark web gateway."
Personal Data Protection / Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 Privacy dimension of platform regulation; tension between surveillance needs and data rights.
National Cybersecurity Policy & CERT-In Broader institutional framework within which I4C and MeitY operate.
Encryption Policy Debate in India End-to-end encryption on platforms like WhatsApp/Telegram vs. lawful interception demands — a live policy debate.
Foreign Direct Investment and Digital Sovereignty Pattern of India restricting foreign-headquartered platforms (Chinese apps, now Telegram) — strategic sovereignty angle.

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Section 69 vs. Section 69A: Section 69 deals with interception/monitoring/decryption orders; Section 69A deals with blocking access to information. Conflating them is a common error — Telegram's ban used 69A, not 69. [S5][S10]
  2. I4C under MeitY (WRONG) — it is under MHA: I4C is a MHA body. MeitY issues blocking orders but does not run I4C. Students frequently mix up the two ministries. [S7][S8]
  3. "Dark web = Telegram" is not the government's claim: The government's claim is that Telegram has become a gateway/aggregator for dark web links — not that Telegram itself is a dark web platform (which requires Tor/overlay networks). [S6]
  4. NTA under Ministry of Education, not MeitY or MHA: The NEET ban request originated from NTA; confusing the initiating agency with the implementing agency (MeitY) is a common trap. [S1]
  5. Shreya Singhal struck down Section 66A, NOT 69A: Section 69A was upheld. Many aspirants wrongly recall the case as striking down all problematic IT Act provisions. [S5]

11. Sources


Note: Tier 1 sources (MHA, MeitY, PIB, IndiaCode) confirm the statutory/institutional framework; Tier 4 sources (Business Standard, The Hindu) provide the specific June 2026 event facts. The article supplied by the user is the primary source for HC proceedings (S6).