Skip to main content

Indian courts have had to address many legal issues arising from the development of the Internet – from passing off to phishing, metatagging and jurisdictional matters.

The Internet dominates our life more than any other socio-economic phenomenon in the history of our civilization.

For individuals and corporations alike, it opened up a world of opportunities for both legitimate and illegitimate activities. It is a giant copying machine and, therefore, it has the potential to devastate copyright owners. A single click to distribute and circulate content to thousands of recipients can cause immense damage at little or no cost to the sender. The sender’s identity can remain concealed in the anonymity mesh of the Net so no effective action can be taken beyond freezing the infringing site. This article examines how Indian law has tackled a variety of internet issues.

Authored by Pravin Anand.

This article was published in World Trademark Review February/March 2009.

To continue reading, please contact us at email@anandandanand.com

Most Recent

News & Insights

VIEW ALL
Thought Leadership
May 29, 2025

‘First published on Lexology’ By: Sandhya Singh, Sampada Kapoor and Kritika Gandhi Trademarks play a pivotal role in distinguishing the goods or services

Heir of the Family Trademarks
Thought Leadership
May 15, 2025

‘First published on India Business Law Journal’ By: Pravin Anand, Dr. Ajai Garg and Alvin Antony The ascendancy of large language models (LLMs) has

Navigating the AI frontier: India’s sovereign LLM quest
Thought Leadership
Apr 30, 2025

‘First published on Asia IP’ By: Prachi Agarwal and Manan Mondal In a significant ruling, the Division Bench of the Delhi High Court in Wipro Enterprises

Senior user versus junior user: Delhi High Court confirms passing off in a trademark dispute
Thought Leadership
Apr 29, 2025

‘First published on IP Stars’ By: Safir Anand, Omesh Puri and Abhishek Paliwal As the world changes and technology grows fast, the way we think about

The future of trademarks: shaping tomorrow’s brand identity