New Delhi, Apr 3 The Delhi High Court has protected the personality rights of preacher Aniruddhacharya, who is also popular as 'Pookie' Baba, and restrained the unauthorised use of his name, voice and image for creating memes, videos or any other content, including AI or deepfake content.
Justice Tushar Rao Gedela passed the interim order on March 30 on a lawsuit by Aniruddhacharya.
The court also directed social media entities, Meta, X and Google to take down the offending content identified by the plaintiff, which unlawfully used or imitated his persona.
The court opined that there was prima facie a strong case in favour of the plaintiff, who was a well-known, popular and well-accepted personality.
The court stated that the nature of the content flagged by him was not "mere parody" and appeared to be disparaging and infringing his personality rights.
It said the apprehension of dent and damage to the image and personality of the plaintiff, prima facie, appeared to be real and present.
Aniruddhacharya alleged that several entities were misappropriating the attributes of his personality without authorisation, licence, or consent, with the ulterior motive of deriving illegal commercial gain and free-riding upon his immense goodwill, commercial value, and reputation.
His counsel submitted that certain deceptive and fabricated content was being circulated to falsely suggest that he endorsed or was associated with fraudulent schemes, and spurious goods and services.
Further, the distortion and misrepresentation of his teachings in these posts resulted in a loss of goodwill among his devotees and followers and also had the potential to further mislead members of the public, the lawyer added.
Several public figures, like actors Aishwarya Rai Bachchan, her husband Abhishek Bachchan, Salman Khan, 'Art of Living' founder Sri Sri Ravi Shankar, journalist Sudhir Chaudhary and podcaster Raj Shamani have earlier approached the high court seeking protection of their personality and publicity rights. The court has granted them interim relief.
Recently, the court protected the personality rights of cricketer Gautam Gambhir and actors Sonakshi Sinha and Vivek Oberoi by granting interim relief on their lawsuits.
New Delhi, Apr 3 The Delhi High Court has protected the personality rights of preacher Aniruddhacharya, who is also popular as 'Pookie' Baba, and restrained the unauthorised use of his name, voice and image for creating memes, videos or any other content, including AI or deepfake content.
Justice Tushar Rao Gedela passed the interim order on March 30 on a lawsuit by Aniruddhacharya.
The court also directed social media entities, Meta, X and Google to take down the offending content identified by the plaintiff, which unlawfully used or imitated his persona.
The court opined that there was prima facie a strong case in favour of the plaintiff, who was a well-known, popular and well-accepted personality.
The court stated that the nature of the content flagged by him was not "mere parody" and appeared to be disparaging and infringing his personality rights.
It said the apprehension of dent and damage to the image and personality of the plaintiff, prima facie, appeared to be real and present.
Aniruddhacharya alleged that several entities were misappropriating the attributes of his personality without authorisation, licence, or consent, with the ulterior motive of deriving illegal commercial gain and free-riding upon his immense goodwill, commercial value, and reputation.
His counsel submitted that certain deceptive and fabricated content was being circulated to falsely suggest that he endorsed or was associated with fraudulent schemes, and spurious goods and services.
Further, the distortion and misrepresentation of his teachings in these posts resulted in a loss of goodwill among his devotees and followers and also had the potential to further mislead members of the public, the lawyer added.
Anil Kumar Tiwari Anirudhacharya v. John Doe Ashok Kumar, (Delhi) : Law Finder Doc Id # 2876149