
Just days after celebrating India’s T20 World Cup 2026 triumph as head coach, Gautam Gambhir has taken a serious legal step off the field.
Gautam Gambhir moves Delhi High Court
Gambhir has approached the Delhi High Court, filing a ₹2.5 crore lawsuit to protect what he calls his “personality rights” in the digital age.
At the heart of the case is a growing concern around AI-driven impersonation. Gambhir has alleged that multiple anonymous accounts and platforms have been misusing his identity – his face, voice, and name – through deepfake technology and unauthorized content.
“My identity – my name, my face, my voice – has been weaponised by anonymous accounts to spread misinformation and generate revenue at my expense,” Gambhir stated in a press release accompanying the lawsuit. “This is not a matter of personal hurt; it is a matter of law, dignity, and the protection every public figure deserves in the age of artificial intelligence.”
According to his petition, the issue escalated sharply towards the end of 2025, with fake videos and statements circulating widely across platforms like Instagram, YouTube, Facebook and X. These weren’t harmless edits – they were highly realistic deepfakes created using face-swapping and voice-cloning tools, making it difficult for viewers to tell fact from fiction.
Some of these videos even went viral, including a fake “resignation announcement” that garnered lakhs of views, misleading fans into believing he was stepping down as India’s coach. Others falsely attributed controversial remarks to him about fellow cricketers, further amplifying the damage.
Gambhir invokes multiple laws, including the Copyright Act 1957
What makes this case even more significant is that it goes beyond misinformation—it also involves commercial exploitation. Gambhir’s legal team has alleged that his identity was being used to sell merchandise like posters and digital content on e-commerce platforms without any authorization.
This, according to the petition, is not just impersonation but a calculated attempt to profit from his image without consent. In simple terms, his identity was being turned into a product.
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To counter this, Gambhir has invoked multiple laws, including the Copyright Act 1957, the Trade Marks Act 1999, and the Commercial Courts Act 2015. These legal provisions strengthen his argument that personality rights – especially in today’s AI-driven world – are enforceable and deserve protection.
His case also draws from previous landmark rulings where courts have sided with public figures facing similar issues. Celebrities like Amitabh Bachchan, Anil Kapoor and Sunil Gavaskar have all sought legal protection against unauthorized use of their identity, especially in the context of digital and AI misuse.
What sets Gambhir’s case apart is the timing and the scale. Coming right after a major global cricket victory, it highlights how even the biggest public figures are vulnerable to digital manipulation.
In many ways, this isn’t just a lawsuit – it’s a statement.
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