New Delhi: The Association of Indian Magazines (AIM) has welcomed the decision of the Supreme Court of India to decline a stay on the Bombay High Court judgment that struck down provisions enabling the government’s proposed Fact Check Unit (FCU) under the amended IT Rules.
AIM was among the petitioners that challenged the constitutionality of the Fact Check Unit, arguing that the provision could grant the government excessive authority to determine what constitutes “fake”, “false”, or “misleading” information about its own affairs.
While issuing notice and indicating that it will examine the matter in greater detail, the Supreme Court’s refusal to stay the judgment of the Bombay High Court means that the Union Government cannot operationalise the proposed Fact Check Unit for the time being. The interim position prevents the implementation of a mechanism that critics argued could have given the government sweeping powers to regulate content concerning its own functioning.
Under the amended Information Technology (Intermediary Guidelines and Digital Media Ethics Code) Rules, digital intermediaries could have been required to remove content flagged by the government-designated Fact Check Unit. Failure to comply could have exposed platforms to the loss of safe-harbour protections, raising significant concerns among media organisations and civil society groups about potential executive overreach.
Media stakeholders had also expressed concern that the rules allowed the government to unilaterally determine the accuracy of reporting about itself, with broadly defined terms such as “fake”, “false”, and “misleading”. Critics argued that this arrangement effectively placed the government in the position of both complainant and adjudicator in matters relating to scrutiny of its own actions.

Commenting on the development, Manoj Sharma, President of the Association of Indian Magazines and CEO, Publishing, India Today Group, said, “The Supreme Court’s decision not to stay the Bombay High Court judgment is an important safeguard for press freedom and democratic debate.”
Anant Nath, former president of AIM and editor of The Caravan, further added, “Allowing the government to unilaterally label reporting about its own functioning as ‘fake’ or ‘misleading’ would have created a deeply chilling effect on journalism.”
In the proceedings, the Association of Indian Magazines was represented by Senior Advocate Arvind Datar, along with Advocates Apar Gupta and Vrinda Bhandari (AoR) and the Internet Freedom Foundation, who assisted in advancing the constitutional challenge against the rule.
Background of the Case
The legal challenge emerged after the Information Technology (Intermediary Guidelines and Digital Media Ethics Code) Amendment Rules, 2023 introduced a provision enabling the Central Government to establish a Fact Check Unit to identify information relating to the “business of the Central Government” as “fake, false or misleading”.
Several petitioners subsequently approached the Bombay High Court, including the Association of Indian Magazines, the Editors Guild of India, stand-up comedian Kunal Kamra, and other journalists and civil society stakeholders.
The petitioners argued that granting the government the authority to determine the truthfulness of reporting about itself could create a state-controlled truth certification mechanism, potentially undermining the constitutional guarantee of freedom of speech and expression under Article 19(1)(a).
Bombay High Court Verdict
In a landmark ruling in March 2024, the Bombay High Court struck down the amended IT Rules enabling the Fact Check Unit, holding that the provision violated constitutional protections for free speech.
The court observed that the rule imposed arbitrary and disproportionate restrictions on online expression and lacked adequate procedural safeguards. It further noted that permitting the government to label online content about its own affairs as “fake” or “misleading” could have a serious chilling effect on journalism and public discourse.
AIM’s Stand on Press Freedom
The Association of Indian Magazines reiterated that while addressing misinformation is a legitimate public objective, any framework to combat it must be independent, transparent, and constitutionally sound.
Magazine publishers across India, the association said, remain committed to editorial integrity and fact-based journalism, while emphasising the importance of protecting editorial independence from executive overreach.
“The magazine industry stands firmly committed to defending constitutional freedoms and ensuring that India’s media ecosystem remains vibrant, plural, and independent,” Sharma added.
















