Arjun Kapoor Seeks Delhi HC Protection Over AI Misuse & Deepfakes

Bollywood actor Arjun Kapoor has approached the Delhi High Court seeking protection of his personality and publicity rights against misuse through AI-generated content and unauthorised merchandise. The court heard submissions from Kapoor's senior advocate Pravin Anand, who highlighted sexually explicit material and deepfakes being circulated online. Justice Tushar Rao Gedela observed that not every public figure's content can be taken down unless it is derogatory or defamatory. The case joins a growing list of celebrities like Gautam Gambhir, Allu Arjun, and Aishwarya Rai Bachchan who have sought similar protection.

Key Points: Arjun Kapoor Moves Delhi HC for Personality Rights

  • Arjun Kapoor files plea in Delhi HC for personality rights protection
  • Misuse includes AI deepfakes, pornographic content, and unauthorised merchandise
  • Court notes not all public content can be removed unless defamatory
  • Similar cases filed by Gautam Gambhir, Allu Arjun, Kajol, and others
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Arjun Kapoor moves Delhi HC for protection of personality rights

Bollywood actor Arjun Kapoor seeks Delhi High Court protection against AI-generated deepfakes, pornographic content, and unauthorised merchandise.

"When a person is in public glare, a lot of things happen. We can understand if things are disparaging or defamatory. But everything cannot come under that - Justice Tushar Rao Gedela"

New Delhi, April 29

Bollywood actor Arjun Kapoor has approached the Delhi High Court seeking protection of his personality and publicity rights against the alleged misuse of his name, image, and likeness through artificial intelligence-generated content, unauthorised merchandise, and pornographic material circulating online.

The matter came up for hearing before Justice Tushar Rao Gedela, who heard submissions on behalf of the actor in his plea seeking interim protection.

Appearing for Kapoor, senior advocate Pravin Anand submitted that multiple defendants were engaged in unauthorised use of the actor's name, photographs, likeness, and other personality attributes for commercial gain, including through the sale of merchandise and the dissemination of manipulated digital content without his consent.

The Delhi High Court was informed that apart from unauthorised merchandise, several online entities were allegedly circulating sexually explicit material, pornographic content, and AI-generated deepfakes involving Kapoor.

The senior counsel argued that the misuse went far beyond humour or satire, asserting that the impugned material included morphed and fabricated visuals designed to commercially exploit and distort Kapoor's public image.

He referred to content in which Kapoor's face had allegedly been morphed with that of an animal, while another image purportedly depicted him selling golgappas.

At this stage, Justice Gedela observed that in the case of public figures, not every form of content could be directed to be taken down unless it was derogatory or defamatory.

"When a person is in public glare, a lot of things happen. We can understand if things are disparaging or defamatory. But everything cannot come under that," he remarked.

During the proceedings, counsel appearing for Google LLC and other defendants were also heard.

Justice Gedela said that a detailed order would be passed on Kapoor's plea for interim protection.

The Arjun Kapoor case adds to a growing list of high-profile personalities invoking their personality and publicity rights before the Delhi High Court. In recent months, former cricketer and current head coach Gautam Gambhir, former cricket captain Sunil Gavaskar, spiritual leader and Art of Living founder Sri Sri Ravi Shankar, kathavachak Aniruddhacharya Maharaj, actors Allu Arjun, Nagarjuna, Kajol, Aishwarya Rai Bachchan, and Abhishek Bachchan, singer Jubin Nautiyal, film-maker Karan Johar, and podcaster Raj Shamani have secured court protection against the unauthorised use of their identity, likeness, or AI-generated imitations.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
Honestly, it's high time celebrities take legal action. With AI becoming so sophisticated, anyone can be targeted. I saw a deepfake of a popular actress doing things that would ruin her career. But what about common people? We don't have the resources to fight back. The law must evolve to protect everyone, not just the rich and famous.
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Vikram M
Arjun selling golgappas - now that's a meme I would actually enjoy! 😂 But in all seriousness, pornographic content crossing all boundaries is unacceptable. The court should provide strong protection against that while allowing harmless humor to continue. Our society already has enough problems with digital harassment.
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Kavya N
I'm conflicted. On one hand, deepfakes are a serious violation of consent and dignity. On the other hand, we Indians love our memes and satire - remember how the whole internet joked about politicians during elections? The court's balanced approach is commendable. Hopefully they'll create clear guidelines for what constitutes 'defamatory' vs 'harmless fun'.
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Rajesh Q
Good for Arjun but I wish our courts were this proactive about genuine public issues. The backlog of pending cases runs into crores, yet we have time to protect celebrities' images? Not saying it's wrong, but priorities seem skewed when there are thousands waiting years for justice in rape and murder cases.
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Ananya R
I support this. Personality rights are real and need protection. But I find it ironic that Bollywood often objectifies women in songs and then complains when their own image gets misused. Double standards much? Still,

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