Gautam Gambhir Takes AI Deepfake Battle to Delhi High Court Over Identity Theft

Former cricketer Gautam Gambhir has approached the Delhi High Court seeking protection of his personality rights against widespread digital misuse. The suit targets 16 defendants, including social media accounts and e-commerce platforms, for creating and distributing AI-generated deepfake videos and unauthorized merchandise. Gambhir's legal team documented fabricated content, including a fake resignation video with over 29 lakh views, spreading misinformation. The plea seeks damages of Rs 2.5 crore and permanent injunctions to prevent further exploitation of his name, image, and voice.

Key Points: Gambhir Sues Over AI Deepfakes, Seeks Personality Rights Protection

  • Suit against 16 entities for digital impersonation
  • AI-generated deepfakes garnered millions of views
  • Seeks Rs 2.5 crore damages and injunctions
  • Cites precedents like Amitabh Bachchan case
3 min read

'My identity has been weaponised': Gambhir moves Delhi HC over misuse of his personality rights

Gautam Gambhir files suit in Delhi HC against misuse of his identity via AI deepfakes and unauthorized merchandise, seeking Rs 2.5 crore in damages.

"My identity has been weaponised by anonymous accounts to spread misinformation - Gautam Gambhir"

New Delhi, March 19

Former India cricketer and current head coach of the Indian men's team Gautam Gambhir has approached the Delhi High Court, seeking comprehensive protection of his personality and publicity rights against a "coordinated campaign of digital impersonation, AI-generated deepfakes, and unauthorised commercial exploitation."

The civil suit has been filed in the Commercial Division of the High Court, where Gambhir has sought an urgent injunction against multiple defendants, including social media accounts, e-commerce platforms and intermediaries.

In the law suit, Gambhir's legal team documented a "sharp and alarming increase in fabricated digital content" across Instagram, X (formerly Twitter), YouTube, and Facebook.

"Multiple accounts deployed artificial intelligence, face-swapping, and voice-cloning technologies to create realistic videos falsely depicting Mr. Gambhir making statements he never made - including a fraudulent "resignation announcement" that garnered over 29 lakh views, and a fabricated clip purporting to show him making remarks about senior cricketers' World Cup participation that drew over 17 lakh views. Beyond social media, major e-commerce platforms were facilitating the sale of posters and merchandise bearing his name and likeness without any authorisation," as per the release shared by Gambhir's team.

The suit has been filed against 16 defendants, including identified social media accounts (JanKey Frames, Bhupendra Paintola, Legends Revolution, gustakhedits, cricket_memer45, GemsOfCrickets, Crickaith, Sunny Upadhyay, @imRavY_), e-commerce platforms (Amazon, Flipkart), platform intermediaries (Meta Platforms Inc., X Corp., Google LLC / YouTube), and the Ministry of Electronics & Information Technology and Department of Telecommunications as proforma parties to facilitate implementation of any court order.

"My identity - my name, my face, my voice - has been weaponised by anonymous accounts to spread misinformation and generate revenue at my expense. This is not a matter of personal hurt; it is a matter of law, dignity, and the protection every public figure deserves in the age of artificial intelligence," Gambhir said in a statement.

The plea has been filed under provisions of the Copyright Act, Trade Marks Act and Commercial Courts Act, and also refers to past rulings by the Delhi High Court that recognise personality rights, including cases involving Amitabh Bachchan, Anil Kapoor and Sunil Gavaskar.

In the lawsuit, "damages of Rs. 2.5 crore have been claimed, alongside prayers for rendition of accounts, permanent injunction, and takedown of all infringing content."

The suit seeks a permanent injunction restraining all defendants from using, reproducing, or exploiting Gambhir's name, image, voice, or persona - including through AI, deepfake technology, morphing, and face-swapping - without his express written consent.

An urgent application for ex-parte ad-interim injunction has simultaneously been filed under Order XXXIX Rules 1 & 2 CPC, requesting immediate takedown of all infringing content and a freeze on further dissemination pending final hearing.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Priyanka N
It's about time a high-profile person took a stand. These meme pages and "edits" accounts have crossed all limits. Selling merchandise without permission is straight-up theft. Hope the court sets a strong precedent for other celebrities and sportspeople facing the same issue.
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Aman W
While I agree deepfakes are dangerous, I feel 2.5 crore in damages is a very high amount to claim. It might make the process lengthy. The immediate focus should be on the takedown orders and making platforms like Meta and Google more accountable in India.
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Sarah B
This is a global problem, but seeing it happen to our cricket coach hits home. The part about fabricating remarks on senior players' World Cup participation is especially malicious—aimed at creating drama in the team. Strong legal action is the only way.
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Karthik V
Good move! Following the path of Amitabh Bachchan and Sunil Gavaskar cases. Our judiciary has recognised personality rights before. Now with AI, the threat is multiplied. Hope the court orders are implemented properly by the MeitY and DoT.
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Nisha Z
As a regular social media user, it's getting impossible to tell what's real. One day it's a fake Gambhir video, next day it could be a fake political speech. This lawsuit is important for all of us, not just celebrities. We need tools and laws to fight misinformation.

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