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Relevance: GS-II Government Policies & Interventions · GS-III Cyber Security & Internal Security Source: MeitY directives, June 2026

1 · What happened

The Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY) has placed a temporary nationwide block on the messaging app Telegram. The block stays active until 22 June. Alongside it, MeitY has ordered the platform to switch off the message-editing feature for all old posts in India until 30 June.

The action came at the request of the National Testing Agency (NTA), which is probing the NEET-UG (National Eligibility cum Entrance Test – Undergraduate) question paper leak of 3 May. A re-examination is scheduled for 21 June, and fake “paper leak” channels were spreading panic among students and families.

2 · How the “backdated message” hoax works

The trick is simple but clever. Telegram lets a user edit an old message but still shows its original send-time stamp. Fraud channels use this to make it look like they posted a leaked paper before the exam — even when they did not.

1 Plant a harmless post. A channel admin posts an innocent message a few days before the exam.
2 Wait for the exam. The test is held and the real question paper becomes public.
3 Edit the old post. The admin quietly replaces the innocent text with the leaked paper or a PDF.
4 The loophole. The old date stamp stays unchanged — creating false “proof” that the paper leaked before the exam, even when exam security held.

  • The encryption wall: Telegram’s “Secret Chats” use end-to-end encryption — only the sender and receiver can read them, and no server log is kept. So the company itself cannot say who sent what, or when.
  • The “non-responsive” headquarters: Local staff said they could not share transaction logs or metadata and pointed investigators to the foreign head office, which did not reply.
  • Extortion racket: Channels with names like “PAPER LEAKED NEET” and “Re-NEET 2026” took money — from a few thousand to lakhs of rupees — from worried families for fake access to the 21 June re-exam.
  • A blunt tool: With about 150 million users in India (second only to WhatsApp), a full block also hits law-abiding users, and tech-savvy ones can slip past it using a VPN (Virtual Private Network).

Reforms on the table (way ahead)

  • “Immutable timeline” rule: any platform allowing edits must show a permanent “Edited” tag with a fresh, unchangeable timestamp — or lose its legal protection.
  • Local data escrow: store non-content logs (registration time, IP, linked number) on Indian servers, openable only with a valid court warrant.
  • Cryptographic watermarking: hidden, time-locked marks on exam papers so any genuine leak can be traced to its exact source.

UPSC Value Box
Section 69A, IT Act 2000 Lets the government order blocking of public access to online content for security and public order.
Section 79, IT Act 2000 (“Safe Harbor”) Shields platforms from liability for users’ content, provided they do due diligence and obey valid orders.
IT Rules, 2021 Full name: Intermediary Guidelines and Digital Media Ethics Code Rules, 2021. Require 24×7 grievance officers and timely help to law enforcement.
Public Examinations (Prevention of Unfair Means) Act, 2024 Central law with strict penalties for organised paper-leak and cheating networks.
MeitY Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology; issues blocking orders under Section 69A.
NTA National Testing Agency; conducts NEET-UG and other national entrance exams.
End-to-end encryption Messages readable only by sender and receiver; no server log, so the company cannot trace them.

MCQ Practice Question
Q. With reference to the legal framework governing digital intermediaries in India, consider the following statements:

  1. Section 69A of the Information Technology Act, 2000 empowers the government to block public access to information on digital platforms.
  2. The “Safe Harbor” protection, which shields an intermediary from liability for content posted by users, is granted under Section 69A of the same Act.
  3. The Public Examinations (Prevention of Unfair Means) Act, 2024 provides penalties against organised groups that leak examination papers.

Which of the statements given above is/are correct?
(a) 1 and 2 only    (b) 2 and 3 only    (c) 1 and 3 only    (d) 1, 2 and 3

Answer: (c) 1 and 3 only

  • Statement 1 — Correct: Section 69A is the exact power MeitY uses to order blocking of online content for security and public order.
  • Statement 2 — Incorrect (the trap): “Safe Harbor” is granted under Section 79, not Section 69A. Section 69A deals with blocking; Section 79 deals with intermediary protection — the two sections are commonly swapped.
  • Statement 3 — Correct: The 2024 Act lays down strict penalties for organised networks that leak papers or enable mass cheating.

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