Telangana High Court Protects Actress Ashu Reddy From 'Irreversible Digital Harm', Bars Publication Of 'Defamatory' Content
The Telangana High Court has in an interim order restrained over 30 media platforms from publishing allegedly defamatory content against actress Ashu Reddy, until the trial court decides her injunction application in her defamation suit. The actress had moved the high court, after the trial court refused to grant ex parte ad interim injunction. Justice P. Sam Koshy in his order observed...
The Telangana High Court has in an interim order restrained over 30 media platforms from publishing allegedly defamatory content against actress Ashu Reddy, until the trial court decides her injunction application in her defamation suit.
The actress had moved the high court, after the trial court refused to grant ex parte ad interim injunction.
Justice P. Sam Koshy in his order observed that right to privacy is not confined to mere secrecy, but includes the right of an individual to preserve dignity, reputation, autonomy and to control dissemination of personal information.
The court further said that the injury caused by unauthorized publication of personal and private material, "particularly in the digital space is immediate, pervasive and often incapable of being remedied fully by subsequent damages".
It said that while freedom of speech and expression under Article 19(1)(a) is a cherished constitutional value, however it is not absolute and is subject to reasonable restrictions under Article 19(2) including in relation to defamation and other legitimate interests.
"In matters where the content complained of pertains predominantly to private life and is projected in a manner which is prima facie defamatory and sensational, the balance of convenience would ordinarily tilt in favour of protecting the dignity and privacy of the individual, at least till the competent Court adjudicates the issue on merits.In the present case, the petitioner has placed material to demonstrate that the impugned publications, if permitted to continue, would result in irreversible harm to her privacy, reputation and livelihood.
Once a narrative is repeatedly circulated through multiple platforms, the petitioner may be subjected to continuing public judgment and stigma which cannot be meaningfully undone even if she ultimately succeeds in the suit. Therefore, an interim restraint is needed until the Trial Court decides the injunction application, so that justice is protected and the case does not become meaningless," it added.
The high court restrained respondent Nos.2 to 33 from publishing anything that is defamatory in the form of statements, allegations, narratives, interviews and other communications in newspapers, television channels, websites, YouTube channels, social media and other platforms till I.A.No.576 of 2026 in O.S.No.176 of 2026 is heard and decided by the Trial Court fixed on 06.05.2026.
The court said that the Trial Court is expected to take an independent decision on the actress's injunction application on its own merits in accordance with law without being in any manner influenced by the observations or the order passed by the High Court.
In the suit, the petitioner sought mandatory and perpetual injunction against a private complainant and a large number of media entities and digital intermediaries, including television channels, digital news platforms, YouTube and social media platforms, from publishing, uploading, telecasting, sharing or otherwise disseminating material said to defame, denigrate or impute misconduct to her.
Along with the suit, she had sought temporary injunction for immediate takedown and restraint in relation to statements, allegations, narratives, interviews, posts and communications allegedly circulated in connection with FIR No.78 of 2026 dated 20.04.2026 registered at the Central Crime Station, Detective Department, Hyderabad.
Before the High Court, counsel for the petitioner argued that she had been projected across media reports and online videos as a “villain” and a person of low character, causing serious damage to her personal and professional life. It was submitted that she earns her living through films, web series, television shows, brand endorsements, public relations work and other engagements, and that continuing publication of the impugned material would further tarnish her image before the trial court could even decide the injunction application.
The High Court took note of the petitioner's reliance on a Madras High Court decision in Kanimozhi Karunanidhi v. Thiru. P. Varadarajan, dealing with privacy, reputational harm and the need for calibrated interim protection.
The plea was accordingly allowed.
Case Title: Ms. Venkata Aswini Reddy Koyya @ Ashu Reddy v. Mr. Yetimulla Satyanarayana Murthy & 32 Ors.
Case No.: Civil Revision Petition No.1346 of 2026
Appearance: Sri V. Murali Manohar for the petitioner; none appeared for the respondents.