X announced it will appeal the Karnataka High Court decision that effectively allows India’s government-run Sahyog portal, a platform authorities use to request the removal of online posts. The company claims the program is obscure, widens police authority to demand takedowns and circumvents due process contained in India’s own technology laws.
The court held that X’s free-speech argument must fail because foreign companies are not entitled to constitutional speech protections under Article 19. X argued that its suit addresses the rights of Indian users and legal underpinnings for limiting content, not corporate speech.

India created Sahyog in 2024 to consolidate takedown requests from government agencies. Several major platforms, including services run by Google and Meta as well as locally grown networks like ShareChat, are believed to be participating. X has pushed back against onboarding, arguing that the portal facilitates “allegation-based” removals without proper verification.
What the Sahyog Takedown System Does in Practice
Sahyog acts as a dashboard on which police and other agencies can upload content identifiers, mention alleged offences, and send removal instructions to platforms. Supporters say the portal speeds reaction to illegal content and strengthens audit trails through jurisdictions. Critics say it consolidates censorial power and legitimizes quick, unreviewed takedowns on a vast scale.
As such, the portal enables police officers to slap a demand for taking action on posts without an order passed by a reasoned writing under the statutory procedure in force and give notice to intermediaries about legal repercussions if they do not comply fast. This setup, digital rights activists say, can have a chilling effect on speech in cases where takedowns relate to political content, satire or coverage of public-order events.
The Legal Tightrope of Section 69A and Due Process
Under Sec 69A of the Information Technology Act, the Union government has powers to block content for very specific reasons. The Supreme Court upheld 69A but emphasized procedural safeguards in its landmark decision on the matter, Shreya Singhal v. Union of India: written, reasoned orders; review by committee; and a right to be heard for originator or intermediary if possible. These guardrails are meant to guarantee necessity and proportionality, and not blanket suppression.
X contends Sahyog undermines those safeguards by allowing state-level agencies, like the police, to force removal outside the 69A committee route. But the Karnataka High Court was unconvinced that “the portal, as ultimately deployed by X on 1st June, 2020 is a violation of [the statute],” and declined to acknowledge X’s characterization of this custodial battle as a “constitutional speech case involving a foreign corporation.” Policy experts point to a lingering question the court did not answer in so many words: How should platforms balance portal-based orders with the 69A procedure when they seem out of sync?

Industry Response And Pressure For Enforcement
India is one of the biggest source countries for legal demands to online services, according to transparency reports from companies including Google and Meta, which have repeatedly reported that they receive significant volumes of government requests to take down content. The peaks are usually during elections, law-and-order eruptions and communal flare-ups when posts can spread quickly in minutes and authorities seek speedy compliance.
The current impasse is not X’s first. In an earlier Karnataka High Court case, the platform lost a bid to overturn a government blocking order and had been fined for not promptly complying: a sign early on that Indian courts will expect intermediaries to comply first and fight later. Not following this could put their safe harbour immunity and even local teams at risk of criminal complaint, driving many to geoblock content in India rather than remove it from everywhere.
Most of the big platforms have implemented hybrid playbooks: they cooperate with government through official means, escalate fuzzy requests to legal for review and fall back on geoblocking as a last resort. Sahyog’s automation nudges those playbooks further toward speed over deliberation, and that’s exactly why X and civil-society groups are asking for clearer judicial guidance on when and how portal directives should map onto 69A’s process.
Business Stakes for Musk in India Amid Regulatory Tensions
The spat comes as other Musk-led enterprises ramp up their India plans. Tesla has pivoted closer to market entry, and Starlink recently obtained key regulatory clearances. Corporations are distinct from one another; regulatory fractiousness on the case of X could muddy wider engagement with New Delhi, where cross-portfolio lines and optics often count even if ministries operate independently.
What Comes Next for X’s Challenge to the Sahyog Portal
X will appeal and could apply for a temporary stay restricting the use of Sahyog pending a review by a superior court. A clear decision that confirms 69A’s procedure as being mandatory for every removal would require the government to recalibrate the portal’s workflow. If the present trend continues, Sahyog could end up becoming the go-to pipe for takedown orders in India and significantly hasten compliance timelines across platforms.
Whichever way, the case is on a path to determine the next phase of India’s online speech governance — can speed and scale live in harmony with due process? — and provide other countries mulling similar government-operated takedown portals a lesson about how far they can go without tripping over their own laws.
