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17 Sep 2025

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Digital India Act (Draft)

Author: teresa_myers | 17 Sep 2025

1. Preamble

India’s Digital India Acts(DIA) is in draft status as of 2023 and seeks to replace the aging Information Technology Act ,2000.Among its several goals ,the DIA especially tackles the escalating menace of AI-generated content and deepfakes ,focusing on user accountability ,user safety ,and platform responsibility within the digital system.

2. Scope of the law

The proposed Digital India Act is aimed at addressing a broad spectrum of digital threats ,with a strong focus on deepfakes that impersonate,defame , or mislead. Non-consensual pornographic deepfakes,financial deception,political misinformation ,and identity theft through AI-generated content are among the harms. The legislation applies both to the generation and sharing of the content.

Exemption ,however,can be granted for material that falls under the category of parody,satire ,journalism ,or research,as long as these are prosperity-marked and do not aim to misguide the public.

3. Key provisions:

  • Prohibited Acts:The proposed law prohibits the “use of deepfakes synthetic media to impersonate or mislead individuals or the public”,particularly when it leads to reputational harm or public disturbance.
  • Consent Requirements:Use of deepfakes relating to a person’s voice,likeness,or personal necessities express consent, or else it can be dealt with as harassment,identity theft ,or defamation.
  • Accountability:Online platforms ,such as social media sites,should implement a user verification process,provide traceability of the originators,and have quick takedown processes in place.they can also be required to mark AI-generated content and create tools to identify malicious deepfakes.

4. Penalties and Enforcement

  •  Fines:Offenders who do not comply can be fined up to ₹500 crore(~USD 60 million). Individuals responsible for creating and disseminating hostile deepfakes can be criminally prosecuted,with imprisonment and fines.
  • EnforcementAuthority:The Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology(MeitY) will be the central enforcement agency,with unfair redressal and digital safety regulation provisions.

5. Notable Cases or precedents

While the DIA is yet to be  in effect,recent deepfake attacks featuring Indian actors and politicians have brought about public outcry,exposing acute legal loopholes and calling for government action in the form of suggested regulatory guidelines.

6. Comparison to Global standards

The suggested guidelines by India are broadly in line with EU’s AI Act,with keeping high compliance rates and responsibility. But it lacks judicial oversight at the state level and guardrails of some American deepfake laws.

7. Practical Implications

The clear and disclosed synthetic nature should be adopted by the creators. Sites need to invest in AI tools and compliance systems.The compensation of the victims should be seen through digital grievance systems .

8. Future Outlook

The further development of  DIA will be developed via public consultation with possible mandates on AI labeling,watermarking , and algorithmic transparency. The final version could also recommend a new Digital India Authority to oversee emerging technologies.