Pre-2011 Blocking of Dawn website (1999) Immediately after the
Kargil War in 1999, the website of the
Pakistani daily newspaper
Dawn was temporarily blocked from access within India by
Videsh Sanchar Nigam Limited, a government-owned telecommunications company that at the time had monopoly control of the international Internet gateways in India.
Rediff, a media news website, claimed that the ban was instigated by the Indian government and then published detailed instructions as to how one could bypass the filter and view the site.
Blocking of Yahoo! groups (2003) In September 2003, Kynhun, a
Yahoo! group linked to the "
Hynniewtrep National Liberation Council" (an illegal, minor separatist group from the state of
Meghalaya), which discussed the case of the
Khasi tribe, was banned. DoT asked Indian ISPs to block the group, but difficulties led to all Yahoo! groups being banned for approximately two weeks.
Blocking of 17 websites (2006) In July 2006, the Indian government ordered the blocking of 17 websites, including some hosted on the
GeoCities,
Blogspot, and
Typepad domains. Initial implementation difficulties led to these domains being blocked entirely, but access to sites on these domains other than those specifically banned was restored by most ISPs after about a week.
Orkut and Indian law enforcement agreement (2007) In 2007, Indian law enforcement entered an agreement with the then-popular social networking site
Orkut to track down what it deemed
defamatory content, which, in their example, includes content critical of Indian cartoonist and journalist
Bal Thackeray.
2011 Adopting of new IT rules The "IT Rules 2011" were adopted in April 2011 as a supplement to the 2000 Information Technology Act (ITA). The new rules required Internet companies to remove within 36 hours of being notified by the authorities any content deemed objectionable, particularly if its nature were identified as "defamatory", "hateful", "harmful to minors", or "infringes copyright". Cyber café owners were required to photograph their customers; follow instructions on how their cafés should be set up so all computer screens were in plain sight; keep copies of client IDs and their browsing histories for one year; and forward this data to the government each month. On 21 July of that year, all file hosting websites were blocked by ISPs to prevent copyright infringement of the film
Singham, causing anger amongst Internet users. This ban was later lifted. On 24 December of that year,
Reliance Communications, a widely used ISP, again blocked access to file-sharing sites, having obtained a
John Doe order from a
Delhi court to help protect the movie
Don 2 several days before its release. The block was lifted on 30 December.
Pre-screening of Internet content On 5 December 2011,
The New York Times India Ink—the publication's "first-ever country-specific site for news, information, culture, and conversation"—reported that the Indian government had asked several social media sites and Internet companies, including
Google,
Facebook, and
Yahoo!, to "prescreen user content from India and to remove disparaging, inflammatory or defamatory content before it goes online". Top officials from the Indian units of Google,
Microsoft, Yahoo!, and Facebook had several meetings with
Kapil Sibal, India's acting telecommunications minister, to discuss the issue in recent months, India Ink reported; and at one of those meetings, Sibal asked these companies "to use human beings to screen content, not technology". The next day, Sibal held a press conference confirming the India Ink story and commenting to more than 100 reporters, "We have to take care of the sensibilities of our people", because of the importance of cultural ethos. On the 7th of December,
The Times of India revealed that the search engine Google was asked to remove around 358 items by the government, out of which 255 items were said to criticise it as per a Google
transparency report, adding that the government had also asked Google to remove 236 items from Orkut and 19 from
YouTube for the same reason. Other reasons included defamation (39 requests); privacy and security (20 requests); impersonation (14 requests); hate speech (eight requests); pornography (three requests); and national security (one request). Google admitted that 51% of the total requests were partially or fully complied with. The news of banning and blocking of objectionable content on the Internet was viewed negatively by many Indian
netizens, and
#IdiotKapilSibal trended on
Twitter following netizens' expression of outrage over what was seen as a way to block websites criticising the government. In an interview to
NDTV, Sibal responded by saying that most of the content being requested to be removed was pornographic in nature and involved deities, which could have caused communal disharmony. Although Sibal claimed that the government wanted to remove pornographic content, however, a transparency report published by Google claimed that the content including protests against social leaders or used offensive language in reference to religious leaders was not removed. In its transparency report, Google stated: About this matter, Google also said: Although talks continue between the government and officials of Internet companies like Google and Facebook, there was no consensus on this issue.
Ban on Cartoons Against Corruption In 2011, a nationwide anti-corruption movement,
India Against Corruption, gathered pace under the leadership of a veteran
Gandhian,
Anna Hazare, demanding passage of the
Jan Lokpal Bill to put an
ombudsman in place with power to deal with corruption in public places.
Aseem Trivedi, a
political cartoonist, joined the crusade and started a cartoon-based campaign,
Cartoons Against Corruption, to support the movement with his art. He launched a website, www.cartoonsagainstcorruption.com, consisting of his sharp anti-corruption cartoons targeting the corrupt system and politicos. During a hunger strike by Hazare to support the bill Trivedi displayed his cartoons on the
MMRDA ground,
Mumbai. On the first day of anti-corruption protests — 27 December — he received an email from BigRock, the domain name registrar with which his website was registered, saying: "We have received a complaint from Crime Branch, Mumbai against the domain name 'cartoonsagainstcorruption.com' for displaying objectionable pictures and texts related to
flag and
emblem of India. Hence we have suspended the domain name and its associated services." The complaint had been made by a Mumbai-based advocate and
Congress Party leader, R.P. Pandey, stating that "defamatory and derogatory cartoons" were displayed as posters during Hazare's hunger strike in Mumbai. Noting that the posters were created by Trivedi and were "believed to be made at the instance of Shri Anna Hazare", the complaint requested "strict legal action in the matter". Following the ban on his website, Trivedi uploaded all the cartoons to a blog he quickly created.
2012 Delhi court summonses In January 2012, a Delhi court issued summonses to Google and Facebook headquarters for objectionable content. This was followed by the
Delhi High Court saying that websites such as Google and Facebook were liable for the content posted on their platform by users, as they benefitted from the content. Google responded to both the Court and Minister for Communication and IT Kapil Sibal, stating that it was impossible to pre-screen content. A plea was made by an educationist, citing that any sanctions against the online services would directly affect fundamental rights and be against public interest. The Delhi Court also allowed Yahoo!'s case to be heard separately after it appealed citing it did not host any objectionable content and did not fall under the social networking site category.
Blocking of websites Starting 3 May 2012, a number of websites including
Vimeo,
The Pirate Bay,
Torrentz and other
torrent sites were allegedly blocked by
Reliance Communications, on orders from the Department of Telecom, without any stated reasons or prior warnings.
Compromising of Reliance DNS servers In May 2012, Anonymous India (AnonOpsIndia), a branch of the hacktivist group
Anonymous, hacked the servers of Reliance Communications to protest the blocking of Vimeo, The Pirate Bay, Torrentz, and other torrent sites. The ISP Reliance Communications stated that it simply followed a court order. The group also hacked Reliance DNS servers, preventing direct access to Twitter, Facebook, and many other websites in India on 26 May 2012 for allegedly blocking its Twitter handle @OpIndia_Revenge. They went on to warn the government to restore all the blocked websites by 9 June 2012, and planned nationwide protests on the same date. After this hack, Anonymous also released a list of websites that had been blocked by Reliance without any orders from the government, raising questions of private and unaccountable censorship by telecom providers.
Parliamentary annulment motion against 2011 IT rules An annulment motion against the Information Technology (Intermediaries guidelines) Rules, 2011—moved by Member of Parliament (MP)
P. Rajeev of the
Communist Party of India (Marxist) in the
Rajya Sabha—was the first serious attempt by internet freedom activists to get the
Information Technology Act, 2000 discussed and reviewed by the country's lawmakers. Not unexpectedly, the motion (specifically against the rules governing intermediaries – clause (zg) of subsection (2) of section 87 read with subsection (2) of section 79 of the IT Act, 2000) was not carried. However, the discussion that preceded it demonstrated the concerns of parliamentarians about what Internet freedom activists have termed the "draconian" provisions of the IT Act.
Save Your Voice campaign Save Your Voice, a movement against Internet censorship in India, was founded by cartoonist
Aseem Trivedi and journalist Alok Dixit in January 2012. The movement opposes the Information Technology Act of India and demands democratic rules for the governance of the Internet. The campaign targets rules framed under the Information Technology Act, 2000.
Madras High Court decision that entire websites cannot be blocked blocked by orders of
Department of Telecom on
BSNL broadband network in India as of 13 September 2012 On 15 June 2012, the
Madras High Court passed an order saying that entire websites cannot be blocked on the basis of "John Doe" orders: The High Court provided this clarification after being approached by a consortium of
Internet service providers (ISPs). The order was welcomed by the Indian media and net users.
Banning of domain hosting sites Starting in July 2012, several domain hosting sites were banned and sites such as Buydomains.com, Fabulous.com, and Sedo.co.uk were blocked. When these sites were opened, a message saying that they had been blocked by the Department of Telecommunications or a court order was displayed.
Censorship following Assam violence Between 18 and 21 August 2012, the Government of India ordered more than 300 specific URLs blocked. The blocked articles, accounts, groups, and videos were said to contain inflammatory content with fictitious details relating to
Assam violence and supposedly promoting the
North East exodus. These URLs included the domains of Facebook, Twitter, YouTube,
BlogSpot,
WordPress,
Google Plus, the
Times of India, Wikipedia, and others. Many of the blocked URLs focused on right-wing activism against corruption in India. This blockage raised questions about
freedom of speech in the largest democracy in the world, and also about the censorship of people and posts debunking rumours.
The Economic Times called it levels of censorship "that have not so far been seen in India". Over four days from 18 August on, the Government of India issued directives to ISPs to block the Twitter accounts of two Delhi-based journalists–Kanchan Gupta and
Shiv Aroor–and
Pravin Togadia. The government also blocked the website of
Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh and several other right-wing websites.
Defacement of Telecom Minister's website In November 2012, Anonymous India defaced Indian Telecom Minister Kapil Sibal's constituency website in protest against an amendment to the Information Technology Act and the recent crackdown on netizens for comments posted online.
Defacement of BSNL website The website of
Bharat Sanchar Nigam Limited's (BSNL), www.bsnl.co.in, was hacked by Anonymous India on 13 December 2012. They defaced the website with a picture stating that they were protesting against section 66A of the IT Act and in support of cartoonist Aseem Trivedi and journalist Alok Dixit. The duo went on a hunger striker to protest against section 66A.
2013 Blocking of 39 websites In an order dated 13 June 2013, the DoT directed Indian ISPs to block 39 websites, although the order did not specify a reason or law under which the websites were to be blocked. Most were web forums in which Internet users shared images and URLs to pornographic files. However, some of the websites were also image and file hosts, mostly used to store and share files that were not pornographic. Although watching or distributing
child pornography is illegal in India, watching adult pornography is not. The blocked websites were hosted outside India and claimed to operate under a
U.S. rule requiring performers to be over 18 years of age.
2014 Ban of file-sharing and file-hosting sites In an order dated 23 June 2014, the Delhi High Court, upon a request made by
Sony Entertainment, ordered 472 file-sharing and file-hosting websites blocked, including
The Pirate Bay,
Google Docs,
Google Videos, and Google's
URL shortener (goo.gl). This was contrary to the 2012 Madras High Court orders that blocked only URLs referencing web pages with illegal content, rather than entire websites. However, it was reported on 7 July 2014 that an updated court order blocked 219 sites. Many file storage and torrent websites were included, but no Google sites.
Blocking of Savukku.net site In an interim order on a petition filed by newsreader Mahalaxmi, Justice
Cyril Selvam blocked the entire website www.savukku.net. This order, dated 28 February 2014, directly contradicted an earlier order by the Madras High Court dated 15 April 2012 against banning the entire website instead of specific URLs. Earlier in February, Savukku.net had exposed tapes of communication between
DMK MP
Kanimozhi and former Additional Director General of Police (ADGP) Jaffer Sait; between Jaffer Sait and
Kalaignar TV's former director Sharad Kumar; and between DMK President
M Karunanidhi's Secretary K.Shanmuganathan and Jaffer Sait. Judge Selvam was considered close to Karunanidhi's family: The DoT ordered the blocking of 32 websites including the
Internet Archive,
GitHub,
Dailymotion, and
Vimeo, as they could host terror content relating to
ISIS; but the sites were no longer blocked as of 1 January 2015 as the order had been reversed and the unblocking process had begun on compliant websites.
2015 On 1 August 2015, 857 pornographic sites were blocked under section 79 3(b) of the Information Technology Act, 2000, to restrict access to pornographic content. The list of sites, containing popular ones, had been generated by Suresh Kumar Shukla, founder of Filternet Foundation, maker of pornography-blocking software, and given to government officials by petitioner Kamlesh Vaswani on 17 October 2014 in the
Supreme Court of India. The block was ordered by the DoT on 31 July 2015, copies of the order of which are available through media websites; but the agency lifted the ban shortly afterward on 5 August, as porn was a major Internet traffic (as high as 70%) and telecom companies were losing revenue. Additionally, people criticised the law enforcement (section 67 of the IT Act 2000).
2016 After the high-profile death of
Burhan Wani, a Kashmiri Islamist militant in Indian-administered Kashmir and the ensuing protests in July 2016, the government shut down the Internet in the area for five months. In August, some Bollywood studios came up with a public education message that
black money generated from the pre-release of their content through offline markets was being used for terrorism, though their sources were not clear. Reports did show that piracy losses were significantly high. In August of that year, the
Ministry of Health and Family Welfare (MoHFW) told a court that Google, Microsoft, and Yahoo! had agreed to censor all information on their search engines related to
prenatal sex discernment in order to comply with the
Pre-Conception and Pre-Natal Diagnostic Techniques Act, 1994.
2017 In August 2017, the Madras High Court ordered that the Internet Archive be blocked in India, following complaints by film studios that the service had been used to disseminate copyright-infringing copies of their films.
2018 In October 2018, the government directed ISPs to block 827 websites that hosted pornographic content, following an order by the state of
Uttarakhand High Court, effectively reinstating the previously rescinded 2015 porn ban. Although the Court had asked for 857 websites to be blocked, MEITy removed 30 portals with no pornographic content listings. The Court also asked the DoT to ban pornographic websites in India, citing an incident from
Dehradun in which a 10th-standard girl was raped by four of her seniors, who later told police that they had done so after watching pornographic content on the Web. As per the directions of the Uttarakhand High Court and the regulations of DoT, Indian ISPs banned pornographic websites across the country.
2019 Between January and October of that year, MEITy revealed that it had issued blocking orders for 20 websites in response to a
Right to Information (RTI) query filed by the Software Freedom Law Center (SFLC) India, a Delhi-based not-for-profit legal services organisation. During the same period, the ministry ordered social media platforms to take down 3,433 URLs under section 69A of India's Information Technology Act to block users and posts across social media platforms. An Indian court ordered Facebook, Twitter, and Google to remove government-flagged content globally, not just in India. In February of that year, the Indian government had proposed giving itself new powers. Under the new proposed rules, Indian officials could demand Facebook, Google, Twitter,
TikTok,
WhatsApp, and other platforms to remove posts or videos that the officials deemed unlawful or an invasion of privacy and could trace a message to its original sender. Over 130 complaints around the country from users appeared about blocked access to
VPN,
proxy sites. There were also reports of platforms like
Telegram,
Reddit, and
SoundCloud being inaccessible. There was no official word from the DoT on why these platforms were blocked, a common practice by DoT, which has a record of being non-transparent about blockings.
2020 In June 2020, in retaliation for a military
clash between
Indian and
Chinese troops in a
disputed territory along the shared border between
Ladakh and
western China, the Indian government banned around 60 mobile apps published by Chinese companies, most notably including TikTok,
WeChat, and mobile games such as
PUBG Mobile. The stated reason for the bans was to protect India's sovereignty, integrity, and security, and its citizens from software that was "stealing and surreptitiously transmitting users' data in an unauthorised manner to servers outside India". Apar Gupta, executive director of the
Internet Freedom Foundation (IFF), said the censorship was absent from well-defined national security criteria and had "impacted more Indians than any before".
The Indian Express said that the loss of revenue might drive Indian TikTok stars to rival platforms.
The Times of India published an editorial supporting the block. Around 40 websites operated by the pro-
Khalistan outfit
Sikhs For Justice (SFJ) were blocked in response to its starting registrations on its websites for Referendum 2020. There were several reports of the search engine
DuckDuckGo being inaccessible to Indian users. In July, environmental groups leading the movement against the Indian government's new
Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) 2020 Draft reported that their websites were inaccessible to users in India. In addition,
Fridays for Future India and several other environmental collectives reported that their websites were blocked/taken down, for reasons unknown to them and without prior notice of any sort. During the
curfew in
Jammu and Kashmir after
revocation of its autonomous status on 5 August 2019, the Indian government ordered Twitter to block accounts spreading "anti-India" content.
2021 Twitter during farmers' protests In early February, Twitter refused to comply with orders from the Indian government to ban over a thousand accounts related to
farmers' protests. The government warned Twitter employees that they could face up to seven years in jail if the company failed to remove certain accounts that the government alleged were spreading misinformation. On 10 February, the company took action on more than 500 accounts and also reduced the visibility of several hashtags that violated its rules, stating, however, that accounts belonging to news media outlets, journalists, and activists or politicians were not taken down. This defiance angered officials, leading to the government's
Government's handling of COVID-19 pandemic In late April, many citizens were angry with the government's poor performance in handling the
COVID-19 pandemic and took to social media to express their dissatisfaction. Following an emergency order by the government to Twitter to take down tweets from high-profile users criticising its handling of the pandemic, the company complied and withheld these tweets for users in India. The hashtag #crocodiletears, which criticised Prime Minister Modi, was ordered to be removed and information on the users who tweeted it to be handed over. When the company resisted, officials claimed that it was being used by terrorists, with a later additional claim that it had pornography. A Twitter investigator found some posts being sent from a location near a police building, and concluded that the government was trying to justify the censorship requests. Subsequently,
Delhi Police with TV cameras visited Twitter's Delhi and
Gurgaon offices to seek more information. although reportedly, the police had not had a search warrant. Twitter expressed concerns for its employees, the police's intimidation tactics, and the potential threat to freedom of expression in India. It also said it was particularly concerned over the rule whereby the compliance officer—a position to be set up by social media companies with over 5 million users under new social media rules—would be criminally liable for the content on the platform. The company requested the government for a three-month extension to enforce the new requirements. In a
Right to Information Act (RTI) reply to the IFF, the Ministry of Electronics and IT said it did not have the power to direct Twitter to not label these tweets as misleading. The company became more and more compliant with taking down tweets and accounts requested by the government, especially after
Elon Musk's purchase of the company. Through a wave of new regulations and the weight of law enforcement agencies, the government changed Twitter from being a company very resistant to censorship requests.
2023 In April 2023, new regulations were enacted that would require online intermediaries to censor and remove content deemed to be false or misleading by a body appointed by MEITy. During this year, Internet services were suspended on multiple occasions in
Manipur amid
ethnic violence, though services were ultimately restored in December. Allegedly, it was the longest-running Internet shutdown worldwide in 2023.
2024: Asian News International vs. Wikimedia Foundation In July 2024,
Asian News International (ANI) filed a lawsuit against the
Wikimedia Foundation in the
Delhi High Court, claiming to have been defamed in its article on Wikipedia, and seeking in damages. On 5 September, the Court threatened to hold Wikimedia in contempt for failing to disclose information about the editors who had made changes to the article, warning that Wikipedia might be blocked in India upon further non-compliance. The judge on the case stated, "If you don't like India, please don't work in India... We will ask government to block your site". In response, Wikimedia emphasised that the information in the article was supported by multiple reliable secondary sources. Justice
Manmohan said, "I think nothing can be worse for a news agency than to be called a puppet of an intelligence agency, stooge of the government. If that is true, the credibility goes." On 21 October, the Wikimedia Foundation suspended access to
the article for the lawsuit itself, due to an order from the Court stating that the article violated the
sub judice principle. This is believed to be the first time an English Wikipedia page had been taken down after a court order. On 17 March 2025, at a hearing in the
Supreme Court of India, a two-judge bench, consisting of
BR Gavai and
KV Vishwanathan, questioned the Delhi High Court's decision, stating that judges and courts should be more tolerant of criticism and that requiring removal of content because of criticism might not be correct. At the same time, the judges also stated that the order was about freedom of the press. The court remarked, "This concerns press freedom. If it is Wikipedia today, it could be someone else tomorrow." On 9 May of that year, the
Supreme Court of India reversed the Delhi High Court's decision to take down the article about the defamation case, and access to the article was restored.
2025 India banned 16 Pakistani YouTube channels with 63 million subscribers for spreading provocative communal content after the
Pahalgam terror attack, based on recommendations from the
Home Ministry. On 9 May, amidst the
2025 India–Pakistan standoff, the Indian government ordered
X (formerly Twitter) to withhold 8,000 accounts from India. The block list included foreign media
Global Times,
Xinhua News Agency, and
TRT World; Indian news outlets
Maktoob Media,
The Kashmiriyat and
The Wire; and prominent users, including Indian journalist
Anuradha Bhasin. X stated that it had not received information on specific posts, and in some cases no evidence or justification at all, for the accounts ordered blocked.
France 24 linked the blocking spree to a campaign targeting the social media of prominent Pakistani individuals and media. On 19 August, Delhi High Court banned
Sci-Hub and
Library Genesis following a lawsuit by
Elsevier,
Wiley and the
American Chemical Society that alleged copyright violation. == Blocked websites ==