
October 4, 2025
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RBI FREE-AI COMMITTEE REPORT: Framework for Responsible and Ethical Enablement of Artificial Intelligence; August 13, 2025.
Summary
The article discusses the legal challenges of assigning accountability for intellectual property infringements involving AI-generated content within the framework of Indian and international law. India’s existing intellectual property (IP) laws require human authorship for copyright protection, creating gaps as AI autonomously generates content from copyrighted training data without clear attribution or liability. The need for updated legal frameworks that protect human creativity while accommodating AI-driven innovation is emphasized.
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has addressed accountability and governance challenges of AI through its Framework for Responsible and Ethical Enablement of Artificial Intelligence (FREE-AI). This comprehensive blueprint for India’s financial sector centers on seven foundational principles (called “Sutras”) focusing on trust, fairness, accountability, inclusiveness, transparency, and sustainability, accompanied by a set of 26 actionable recommendations across six strategic pillars: infrastructure, policy, capacity, governance, protection, and assurance.
Background
Legal & Regulatory Analysis
Conclusions & Recommendations
This synthesis incorporates the detailed regulatory vision and recommendations from the RBI’s FREE-AI framework in guiding responsible AI governance and legal accountability in India, especially in the context of intellectual property rights affected by AI-driven creation and infringement.
WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW BEFORE DEPLOYING AI IN INDIA: THE LEGAL BASICS
Navigating the Regulatory Landscape Before Deploying AI Technology in India
As artificial intelligence (AI) steadily reshapes diverse industries, organizations seeking to harness its power must carefully navigate a complex and evolving legal environment. India, emerging as a key global AI hub, is witnessing rapid changes in data protection, sectoral regulations, and emerging AI-specific laws that govern how AI systems can be developed and deployed responsibly.
Foundations in Data Protection and Privacy
The backbone of lawful AI use lies in compliance with data protection frameworks. India’s Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 (DPDP Act) significantly tightens requirements around consent, data minimization, and accountability. Enterprises utilizing personal data to train AI models or offer AI-powered services must prioritize robust consent mechanisms and clearly articulate data processing purposes. Violations risk severe penalties, with fines reaching up to ₹250 crore, underscoring the critical nature of privacy compliance.
Sector-Specific Regulatory Scrutiny
Beyond general data privacy norms, sector regulators are increasingly attentive to the nuances of AI use within their domains. For instance, the banking sector mandates adherence to fair lending and credit reporting laws when AI aids lending decisions. Healthcare providers leveraging AI-assisted diagnostics must comply with medical device regulations and safeguard patient confidentiality rigorously. Regulators may also mandate transparency through algorithmic audits, documentation, and, where required, prior approvals — ensuring AI does not circumvent established compliance safeguards.
The Rise of AI-Centric Regulations
Globally, AI-specific regulatory measures are crystallizing around risk-based frameworks. The European Union’s AI Act, set to come into force by 2026, exemplifies this with tiered obligations depending on AI applications’ risk profiles. Other jurisdictions have introduced localized mandates targeting AI-driven hiring decisions, content moderation, and recommendation algorithms. Given this accelerating regulatory patchwork, Indian organizations must maintain vigilant monitoring of international developments to strategically align AI initiatives with forthcoming legal standards.
Intellectual Property Challenges in the AI Era
The intersection of AI and intellectual property (IP) law presents distinctive complexities. Copyright law grapples with AI training on copyrighted works without explicit permission, while patent law does not presently recognize AI as an inventor, mandating human attribution to secure patent rights. Trade secret protections guard proprietary AI models, but often constrain transparency critical for explainability. Meticulous license management and legal counsel involvement remain indispensable to prevent inadvertent IP infringements linked to AI components or generated outputs.
Accountability and Liability: Who Bears the Burden?
Presently, Indian law holds organizations deploying AI liable under traditional product liability or negligence doctrines for damages caused by AI system failures or errors. While no standalone AI liability framework exists yet, ongoing legislative dialogues, including proposals akin to the EU’s AI Liability Directive, seek to establish clearer accountability regimes. Companies should proactively document AI decision-making processes, incorporate risk assessments, and revisit insurance coverage to encompass AI-related exposures.
Indian Cyber Laws and Content Governance
The Information Technology Act, 2000 (IT Act), supplemented by recent rules, governs offenses such as unauthorized data access and digital content moderation. The Ministry of Electronics and IT (MeitY) has issued advisories emphasizing that AI-generated content must respect existing laws against unlawful material, misinformation, and hate speech. Consequently, AI implementations producing user-facing content are held to the same legal standards as traditional content creators, ensuring accountability.
Practical Guidance for AI Deployments
To effectively harness AI benefits while avoiding legal pitfalls, organizations should:
Conclusion
As AI technologies advance, India’s regulatory and legal ecosystems are transforming to provide guiding guardrails for innovators and users alike. Companies that anticipate and integrate these evolving requirements will not only mitigate risks but also fortify trust with customers and regulators, positioning themselves as responsible leaders in an AI-driven future.



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