Your weekly rundown of significant judicial rulings and legal battles influencing policy, companies, regulation, and governance.
By BasisPoint Insight
June 8, 2025 at 7:05 AM IST
“Technology must complement, not replace, the human mind in judicial decision-making; The emphasis must always be on using technology to enhance trust and transparency — never to replace the human conscience at the heart of justice.”
- Chief Justice of India B.R. Gavai during his keynote speech at SOAS, University of London
Jaggi Vasudev and the developing law on personality rights
Isha Foundation founder Jaggi Vasudev becomes the latest example of famous persons needing the court’s assistance in protecting their personality and publicity rights in times of ever-expanding horizons of artificial intelligence and deep-fakes.
There is no gainsaying the existence of photoshopped pictures, deep-fake video and audio clips that use likeness with famous celebrities. Such media is widely circulated for various purposes including humour, and many times even for clandestine ways to market or endorse things or even ideas.
With the AI technology making it near impossible to distinguish between what is real and what is fake, popular celebrities like Amitabh Bachchan, Anil Kapoor, Jackie Shroff and now Jaggi Vasudev have had to approach court to bar people from using anything even remotely resembling them for purposes not authorised by them. And rightly so!
The AI use to morph media prejudices famous persons’ interests who would otherwise leverage their celebrity status for their personal financial gains. A celebrity who could charge royalty for use of his voice would not want to lose this monetary source because an AI can unauthorisedly create audio to sound like him. Moreover, the potential danger the existence of technology to create deep-fakes puts famous persons in highlights the void in the law that needs filling.
Naturally the law, when it was set out, did not anticipate AI, but now with the rapid rise of this technology, India’s legal system cannot afford to stall. These cases have shown the need for the jurisprudence to develop and develop fast.
The Week That Was
Key Rulings
Courts
Quasi Courts
The Big Listings:
June 9: NCLT in Ahmedabad to hear BluSmart’s petition to defreeze its accounts to facilitate, among others, making salary payments
June 9; Madras High Court to hear Turkish firm Celebi’s petition seeking protection against its replacement in Chennai Airport
June 10: Gujarat High Court scheduled to hear Turkish firm Celebi’s plea to protect its interest in Ahmedabad Airport
June 12: The Ahmedabad bench of the NCLT to hear IREDA’s insolvency petition against Gensol Engineering
June 12: NCLT bench at Ahmedabad to hear Ministry of Corporate Affairs’ plea against Gensol Engineering alleging oppression and mismanagement
June 24: Madras High Court to hear Turkish firm Celebi’s petition challenging revocation of its security in Chennai Airport
July 2: Delhi local court to hold daily hearings in National Herald Case against Sonia and Rahul Gandhi
August 1: NCLT’s principal bench is scheduled to hear BPSL’s former promoter’s plea for initiating liquidation in line with top court’s order
August 20: Supreme Court to hear Flipkart’s appeal against a high court which affirmed CCI probe into the company
* The dates of hearing can change and a concrete list is prepared just a day before
Legal Moves