The Supreme Court has asked the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting to prepare a draft mechanism for screening user-generated content before it is uploaded on social media, noting its potential to trigger unrest even before authorities can act, a Times of India report stated today.
The directive came during a hearing where the bench highlighted the speed at which harmful content spreads and the current statutory vacuum in regulating such posts.
According to the court, the concern is not about curbing free speech but introducing a reasonable, preventive framework. The bench of CJI Surya Kant and Justice Joymalya Bagchi observed that while the right to freedom of speech is vital, it is a regulated right and cannot remain unchecked in a digital environment where objectionable or misleading content can go viral within minutes.
While associations representing broadcasters and OTT platforms argued that their self-regulatory codes were adequate, the bench questioned their efficacy, pointing out that such content continued to appear online.
The ToI report added court has given the I&B Ministry four weeks to draft and publicise the proposed guidelines, inviting objections and suggestions from the public.
Avi Kaul bids adieu to Network18 by penning an emotional note
DONER Secy Chanchal Kumar swaps places with MIB’s Jaju
JioStar terminates IPL broadcast distribution deal in Bangladesh
SPNI to air star-studded Chetak SCREEN Awards 2026 LIVE on April 5
‘Avatar: The Last Airbender’ S2 to stream on Netflix from June 25
Zee Music elevates Sujal Parekh; Vikas Somani steps down
Meta tests ‘Instagram Plus’ with new Story and privacy features
Balaji Digital announces new series ‘Ishk Dum Aur Idli Rasam’
SPNI’s April Fool’s prank leaves fans guessing 

