If an old court case shows your name on Google or Indian Kanoon, you can sometimes ask a court to de-index or mask it, but only in limited situations. This right comes from your fundamental right to privacy under Article 21 of the Constitution, not from the RTI Act or the DPDP Act. The Delhi High Court recognised it in Laksh Vir Singh Yadav v. Union of India (W.P.(C) 1021/2016), decided on 29 May 2026 by Justice Sachin Datta.
Short answer: In some cases yes, especially if you were acquitted, discharged, or the matter is old and settled. The Delhi High Court has held that the right to be forgotten is part of informational privacy under Article 21, and that de-indexing or masking your name in court records can be a valid remedy. It is not automatic, and it does not apply where there is genuine public interest.
If you are short on time, jump to the step-by-step block below and the “Who is most likely to succeed” section.
There is no single all-India form or portal for this. The exact process varies by High Court. The practical route is the following.
Note: the exact procedure, the bench, and the type of petition can differ between High Courts. Confirm the local practice with a lawyer or the High Court registry before you file.
The Court framed the core question as whether a person whose name appears in judicial records that show up in internet searches can, on the strength of the right to informational privacy under Article 21, ask for de-indexing.
It held that the right to be forgotten is a facet of that informational privacy, and recognised de-indexing and masking as permissible remedies. At the same time, it carved out exceptions for matters of genuine public interest. So the right is real, but not absolute. Court records are public by design and open justice is itself a constitutional value, so the Court balances your privacy against the public interest case by case.
You have a stronger case for de-indexing or masking when:
In these situations the privacy interest is high and the ongoing public interest in linking your name is usually low.
Courts are far less likely to order de-indexing or masking when:
The right to be forgotten does not let you erase a true and lawful record simply because it is inconvenient.
This is the part people get wrong. The right discussed here is grounded in Article 21, the constitutional right to privacy, and is enforced by going to a court.
The Digital Personal Data Protection Act gives you a separate statutory right to correction and erasure of personal data held by a data fiduciary, with its own conditions. For that route, see our guide to the DPDP right to erasure and correction of personal data and the complete guide to the DPDP Act, 2023.
The RTI Act is the opposite tool. It helps you obtain information from public authorities. It does not remove your name from court records, so do not file an RTI to get yourself forgotten.
If your underlying worry is a criminal case itself, and not just the search result, read how to quash an FIR under Section 528 BNSS before the High Court.
For the bigger picture on your information rights, see The RTI Playbook.
Not just by asking. Indian Kanoon publishes public court judgments. The reliable route is a court order for masking or de-indexing, which you then send to the platform and the search engine. A court order carries far more weight than a plain request.
Usually not, especially for a serious or recent conviction where there is genuine public interest. The Delhi High Court carved out a public interest exception. Acquittal, discharge, or an old and settled matter gives you a much stronger case than a standing conviction.
Generally the High Court connected to the case or with jurisdiction over the matter. The exact type of petition and the procedure vary between High Courts. Confirm the local practice with a lawyer or the High Court registry before filing.
There is no fixed timeline. It depends on how quickly the court hears your application, the order it passes, and how fast the search engine or website acts on the order. Treat it as a matter of months, not days, and keep records of every step.
Not always. De-indexing removes the page from search engine results so it stops appearing when someone searches your name. Masking hides or redacts your name within the judgment. The judgment itself may still exist on the court record. The remedy depends on what the court orders.