Freedom of digital expression upheld: Supreme Court rules profanity is not per se obscenity
🕒 1 min read
The Supreme Court thoroughly reviewed the notion of obscenity, legislative framework involved in the application of the Sections 67 and 67A in the Information Technology Act and the judicial standards that were established in the application of Section 292 in the Indian Penal Code.
Continue Reading
-
Video: Mexican Navy Ship Hits New York’s Brooklyn Bridge, People Seen Hanging On To Masts
-
CSK vs KKR LIVE Score, IPL 2026: Suspense Over MS Dhoni Continues; KKR To Receive ‘World No. 1’ Boost?
- Search On For Survivors Of Pakistan Building Collapse
-
“Spotlight Shines Firmly On Him”: Ex-India Coach On Shubman Gill Ahead Of 4th Test
-
Bank holidays in March 2026: How many days are banks closed this week? Check state-wise list for Ugadi, Eid-Ul-Fitr & more
- Accedi Verso Winspark Mucchio Login Accesso SpyBet Fidato Al Tuo Account Di Inganno
-
Sunil Gavaskar Calls Pakistan “Popatwadi Team”, Rubs Salt On Wounds After Defeat vs India
-
Resilient India Inc: Indian companies to see stable growth in Q1 FY26; railway & defence related cos projected for significant uptick
-
61 Missing After Boat Sinks Near Indonesia’s Bali: Report
-
Rahul Dravid Loses Cool After RR’s 10th Defeat Of IPL 2025 Season, Says “There’s No Point…”