Written By Chirkankshit Bulani (Rajiv Gandh i National University Of Law) and Shivansh Bajpai Introduction A recent blog piece published in the Tech law Forum at NALSAR university addressed algorithmic manipulation of political information, and proposed a listener-centric approach to accountability. While the normative concerns raised through the blog are indubitably qualified to warrant serious attention, this critique/response attempts to identify technical deficiencies wh
Introduction Over the past 2 decades Twitter, now X, has been one of the biggest social media platforms with around 27.3 million users from India. X in the past had has many issued regarding freedom of speech and what is and is not allowed on the platform, with Elon Musk himself weighing in numerous times . In the past X has tried to push back against India’s tightening grip over what content could or could not be posted on its platform. However, over the years it has seeme
Sunidhi Khabya and Satviki Agnihotri, 3 rd Year, BA.L.L.B Students, NLU Jodhpur The challenge of AI to Data Protection The advent of Artificial Intelligence in the contemporary world has led to data accumulation and processing at a substantially larger scale. With the help of predictive models, which continuously learn from patterns of past user behaviour and often extend beyond what is covered under the direct consent of the data subject. AI Systems process not only data d
India's ambition to become a global tech and manufacturing titan is up against a formidable challenge. It is neither a rival nation nor a market competitor, but something much deeper—its own legal framework. The crisis surrounding rare earth elements (REEs) —minerals essential to everything from iPhones to fighter jets—can be traced back to a single piece of legislation written when the geopolitical landscape was entirely different. India possesses significant geological pot