India's Supreme Court Rebukes Attempt to Codify Link Between Porn, Sex Crimes

India's Supreme Court Rebukes Attempt to Codify Link Between Porn, Sex Crimes

NEW DELHI — The Supreme Court of India has rejected a petition seeking to codify an alleged link between viewing internet pornography and committing crimes such as rape and child sexual abuse.

“Seeking a judicial declaration from the Supreme Court that porn on the Internet has led to child sex crimes would be equal to giving a go-ahead to online surveillance,” cautioned the justices in their opinion after reviewing the petition, Indian newspaper The Hindu reported.

The top Indian tribunal stated that “child sex abuse is a crime by itself” and noted that although police can investigate specific cases to determine “whether or not viewing of pornography had triggered the crime,” such findings would apply only to each individual case.

“So your final goal is that such material should not uploaded ... What you are advocating may be surveillance and collection of data,” the court told Nalin Kohli, the petitioner-in-person and a prominent figure in the BJP, India's right-wing ruling party.

The court expressed concern about where the type of Internet surveillance being proposed might lead.

"This is a tiger if it gets loose, problem is at what point we control it… The issue of the link between viewing pornography and crime is individual case specific," Chief Justice Lalit opined.

Influence of U.S. Jurisprudence on India's Supreme Court

Justice S. Ravindra Bhat cited a 1990s U.S. Supreme Court case dealing “with a question of banning the Internet to a certain class in order not to give them access to porn,” The Hindu reported.

Bhat quoted former U.S. Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy as saying, "We cannot set the house on fire to roast the pig," in turn a reference to a much-cited 1957 case, Butler v. Michigan.

According to free-speech scholar Clay Calvert, Justice Felix Frankfurter’s opinion in the Butler decision established “a pivotal principle in First Amendment jurisprudence — that the government cannot, in the name of shielding minors from supposedly objectionable content, implement a blanket ban on that content and thereby reduce the scope of speech available to consenting adults.”

Kohli initially “sought a direction to the Bureau of Police Research and Development (BPRD) to study the link between free access to internet pornography and child sexual abuse cases as well as rape,” The Hindu noted.

Kohli withdrew his petition following the Supreme Court rebuke.

Copyright © 2025 Adnet Media. All Rights Reserved. XBIZ is a trademark of Adnet Media.
Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission is prohibited.

More News

Takedown Piracy Adds 'Search Max' Feature

Takedown Piracy has launched Search Max, a search engine for detecting, verifying, and removing Google infringements.

Sex Workers' Group Fights Proposed Swedish Ban on 'Remote' Sexual Services

The European Sex Workers’ Rights Alliance (ESWA) has launched a campaign against a Swedish government proposal to expand current laws against purchasing sexual services to apply to acts performed remotely by cammers, streamers and custom content creators.

FSC: Arizona Governor Signs Controversial Age Verification Law

Free Speech Coalition has released a statement regarding Arizona Governor Katie Hobbs signing the state's age verification bill into law.

NCOSE Sues 4 Adult Websites Under Kansas Age Verification Law

The National Center on Sexual Exploitation (NCOSE), a conservative anti-pornography organization, has sued four adult websites in Kansas under the state's age verification law.

Sarina Havok, Robin Coffins Launch New Site Through Grooby's Blue.xxx

Sarina Havok and Robin Coffins have launched their new membership site, SarinaAndRobin.com, through Grooby's website management company Blue.xxx.

SpankChain Pauses SpankPay, SpankMatch

SpankChain has paused SpankPay, its adult crypto payment platform, and SpankMatch, its adult networking platform.

Sen. Mike Lee Tries Again to Criminalize All Porn With Interstate Obscenity Definition Act

Republican Senator Mike Lee of Utah has introduced the Interstate Obscenity Definition Act, which would redefine almost all visual depictions of sex as obscene and therefore illegal.

Ofcom Investigates 2 Adult Sites for AV Noncompliance

U.K. media regulator Ofcom is investigating two adult sites for failure to comply with age assurance requirements under the Online Safety Act, which Ofcom is charged with enforcing.

MojoHost to Launch New GPU Servers

MojoHost has announced plans to launch new GPU servers for its clients.

Maximilian Peldszus Joins Fanblast

Former BestFans CEO Maximilian Peldszus has joined creator software company Fanblast.

Show More