Brands vs influencers ruling goes beyond free speech
The Delhi High Court’s ruling in San Nutrition vs. Arpit Mangal is a welcome jurisprudential shift in the legal interpretation of free speech, consumer protection, and corporate accountability. In affirming that criticism rooted in scientific evidence does not amount to defamation — even when it names brands — the Court has not only protected an individual’s right to free speech but also clarified that in the age of information saturation, evidence-based critique is a constitutional necessity, not a reputational threat.
For far too long, corporations have used the spectre of defamation, disparagement, and trademark infringement to intimidate critics and sidestep public scrutiny. By drawing a clear boundary between good-faith critique and malice, the court has laid down an early contour of defamation jurisprudence concerning the digital medium.
The recognition that satire, hyperbole, and exaggeration — if anchored in truth, especially with data-backed evidence — constitute protected speech is a doctrinal advancement that aligns Indian law more closely with global standards. The implications go beyond this single case. The judgment demands that we reconceptualise defamation in the context of digital virality. Traditional defamation law was forged in an era where speech was slow-moving, intermediated, and ephemeral. Today, a single video can reach millions within hours and remain perpetually accessible.........
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