India tells global tech platforms to follow constitution after tougher content rules


Ashwini Vaishnaw, Minister for Railways, Information & Broadcasting and Electronics and Information Technology gestures as he speaks during a press conference at Bharat Mandapam, one of the venues for AI Impact Summit, in New Delhi, India, February 17, 2026. REUTERS/Bhawika Chhabra

Feb 17 (Reuters) - India's information ⁠minister said on Tuesday that big tech platforms ⁠like Google's YouTube, Meta, X and Netflix must ‌operate within the country's constitutional framework, a week after New Delhi tightened its content-takedown rules.

His comments came on the sidelines of an ​artificial intelligence summit in Delhi, where ⁠top executives from global ⁠AI giants will join several world leaders in this week.

"It's ⁠very ‌important for the multinationals to understand the cultural context of the country in which they ⁠are operating," Ashwini Vaishnaw said during a briefing ​at the ‌India AI Impact Summit.

Last week, India said social media ⁠companies will ​have to remove unlawful content within three hours of being notified, tightening an earlier 36-hour timeline, in what could ⁠be a compliance challenge for Meta, ​YouTube and X.

There is a need for much stronger regulation on deepfakes, Vaishnaw said, adding that a dialogue has already ⁠been initiated with the industry on the issue.

There is mounting global pressure on social media companies to police content more aggressively, with governments from Brussels to Brasilia ​demanding faster takedowns and greater accountability.

On ⁠Tuesday, Spain ordered prosecutors to investigate social media platforms X, ​Meta and TikTok for allegedly spreading ‌AI-generated child sexual abuse material, ​as European regulators intensify scrutiny of big tech over harmful and illegal content.

(Reporting by Abinaya Vijayaraghavan)

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