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HomeArtificial IntelligenceFrom Rashmika deepfake to draft rules: India’s 2-year fight against AI misuse

From Rashmika deepfake to draft rules: India’s 2-year fight against AI misuse

A timeline tracing how India moved from shock and outrage over a viral deepfake in late 2023 to drafting the country’s first legal framework defining and regulating synthetically generated information

October 23, 2025 / 14:49 IST
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On October 22, India introduced draft amendments to the IT Rules aimed at addressing deepfakes menace

Two years after a manipulated video of actor Rashmika Mandanna went viral, the government has unveiled draft amendments to the IT Rules formally defining “synthetically generated information” -- capping a two-year effort to curb deepfake misuse.

Over this period, Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY) issued a series of advisories to social media platforms, the Delhi and Bombay High Courts recognised personality rights against AI misuse, and IT Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw articulated a “techno-legal” regulatory vision.

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Here's the two-year journey --

Rashmika Mandanna controversy: In November 2023, a morphed video of actor Rashmika Mandanna went viral on social media. The clip appeared to show the actor entering a lift was identified as AI-generated. However, by then, the video had become viral. The incident drew strong public outrage and triggered debate about the risks posed by deepfakes.

IT ministry sends first advisory: A few days after the Mandanna incident, the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY) issued an advisory to social media companies, urging them to tackle deepfake content. In the advisory,  the government warned social media intermediaries that not removing deepfake content from their platforms can attract damages, such as losing safe harbour provisions and so on.

Modi acknowledges deepfakes harm:  A few weeks later Prime Minister Narendra Modi flagged the issue during a public event, describing deepfakes as a serious threat after being himself targeted in a fake video showing him performing Garba.

Ministers' meetings with social media cos: Soon after IT minister Ashwini Vaishnaw and former minister of state in the IT ministry Rajeev Chandrasekhar, announced separate meetings with social media companies, on November 23 and November 24, respectively. During the Chandrasekhar meeting, the former minister warned that platforms could temporarily be blocked in cases of violations.

Second advisory: A second, more detailed advisory was issued on December 26, 2023, requiring platforms to explicitly inform users about prohibited content -- including AI-generated misinformation -- and to communicate potential legal consequences under the Indian Penal Code and IT Act, 2000. The controversial AI government approval advisory: On March 1, 2024, MeitY issued a new advisory requiring intermediaries to label under-tested or unreliable AI models and obtain prior government approval before deploying such systems in India.