What Is Defamation Under Indian Law?
Defamation under Indian law is defined in Section 356 of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS), 2023 (formerly Section 499 IPC) as making or publishing any imputation that harms the reputation of a person. Defamation can be:
- Criminal defamation (S.356 BNS) — a cognisable offence punishable with up to 2 years imprisonment, fine, or both. Requires a complaint by the affected person (not a police FIR).
- Civil defamation — a tort actionable in the District Court or High Court, where the plaintiff can claim monetary damages for reputational harm.
Does Section 66A IT Act Still Apply to Online Defamation?
No. Section 66A of the IT Act — which was used to arrest people for offensive social media posts — was struck down as unconstitutional by the Supreme Court in Shreya Singhal v. Union of India (2015). Any case filed under S.66A is immediately challengeable. Online defamation is now governed by S.356 BNS (criminal) or civil law — not Section 66A.
How to Collect Evidence for Online Defamation
Evidence collection is critical — social media content can be deleted. Do this immediately:
- Screenshot everything — the defamatory post, the profile of the person who posted it, timestamps, comments, and shares.
- Get a Section 65B IT Act certificate — for digital evidence to be admissible in Indian courts, a certificate under S.65B of the Indian Evidence Act must accompany it. A lawyer or a certified IT professional can issue this certificate.
- Preserve URL links — save the complete URL of the defamatory content.
- Note the extent of spread — how many people shared, liked, or commented — this is relevant to damages.
Legal Remedies Available
Criminal Complaint
File a criminal complaint under S.356 BNS before the Judicial Magistrate. Note: this is a complaint to the Magistrate — not an FIR to the police. The Magistrate can take cognizance and issue process (summons or warrant) to the accused. The process takes time but results in criminal prosecution of the defamer.
Civil Suit for Damages
File a civil defamation suit in the District Court or High Court for monetary compensation. Courts can award general damages (for injury to reputation), special damages (financial loss caused), and in egregious cases, exemplary damages. You can also seek an interim injunction to immediately remove the defamatory content from the platform.
Platform Takedown
Under the IT (Intermediary Guidelines and Digital Media Ethics Code) Rules, 2021, platforms like Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter must acknowledge a grievance within 24 hours and resolve it within 15 days. Report the content using the platform’s in-built grievance mechanism. If the platform fails to act, you can approach the Grievance Appellate Committee (GAC) established by the government.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I take legal action for defamation in a private WhatsApp group?
Yes. Defamation in a private WhatsApp group is still defamation — the publication element is satisfied by the message being seen by other group members. However, the smaller the audience (just 1–2 people), the less severe the reputational harm and consequently the lower the likely damages. For defamation sent to a large group or a public platform, the legal case is stronger and the remedy more significant.
What if the person defaming me is anonymous or using a fake account?
Anonymous defamers can be identified through the platform — courts can issue directions to social media companies to reveal the identity (IP address, phone number linked to the account) of an anonymous user. A police complaint or a court order for production of records from the platform can compel disclosure. Cyber cell investigations are also effective in tracing anonymous online accounts.
What are the defences available to a person accused of defamation?
Key defences include: (1) Truth — if the statement is true and made for public good, it is not defamation under S.356 BNS. (2) Fair comment — honest opinion on a matter of public interest. (3) Privilege — statements made in legislative proceedings or court proceedings are absolutely privileged. (4) No publication — the statement was not communicated to a third party.
Advocate Akash Chikate handles online defamation complaints and civil suits in Pune. If your reputation has been damaged by false social media content, contact us for a consultation on the fastest available remedy.