India’s Digital Future Is Moving Faster Than Its Laws
Artificial Intelligence can now generate art, clone voices, imitate personalities, and create highly convincing deepfakes within seconds.
Yet, many of these emerging issues are still being governed through legal interpretation of statutes enacted long before the AI era.
India currently has:
- no dedicated AI legislation,
- no standalone deepfake regulation,
- no codified personality rights statute,
- and limited statutory guidance on synthetic digital identity misuse.
As a result, courts are increasingly relying on:
- constitutional privacy principles,
- copyright law,
- trademark jurisprudence,
- IT Act provisions,
- and equitable remedies to bridge rapidly expanding technological gaps.
This raises an important policy question:
Can traditional legal frameworks effectively regulate exponentially evolving technologies?
The challenge is not merely technological innovation.
The challenge is regulatory adaptation.
As India moves toward becoming a global digital economy, legislative clarity around AI governance, digital identity protection, and synthetic media regulation may soon become unavoidable.
Would love to hear perspectives from:
- developers,
- policy researchers,
- startup founders,
- cyber lawyers,
- and technologists.
Should India move toward dedicated AI and deepfake legislation?
Top comments (0)