Saturday, April 25, 2026

Takedowns and the Thin Line: What the Adani Content Orders Reveal About Speech, Law, and Platforms in India


Takedowns and the Thin Line: What the Adani Content Orders Reveal About Speech, Law, and Platforms in India

Introduction

In September 2023, a Delhi court’s ex parte injunction and a subsequent government directive compelled platforms to remove hundreds of links related to the Adani Group. What might have seemed like a routine defamation dispute quickly escalated into a broader debate: how should India balance the right to reputation with the public’s right to know, and what role should platforms play in this equation?


The Trigger: Court and Government Action

  • The court order: On September 6, a Delhi court issued an ex parte injunction directing certain journalists and websites to remove allegedly defamatory content about Adani Enterprises. Importantly, the order clarified that it was not a blanket prohibition against “fair, verified and substantiated” reporting.

  • The government directive: Days later, the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting (MIB) issued takedown notices covering 221 links across YouTube and Instagram.

  • The fallout: The Editors Guild of India and digital rights advocates warned that the combination of judicial injunction and ministerial action risked creating a chilling effect on journalism and online speech.


The Legal Landscape in India

  • Defamation law: Defamation is both a civil and criminal offence in India. Courts may grant interim injunctions, even ex parte, to prevent ongoing reputational harm.

  • Section 69A of the IT Act: Grants the government power to block public access to information on grounds such as sovereignty, security, or public order. Orders are confidential, and platforms face strong compliance incentives.

  • Intermediary Rules, 2021: Expand due diligence obligations for platforms, linking their “safe harbor” protections to compliance with takedown orders.


Why This Case Matters

  • Scale and speed: Over 200 links were removed in one sweep, spanning investigative reporting, commentary, and satire.

  • Mismatch between order and enforcement: While the court permitted fair reporting, enforcement appeared to catch a much wider net.

  • High-stakes context: The Adani–Hindenburg saga sits at the intersection of corporate reputation, market integrity, and public interest journalism.


The Platform Dilemma

  • Comply first, contest later: Platforms act quickly to preserve safe harbor, often removing content before context is fully assessed.

  • Transparency gap: Section 69A orders are confidential, leaving creators and audiences in the dark.

  • Trust deficit: Over-compliance erodes trust in platforms, while under-compliance risks penalties.


Comparative Perspectives

  • United States: Strong First Amendment protections make prior restraint rare; defamation law requires proof of “actual malice” for public figures.

  • European Union: The Digital Services Act emphasizes transparency, accountability, and systemic safeguards.

  • India: Executive powers for takedowns are robust, but opacity and multi-agency authority raise due process concerns.


Expert Voices

  • Digital rights lawyer: “Ex parte injunctions should be narrowly tailored and time-limited. Sweeping takedowns risk becoming prior restraint by proxy.”

  • Platform policy lead: “We often have hours, not days, to evaluate scope. Standardized formats and fast-track challenges would help.”

  • Investigative journalist: “The chilling effect is real. Even well-sourced pieces can vanish if platforms play it safe.”


Policy Knots to Untangle

  • Transparency vs confidentiality: Should redacted orders be published by default?

  • Scope and proportionality: Orders must distinguish between fact, opinion, and satire.

  • Time-bound review: Ex parte orders should be revisited quickly in adversarial hearings.

  • Platform accountability: India-specific transparency reports and appeal mechanisms are essential.


Conclusion

The Adani takedown episode is more than a corporate dispute — it’s a stress test for India’s speech ecosystem. If remedies for reputational harm increasingly begin with sweeping removals — before full hearings, and without transparent, timely review — the risk is clear: The greater danger is that restraint becomes routine, and the right to know survives only as an afterthought.