--- layout: default title: "Unshackling Expression: A Study on Laws Criminalising Expression Online in Asia" description: "The India chapter of APC's GISWatch special issue, authored by the Internet Democracy Project, mapping laws that criminalise online expression in India as of 2017." categories: [Media mentions] date: 2018-03-16 authors: ["Anja Kovacs", "Nayantara Ranganathan"] source: "Internet Democracy Project" permalink: /media/unshackling-expression-internet-democracy-project/ created: 2026-03-12 --- **Unshackling Expression: A Study on Laws Criminalising Expression Online in Asia** is a research report published on the *Internet Democracy Project* website on 16 March 2018, authored by Anja Kovacs and Nayantara Ranganathan. It constitutes the India chapter of the Association for Progressive Communications' (APC) *Global Information Society Watch* (GISWatch) special issue on laws criminalising expression online in Asia. The chapter maps the legal landscape governing freedom of expression on the internet in India β across criminal law, intermediary liability, network shutdowns, and surveillance. [Sunil Abraham](/sunil/) is cited within section 4.2 ("Intermediaries and copyright"), for his published analysis of the Copyright (Amendment) Act, 2012. ## Contents 1. [Article Details](#article-details) 2. [Abstract](#abstract) 3. [Chapter Structure](#chapter-structure) 4. [Chapter Overview](#chapter-overview) 5. [Sunil Abraham's Cited Contribution](#sunil-abrahams-cited-contribution) 6. [Context and Background](#context-and-background) 7. [External Links](#external-links) ## Article Details
As Sunil Abraham has pointed out,108 the amendment clearly privileges the concerns of intellectual property rights-holders, as the intermediary is obliged under the law to remove the content in question even before the validity of the complaint has been proved. Because of this, the mechanism provided for under the amended Copyright Act is likely to have a chilling effect on free speech. Moreover, the likelihood of ISPs automatically and voluntarily reinstating content once the legal waiting period of three weeks has passed and no court order has been received, is low.
Abraham's colleague Pranesh Prakash goes even a step further. If the complaint turns out to be false β either because the complainant is not the rights-holder or because the content does not entail a violation of the rights-holder's copyright β there is no punishment for the person who filed the complaint. Given this lack of punishment, Prakash has argued, the law is open to widespread abuse: it allows anyone "to remove content from the internet without following any 'due process' or 'fair procedure'."
Clearly, this amendment to the Copyright Act therefore violates the principles of necessity and proportionality that are integral to the validity of any action that seeks to censor content online.