SEBI Deploys AI 'Sudarshan', Removes 1.2 Lakh Misleading Finfluencer Posts

SEBI Chairman Tuhin Kanta Pandey announced the removal of over 1.2 lakh misleading social media posts by unregistered financial influencers. The regulator is using an in-house AI tool named 'Sudarshan' to track audio, video, and text content across languages for violations. SEBI mandates that only registered entities can provide investment advice and has introduced a statutory warning for options trading about high investor losses. Pandey emphasized a calibrated, surgical approach to market regulation rather than a heavy-handed one.

Key Points: SEBI Removes 1.2 Lakh Misleading Finfluencer Posts with AI

  • Removed 1.2 lakh misleading posts
  • AI tool 'Sudarshan' tracks violations
  • Only registered entities can give advice
  • Statutory warning for options trading
  • Social media platforms cooperating
3 min read

SEBI removes 1.2 lakh misleading finfluencer posts, deploys AI 'Sudarshan': Chairman

SEBI Chairman reveals AI tool 'Sudarshan' removed over 120,000 misleading social media posts and enforces rules against unregistered investment advice.

SEBI removes 1.2 lakh misleading finfluencer posts, deploys AI 'Sudarshan': Chairman
"We are armed with our own AI tool called 'Sudarshan'... to pinpoint where transgressions occur. - Tuhin Kanta Pandey"

New Delhi, March 2

The Securities and Exchange Board of India has removed more than 1.2 lakh misleading social media posts by unregistered financial influencers and is leveraging artificial intelligence tools to track violations in the digital space, Chairman Tuhin Kanta Pandey said.

Speaking to ANI, Pandey said, "We have removed more than 120,000 such pieces of content from social media where we found egregious behaviour violating our norms."

He reiterated that SEBI regulations clearly mandate that investment advice can only be given by registered entities.

"Our rules say that if you have to give investment advice, you have to be registered with SEBI. And being registered means you have certain do's and don'ts," he stated.

While acknowledging freedom of expression and the right to undertake financial education, the SEBI chief drew a clear distinction between education and misleading advice. "People have every right to express themselves and undertake financial education as part of their fundamental right to freedom of expression. Only when you transgress that line and actually mislead investors do we step in, seek removal, and have the content taken down," he said.

Pandey said SEBI has the authority to direct the removal of such content and that social media platforms are cooperating. "We have the power to order removal, and the platforms cooperate with us," he stated.

To strengthen surveillance, SEBI has deployed an in-house AI tool. "We are armed with our own AI tool called 'Sudarshan,' through which we are able to track, on a multilingual basis, audio, video, and other content to pinpoint where transgressions occur," he said.

On the broader issue of retail participation in derivatives markets, Pandey flagged the influence of social media narratives post-COVID. Referring to options trading, he said many retail investors were "much influenced by influencers post-COVID, possibly by misleading claims that there's a lot of money to be made in these."

SEBI, he said, responded with data-backed measures and investor warnings. "Our data showed, and we made it public, that collectively there were substantial losses. We also introduced a statutory warning, like those on cigarettes, stating that whenever you trade in options, 9 out of 10 investors lose money. That's the warning we are giving you. A pop-up message will appear," he added.

Calling market regulation a calibrated exercise, Pandey underlined that SEBI's approach is not heavy-handed. "Market development is not about a sledgehammer approach but more like a surgeon's knife - identifying problem areas and dealing with them," he said.

The SEBI Chairman described the past year as "a year of reform," asserting that the regulator remains focused on achieving optimum regulation - neither over-regulating the market nor under-regulating it.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Priyanka N
Finally! These so-called finfluencers were operating like modern-day snake oil salesmen. My cousin lost a significant amount following advice from a Telegram group. The warning on options trading is crucial—people need to understand it's speculation, not investment. Hope SEBI keeps this momentum.
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Rahul R
While I appreciate the intent, I hope this doesn't stifle genuine financial education. There's a thin line. Many small creators explain concepts well without giving specific advice. SEBI must ensure its "surgeon's knife" approach doesn't accidentally cut down useful content. The focus should remain on the misleading "tips" and "calls".
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Anjali F
1.2 lakh posts! That's a staggering number. It shows how pervasive the problem was. Naming the AI tool 'Sudarshan' is apt—it means "good vision" or "auspicious sight". We need clear vision to navigate this jungle of online advice. Good move by the regulator.
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Karthik V
The comparison to a cigarette warning is powerful. Trading in derivatives is addictive and harmful to wealth for most. Retail participation has boomed, but so have losses. SEBI's data-backed approach is correct. Let people be informed, then let them make their own choices—but with clear warnings.
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Sarah B
Working in tech, I'm impressed they built an in-house multilingual AI tool. Tracking audio and video across Indian languages is a complex task. This shows SEBI is modernizing its surveillance. The cooperation from social media platforms is also key for this to work effectively.

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