High Court
Bombay HC stays parts of new IT rules
New Delhi: The Bombay high court has granted an interim stay to the implementation of parts of the Information Technology (IT) Rules, 2021 which require that all online publishers follow a “code of ethics” and norms of conduct.
According to the court, “prima facie” (on the face of it), sub-clauses 1 and 3 of clause 9 of the Intermediary Guidelines and Digital Media Ethics Code Rules, 2021 violated the petitioners’ constitutional right to freedom of speech and expression under Article 19. Provisions of clause 9 also went beyond the scope of the substantive law (the Information Technology Act of 2000), it added further, according to PTI.
The court was hearing two petitions filed by digital news portal `The Leaflet’ and journalist Nikhil Wagle which had challenged the new regulations notified by the government in February this year. According to the petitions, the new rules are “vague”, “draconian”, and bound to have a “chilling effect” on the freedom of press and right to free speech guaranteed by the Constitution. The petitioners had also contended that the rules “go beyond the parameters set by the Information Technology Act and limits set under Article 19 of the Constitution”, and sought an interim stay on the implementation of the new IT Rules till the court gives its final decision in the matter.
Meanwhile, the high court has refused to stay clause 14 that pertains to the setting up of an inter-ministerial committee with powers to regulate online content and deal with grievances and breach of rules, and clause 16 which is about blocking of online content in case of an emergency.
The Information Technology (Intermediary Guidelines and Digital Ethics Code) Rules, 2021 seek to regulate dissemination and publication of content in cyber space, including social media platforms. The rules notified in February, also recommend a three-tier mechanism for the regulation of all online media. Under the rules, the digital publishers are required to take urgent steps for appointing a grievance officer, if not done, and place all relevant details in the public domain. They also need to constitute self-regulatory bodies through mutual consultation so that the grievances are addressed at the level of publishers or the self-regulating bodies themselves.
It is significant to note that similar petitions opposing the new rules have been filed in high courts across the country.
High Court
Delhi HC quashes tax notices against Prannoy Roy & Radhika Roy, fines department Rs 2 Lakh
NEW DELHI: In a sharp rap on the knuckles for tax overreach, the Delhi High Court has told the Income Tax Department that it cannot keep knocking on the same door hoping for a different answer, especially when it has already been opened, inspected and firmly shut.
Quashing reassessment notices issued to veteran broadcaster Prannoy Roy and media professional Radhika Roy, the court on January 19 ruled that the tax authorities had acted without jurisdiction, reopening a settled assessment on nothing more than a change of opinion. To underline its displeasure, the court imposed a token cost of Rs 1 lakh each, Rs 2 lakh in total, on the department, payable to the Roys.
The case, like a badly written sequel, centred on Assessment Year 2009–10, an old chapter the tax department tried to reread years later.
Radhika Roy had filed her income tax return for AY 2009–10 on July 31, 2009, declaring an income of Rs 1.66 crore. The return was processed and accepted under Section 143(1), with the intimation issued on February 22, 2011.
Then came the first knock. In July 2011, the department reopened the assessment under Sections 147 and 148, citing transactions involving shares of New Delhi Television Ltd (NDTV) between the Roys and their holding company, RRPR Holding Pvt Ltd. The reassessment culminated in an order dated March 30, 2013, assessing Radhika Roy’s income at Rs 3.17 crore. This included a major addition of Rs 1.30 crore as short-term capital gains, along with smaller additions of Rs 20.74 lakh as house property income and Rs 2,750 relating to Section 80G.
Crucially, during these proceedings, the assessing officer had specifically examined interest-free loans received by the Roys from RRPR. A show-cause notice issued on March 6, 2013 proposed treating these loans as “deemed dividends” under Section 2(22)(e). After examining RRPR’s audited books, balance sheets and shareholding pattern, the officer dropped the proposal. No addition was made on this count.
Three years later, on March 31, 2016, the department reopened the same assessment yet again, issuing fresh notices under Section 148 to both Prannoy Roy and Radhika Roy. This time, the department leaned on “complaints” and an internal review of RRPR’s records, arguing that interest-free loans given to the Roys should be taxed as “deemed income” under Section 2(24)(iv).
The figures were hefty. RRPR had borrowed Rs 375 crore from ICICI Bank in October 2008 at an interest rate of 19 per cent per annum. From this loan, it extended interest-free advances of Rs 20.92 crore to Prannoy Roy and Rs 71 crore to Radhika Roy. According to the department, RRPR suffered interest costs of nearly Rs 35 crore in that year, and an estimated Rs 6.79 crore of “benefit” had accrued to Radhika Roy alone due to non-charging of interest.
A bench of justices Dinesh Mehta and Vinod Kumar held that the so-called “new information” was neither new nor hidden. The interest-free loans were already disclosed, examined and consciously accepted during the earlier reassessment proceedings.
“Section 147/148 powers are an exception, not a licence for repeated harassment,” the court observed, noting that the same transaction cannot be reopened merely because a different officer believes another legal provision should have been applied.
Calling Sections 2(22)(e) and 2(24)(iv) “two sides of the same coin”, the court said the department had every opportunity in 2013 to tax the alleged benefit if it believed it was taxable. Revisiting the issue years later was nothing but a change of opinion, a settled no-go zone in tax law.
The court also rejected the department’s attempt to invoke the extended six-year limitation period by alleging failure to disclose material facts. The Roys, it said, had disclosed all primary facts, including RRPR’s audited accounts, which explicitly recorded the interest-free loans. Drawing on Supreme Court precedents, the bench reiterated that an assessee is not required to disclose inferences or help the tax officer draw conclusions.
Allowing both writ petitions, the High Court quashed the 2016 notices and all consequential proceedings. While noting that “no amount of cost can be treated enough” for such cases, it imposed Rs 1 lakh as cost in each petition, a symbolic but pointed message.
Beyond the Roys, the ruling sends a wider signal. Reassessment powers are not a rewind button. Once the taxman has examined the facts, applied his mind and passed an order, he cannot keep returning with fresh labels for the same transaction.
In short, the court told the department to stop re-editing old tapes, especially when the credits have already rolled.
High Court
Havas speaks EU fluently as Brussels taps It for five year mandate
MUMBAI: When Europe needs to explain itself, it’s turning to a familiar accent. Havas has been selected under the new Framework Contract of the European Commission, securing a five-year mandate to support strategic communication assignments for EU institutions across Member States and beyond.
The appointment positions Havas as the only France-based European communications group chosen under the framework, reinforcing its standing as a go-to player for pan-European institutional communication. The contract builds on previous mandates handled by the group for the Commission and underlines its growing influence at a continental level.
At a time when Europe’s message must travel across borders, cultures and political climates, the brief is as much about nuance as scale. Havas will deliver an integrated model coordinated by its Paris teams, combining Europe-wide strategic coherence with local execution through its network of agencies across the EU. The aim: to make European initiatives more relatable, intelligible and relevant to citizens in their everyday lives.
Havas Paris CEO Julien Carette said Europe’s diversity demands communication that connects institutions with people, not just policies with paperwork. The group’s approach, he noted, is rooted in translating complex ideas into clear narratives that resonate locally while aligning centrally.
The mandate will see Havas supporting communication around major European public policies spanning employment, justice, health, defence and economic and social transition, alongside issues such as civil liberties, shared values and the rule of law. In a fragmented media environment marked by misinformation and scepticism, the focus will be on clarity, pedagogy and dialogue grounded in facts.
Havas’ integrated structure is central to the win. Its H/Advisors platform will play a key role in reputation, influence and public diplomacy, while the group’s Converged.AI strategy brings advisory, creative and media teams together to deliver measurable outcomes. Havas Creative Europe CEO Raphaël de Andréis said institutions increasingly seek partners who can turn complexity into accessible storytelling, a space where Havas believes it has a competitive edge.
The contract also highlights Havas’ European DNA. Headquartered in Paris, listed in Amsterdam and embedded across the continent’s economic and cultural ecosystems, the group positions itself as European by both culture and structure capable of operating at scale while remaining sensitive to national realities.
Havas Group, chairman of H/Advisors and executive vice president Stéphane Fouks described the mandate as a responsibility as much as a recognition, one that reflects Europe’s values of dialogue, democracy and openness at a time when competing governance models are gaining ground.
For Havas, the Brussels nod is more than a contract win. It is a signal of trust from one of the world’s most complex institutions and a reminder that in Europe’s crowded conversation, choosing the right voice still matters.
High Court
Delhi court tells WhatsApp Moneycontrol scammers to control themselves
NEW DELHI: If you received a WhatsApp message promising stock market riches from someone claiming to represent Moneycontrol, congratulations—you were being fleeced. The Delhi high court has now pulled the plug on a sprawling scam that hijacked the trusted financial news platform’s name to separate gullible investors from their cash, according a livelaw.in report.
Justice Manmeet Pritam Singh Arora handed down a permanent injunction on 19 December, ordering that several individuals be restrained from misusing the “Moneycontrol” trademark and that their WhatsApp accounts and mobile numbers stay blocked. The ruling caps a trademark infringement suit filed by Network18 Media & Investments, which runs Moneycontrol—one of India’s most popular sources for financial news, stock data, and investment information.
The con was straightforward in its audacity. Unknown individuals sent WhatsApp messages inviting recipients to join investment groups with names like “CINV The Premier Strategy Group,” promising insider stock tips and eye-watering returns. The groups had zero connection to Moneycontrol but traded shamelessly on its reputation. Unsuspecting punters, believing they were getting advice from a legitimate source, handed over substantial sums of money. They got fleeced instead.
Network18 started receiving complaints in March 2024 from confused members of the public who had been targeted by these fraudulent groups. The pattern was familiar to anyone who has spent five minutes on WhatsApp: join this exclusive group, get rich quick, send money now. The only thing exclusive about it was how thoroughly the scammers exploited Moneycontrol’s credibility.
The court was unimpressed by the defendants’ behaviour—or rather, their complete lack of it. Despite being served notice, none of the 21 individuals involved bothered to show up in court or contest the proceedings. That sort of no-show suggests either supreme confidence or the realisation that the game was up. The court went ahead anyway.
“The activities of the defendants establish a clear intention of showing a direct nexus or affiliation with the plaintiff and making a misrepresentation that its services have been licensed or approved or endorsed by the plaintiff,” Justice Arora observed. Legal-speak for: these people were pretending to be Moneycontrol, and they knew exactly what they were doing.
The court had earlier granted an interim injunction blocking the WhatsApp accounts and mobile numbers tied to the scam. Now it has made that ban permanent, with a one-year extension on the blocked numbers and a directive that they must not be reissued to the same individuals. One of the fraudulent WhatsApp groups has been permanently shut down as well.
The ruling underscores a persistent problem in India’s digital ecosystem: scammers brazenly impersonating legitimate brands on messaging platforms, counting on the fact that enforcement is patchy and victims are often too embarrassed to complain. Moneycontrol’s case is unusual only in that it reached court and resulted in a clear victory.
For Network18, the injunction is both vindication and a warning shot. Protecting a brand’s reputation in the age of WhatsApp fraud requires constant vigilance and legal firepower. For the scammers—or at least the ones daft enough to use traceable phone numbers—the message is clear: the court can and will shut you down.
As for the investors who lost money? The court order does not bring their cash back. It merely ensures that these particular fraudsters cannot keep using Moneycontrol’s name to find fresh victims. In the ruthless world of financial scams, that counts as a small mercy. Caveat emptor, as always—especially on WhatsApp.
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