NEW DELHI — In a milestone ruling for digital intermediary regulation, the Delhi High Court dismissed a legal challenge filed by Dubai-based messaging giant Telegram. The Court upheld the Central Government’s emergency order to temporarily block access to the platform across India until June 22, 2026, to safeguard the integrity of the high-stakes NEET-UG 2026 re-examination scheduled for Sunday, June 21.
Vacation Judge Justice Tejas Karia categorically rejected Telegram’s plea for immediate interim relief. The Court ruled that the proactive intervention by the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY) was well-founded under Section 69A of the Information Technology Act, 2000. The bench characterized the time-bound block as the “least restrictive measure” available to combat organized cheating syndicates under exceptional public order circumstances.
The Legal Clashes: Intermediary Architecture vs. User Rights
During intense courtroom arguments, Telegram’s counsel strongly opposed the blanket shutdown. They contended that a platform-wide block was heavily disproportionate and abruptly curtailed the digital communication and educational access of nearly 150 million legitimate users in India over an exam being taken by 2.28 million aspirants.
Defending the emergency block, the Centre presented a robust counter-narrative to the bench. Attorney General R. Venkatramani described Telegram as a highly decentralized, cloud-based framework that often leaves law enforcement blind to actual user identities. Solicitor General Tushar Mehta further argued that unlike rival messaging applications, Telegram’s architecture allows a single user to deploy up to 40 complex automated bots. Government counsels stated that this specific facility had been heavily weaponized by a highly sophisticated network of exam fraud operations.
The National Testing Agency (NTA) and the Indian Cyber Crime Coordination Centre (I4C) testified that localized link-blocking had completely failed during previous containment attempts. Investigative bodies explained that whenever specific channels were taken down under standard compliance procedures, automated mirror channels and audience-migration bots reconstituted the illegal networks within mere minutes, making a total temporary block necessary.
The Core Fraud: How Telegram’s “Edit” Feature Was Weaponized
Beyond a total platform restriction until June 22, the High Court significantly upheld a secondary federal mandate requiring the complete disabling of Telegram’s message-editing functionality within India until June 30, 2026. The NTA and cyber investigators provided critical evidence of a massive post-exam scam pattern driven entirely by Telegram’s unique modification architecture.
. Cyber investigators demonstrated that the fraud begins days before a major exam when scammers create public channels with enticing titles and upload an innocuous placeholder file or a blank text message. Once the real examination concludes and the paper becomes public, scammers utilize Telegram’s “Edit” feature to replace the original placeholder file with the actual leaked question paper.
Because Telegram retains the original message’s metadata and date stamp, the newly edited message falsely appears to have been uploaded before the exam actually took place. Scammers then forward these altered, backdated chats across multiple groups to falsely prove they have authentic pre-exam leak access. This allows them to subsequently extort and charge future candidates lakhs of rupees for upcoming test materials under false pretenses.
The Proportionality Verdict
In his judgment, Justice Tejas Karia invoked established legal precedents—specifically Anuradha Bhasin v. Union of India (2020)—to test the proportionality of the digital restriction. The Court concluded that Section 69A of the IT Act safely extends to platform-wide blackouts when entity-specific interventions are continually sabotaged by the target architecture.
Placing considerable weight on the strictly time-bound nature of the ban, which ends right after the re-examination cycle, the Court noted that the restriction was narrowly tailored to neutralize immediate threats to public order and student security, rather than acting as an indefinite censorship mechanism.
While cybersecurity experts and bodies like the Internet Freedom Foundation (IFF) have labeled the move a temporary fix that risks pushing bad actors toward deeper encryption ecosystems, the legal seal of approval ensures India’s Re-NEET will take place under an absolute digital lockdown.

