IT Act Section 79
in Nagpur
Section 79 of the Information Technology Act 2000 provides conditional immunity to online intermediaries (platforms) from liability for third-party content. However, this immunity is lost if the platform fails to act expeditiously upon receiving actual knowledge of unlawful content through a government or court order, or a legal notice.
- →Intermediary immunity is conditional on expeditious action upon notice
- →IT Rules 2021 mandates 36-hour response time for certain content categories
- →Failure to act after valid notice makes the platform co-liable for the defamatory content
- →Platforms must appoint India-based Grievance Officers who must be addressed in legal notices
IT Act Section 79 for content removal in Nagpur.
When RepuLex issues a formal Section 79 notice to a platform (Google, Facebook, YouTube etc.), the platform's immunity is put at risk. The platform must remove the content or face direct legal liability. IT Rules 2021 tightened this obligation, requiring action within 36 hours for certain categories of content.
Section 79 notices work best for clearly defamatory or illegal content. Borderline cases may require court orders for platform compliance. Overseas platforms may resist Indian notices — High Court injunctions are more effective in those cases.
How does IT Act Section 79 apply to content removal in Nagpur?+
When RepuLex issues a formal Section 79 notice to a platform (Google, Facebook, YouTube etc.), the platform's immunity is put at risk. The platform must remove the content or face direct legal liability. IT Rules 2021 tightened this obligation, requiring action within 36 hours for certain categories of content. In Nagpur, RepuLex uses IT Act Section 79 alongside Bombay High Court filings to achieve permanent content removal. Bombay High Court provides additional enforcement jurisdiction for Maharashtra-based matters.
Can IT Act Section 79 be used to remove content targeting Nagpur businesses?+
Yes. IT Act Section 79 has national jurisdiction under Indian law — a notice or court proceeding initiated in Nagpur is effective against platforms and content originators across India. IT Act proceedings do not require you to prove where the content server is located.
What are the limitations of IT Act Section 79 for Nagpur cases?+
Section 79 notices work best for clearly defamatory or illegal content. Borderline cases may require court orders for platform compliance. Overseas platforms may resist Indian notices — High Court injunctions are more effective in those cases. For Nagpur clients, RepuLex assesses each case to determine which combination of legal provisions — IT Act, IPC 499/500, or Bombay High Court injunctions — will be most effective given the specific content and platform.
Use IT Act Section 79 to remove content in Nagpur.
Fixed fee · Legal notices · Bombay High Court jurisdiction · Written confirmation