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Online harassment and trolling have become common on social media platforms, affecting individuals’ mental health, reputation, and personal safety. Indian law recognises that harassment in the digital space can be as harmful as physical-world abuse and provides legal remedies in such cases.
Online harassment includes sending abusive messages, threats, stalking, impersonation, spreading false information, or repeatedly targeting someone to cause distress. Trolling may cross into illegality when it involves intimidation, obscenity, defamation, or invasion of privacy.
Indian laws dealing with online harassment include provisions related to criminal intimidation, defamation, obscenity, and identity misuse, along with specific cyber law provisions that address misuse of electronic communication. The law focuses on intent, content, and impact of the online conduct rather than the platform used.
Victims of online harassment can report abusive content to the social media platform for removal and also file a complaint with the cyber crime cell or local police. Digital evidence such as screenshots, URLs, and message logs plays an important role in investigation.
Not all criticism or disagreement amounts to harassment. Courts generally distinguish between lawful expression and conduct that is abusive or threatening. Understanding this distinction helps protect free speech while ensuring accountability for online misconduct.
Disclaimer
This article is written for general legal awareness and educational purposes only. Legal consequences depend on facts, intent, nature of content, and applicable law. It should not be treated as legal advice.
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