MeitY doubles online content blocking orders to 24,000 in a year

The Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY) has doubled its online content blocking orders to 24,300 in 2025, officials said, citing a surge in deepfakes and AI-generated content. Roughly 60% of these orders targeted URLs on X, formerly Twitter, with 25% for Facebook and Instagram, and 5% for YouTube.

The Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY) issued 24,300 blocking orders by December 2025, double the 12,600 in 2024 and up from an average of 6,000 in 2023. Officials attributed the rise to deepfakes, objectionable posts, and AI-generated content on social media platforms.

Requests peaked during Operation Sindoor in May 2025 and have stayed high since. More than half came from nodal officers in the Ministry of Home Affairs and Ministry of External Affairs, with others from various ministries, departments, and individuals. Several orders targeted Instagram, Facebook, and YouTube posts by political parties and politicians.

Congress MP Shashi Tharoor lodged a recent high-profile complaint with the Home Ministry and MeitY over deepfake videos. Speaking to The Indian Express, he said, “It was best that I put up my complaints in writing. The fake content was apparently being generated from Pakistan and I am told, at least in India the fake content has been blocked.” On April 9, Tharoor posted on X about AI-generated voice-overs on his old interview footage spreading false statements.

Orders are issued under Section 69A of the Information Technology Act 2000 to protect sovereignty, security, public order, and foreign relations. A Blocking Committee, including representatives from Law and Justice, Home, Information and Broadcasting ministries, and CERT-In, reviews cases, with final approval from MeitY's Secretary. Social media firms like Meta and xAI attend virtual sittings, now held several times a week.

A senior official noted, “With the explosion of AI posts and the flood of deep fakes, we are now frequently issuing blocking orders under the emergency clause. Several requests also come to us from state governments for urgent intervention when a situation arises.”

Makala yanayohusiana

India's Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY) has released a draft amendment to the IT Rules 2021, bringing news content posted by individual users under the same framework as publishers. Social media platforms must comply with ministry guidelines or face legal action. Comments are invited until April 14.

Imeripotiwa na AI

India's Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology proposed persistent labels for AI-generated content on social media in a notice issued on April 21. The move amends IT Rules to enhance oversight on user-generated news. Feedback is invited until May 7.

The Supreme Court has revived the Union government's appeal against a Bombay high court judgment that struck down the Centre's attempt to establish a Fact-Checking Unit under the 2021 IT Rules. The restoration came after the government informed the court of its decision to pursue judicial remedies. The appeal had been dismissed earlier due to uncured procedural defects.

Imeripotiwa na AI

Indonesia's Minister of Communications and Digital, Meutya Hafid, called on young people, especially university graduates, to safeguard the country's digital space amid the post-truth era. She highlighted their role as agents of digital literacy and ambassadors for the PP Tunas regulation to protect children from risky content. The remarks were made in Jakarta on April 26, 2026.

South Africa's Communications Minister Solly Malatsi has withdrawn the draft National Artificial Intelligence Policy following revelations of fictitious sources in its references, likely generated by AI tools. The errors impacted three of the policy's six pillars, leading to internal probes and commitments to accountability. Malatsi described the lapse as a key reason for needing stronger human oversight in AI use.

Imeripotiwa na AI

TikTok began on Tuesday (17) making all accounts of users under 16 private, to comply with the ECA Digital. The change requires parental authorization for alterations and complements existing restrictions. The law takes effect today, but its decree was postponed.

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