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Current Rupee Fall, is it bad our Indian Economy

India has seen sharp decline in the rupee fall


India needs to take strong measures to tackel the world economic trunmoil. The Middle East was has created a sever imoact on the crude oild reserves of India. With only 45 days of reserve left, India needs better strategic alliances to cater to 120 crores energy demand.

In theory, this creates accountability. In practice, it risks overreach. When content can be flagged for being in “bad taste” rather than unlawful, the boundary between regulation and subjectivity disappears. And once that line is crossed, self-censorship becomes inevitable.

The most effective censorship is not enforced—it is internalised.

The chilling effect is already visible. Creators and commentators are becoming more cautious. Satire softens, investigative work declines, and debate narrows. The most effective censorship is not enforced—it is internalised.

To be fair, the government’s concerns are not entirely misplaced. Misinformation, deepfakes, scams, and online abuse are genuine threats that require intervention. But intent alone is not enough—execution matters. When enforcement appears selective, targeting critics more visibly than harmful networks, the credibility of the system weakens.

India is at a turning point. Traditional media, in many cases, has softened its critical stance, while digital platforms have become the primary space for public discourse. Reports from the Reuters Institute indicate that a growing number of Indians now depend on social media for news. Controlling this space, therefore, has far-reaching consequences.

The question is no longer whether regulation is needed—it is. The real question is how far it should go.

The Supreme Court of India has previously upheld that free speech cannot be curtailed without due process. Civil society groups like the Internet Freedom Foundation continue to demand transparency and accountability. But institutions alone cannot safeguard freedom—public awareness and engagement are equally critical.

The consequence is predictable: when in doubt, delete.

This is how modern censorship operates—not always through direct bans, but through pressure that makes resistance costly. The scope is also expanding. It is no longer just large media houses under scrutiny. A YouTuber, a satirist, or even an ordinary citizen discussing public affairs can now be treated as a “digital news broadcaster,” expected to follow the same compliance burden as established media organisations.

Criticism is not a weakness in a democracy—it is its foundation. Yet in India today, criticism is increasingly treated as disruption rather than democratic participation. Journalists report harassment, independent creators face takedowns, and platforms are flooded with content removal requests. The official response often dismisses such concerns, but the numbers tell their own story. Content blocking has surged from thousands in 2023 to tens of thousands by 2025. This is not moderation; it is escalation.

The real change lies in regulation. Earlier, content takedowns required due process—a written order, stated reasons, and oversight, as reinforced by the Shreya Singhal vs Union of India judgment. Now, proposed IT rule changes are steadily weakening these safeguards. The line between advisory and order is blurring, response timelines are shrinking drastically, and platforms risk losing “safe harbour” protection under Section 79 if they fail to comply.

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