The Delhi High Court has directed Telegram to disclose, in a sealed cover, the details of the channels and devices used to disseminate alleged copyright infringing content, along with the mobile numbers, IP addresses, and email ids of such users.
Rejecting Telegram’s argument that it cannot disclose user information as that would violate its privacy policy and the laws of the jurisdiction where its physical servers are located, a bench of Justice Prathiba M. Singh, said even under the provisions of the IT Act, such as under Section 79(3)(b), Telegram must expeditiously remove or disable access to the unlawful material, without vitiating the evidence in any manner.
The court was dealing with a suit of plaintiff Neetu Singh and K.D. Campus Pvt. Ltd seeking permanent injunction restraining infringement of copyright, damages, and other relief in respect of unauthorized dissemination of the plaintiffs’ videos, lectures, books, etc, IANS reported from New Delhi.
In the 51-page order dated August 30, the court said Indian courts would be perfectly justified in directing Telegram, which runs its massive operations in India, to adhere to Indian law and orders passed by them for disclosure of relevant information relating to infringers.
It held that merely because of Telegram‘s argument that it chooses to locate its server in Singapore, the same cannot result remediless against the actual infringers.
“.. If such an argument is accepted, in the current world where most dissemination happens through online messaging services and platforms, IP violations would go completely unchecked,” the order averred.
“The provisions of the IT Act and the Rules made therein have to be construed harmoniously with the rights and remedies provided to the copyright owners under the Copyright Act. Indian courts are competent to decide issues relating to infringement of copyright and the mere fact that Telegram is operating a messaging service in India which chooses not to locate its servers in India cannot divest the Indian courts from dealing with copyright disputes or divest copyright owners from availing their remedies in Indian courts.
“In the present age of cloud computing and diminishing national boundaries in data storage, conventional concepts of territoriality cannot be strictly applied. The dynamic evolution of law is essential to ensure appropriate remedies in case of violation of copyright and other IP laws,” the order read.
Netflix leads India’s 2025 theatrical streaming race: Ormax study
Netflix debuts ‘Clips’ feed to boost mobile content discovery
India’s creative industry reps air AI policy gaps in meet with PM’s advisor
IAMAI flays TRAI attempts to regulate communication OTT
TRAI consultation seeks policy reset to up public Wi-Fi expansion
Koratala Siva, Balakrishna team up for ‘NBK 112’
I, Nobody’ teaser unveils Prithviraj in gripping heist drama
MIB pushes live events hub plan; urges States to align with federal model
Disney spotlights contributors that led to ‘The Devil Wears Prada2’ 
