Quora Posts & Answers Removal
in Delhi
RepuLex provides legal quora posts & answers removal in Delhi using IT Act 2000 notices and Delhi High Court filings where required. Quora has India operations and is subject to IT Rules 2021. Quora questions/answers ranking on Google for brand searches can cause significant reputational damage. RepuLex issues IT Act notices and simultaneously pursues Google de-indexing of the Quora pages.
- →Defamatory answers making false allegations about businesses or professionals
- →False "scam" questions designed to rank on Google for brand names
- →Anonymously-posted defamatory content on professional questions
- →False allegations in Quora answers reaching large audiences
7–21 days for removal. Google de-indexing confirmed within 7 days of content removal.
Send the Quora URL. RepuLex assesses legal actionability, advises on approach, and provides a fixed fee quote — within 4 hours.
IT Act Section 79 notice issued to Quora and, where applicable, IPC 499/500 criminal defamation notice to the content originator.
Quora must respond within 36 hours under IT Rules 2021. RepuLex monitors compliance and escalates to Delhi High Court if the platform does not act.
Written removal confirmation provided. Google de-indexing request filed. Delhi clients receive documentary evidence of permanent content removal.
Delhi professionals and businesses increasingly face false content on Quora that damages their search rankings and professional credibility. In Delhi, quora posts & answers content is legally actionable under IT Act 2000 — the platform must comply with formal notices issued by RepuLex's legal team. Unlike standard user reports, legal notices create binding obligations under Indian law. Delhi High Court injunctions are available where the platform fails to act promptly.
Remove Quora Posts & Answers content in Delhi permanently.
Fixed fee · Legal notices · Delhi High Court jurisdiction · Written confirmation
Why quora posts & answers removal in Delhi requires Delhi High Court-aware strategy
Delhi High Court is the leading judicial forum for IT Act and online defamation matters in India. It has passed landmark John Doe orders, Google de-indexing directions, and intermediary liability rulings that set precedents for all High Courts nationwide. Delhi's concentration of national media, corporate headquarters, and political institutions makes it the primary source of cross-platform defamation cases requiring urgent injunctive relief.
False news articles on national portals
Glassdoor reviews targeting Delhi-based corporates
WhatsApp-spread defamation among NCR business networks
Delhi-based clients face the highest density of cross-platform attacks in India — coordinated content on Twitter/X, Glassdoor, and national news portals (especially during legislative or business cycles). Telegram and WhatsApp groups operating from NCR are an increasing source of viral defamation requiring John Doe orders.
Delhi High Court accepts urgent mentions before the Vacation Bench and has a strong tradition of granting ex parte interim injunctions in defamation matters with clear evidence of falsity. Original-side filing is the preferred route for IT Act and intermediary liability matters.
Highest-risk Delhi industries: Public sector executives and policy advisors (false news framing), national-corporate leadership (Glassdoor and shareholder forum attacks), and political consultants (coordinated Twitter campaigns).