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⚖️Law Awareness
BeginnerIntermediateAdvancedIndian law types, criminal law, civil law, employment rights, IP, cyber law — for everyone
Why It MattersTypes of LawCriminal LawCivil & Property LawEmployment LawIP LawCyber LawFor Law StudentsQ&A

⚖️ Why Legal Literacy Matters for Everyone

Law is not just for lawyers — it affects every decision you make

Every time you sign an employment contract, rent an apartment, buy a product online, face a workplace dispute, or use the internet, law determines your rights and obligations. Most people only discover they had legal rights after they needed them. Legal literacy means knowing your rights before you need them.

Who benefits from this section

If you are a...You will learn...
Working professionalEmployment rights, contract basics, consumer rights, digital privacy
Law studentOverview of all major Indian law categories, practical applications, career paths
EntrepreneurBusiness law, contracts, IP protection, GST, company registration
General publicKnow your rights: as a tenant, consumer, employee, citizen
DevOps/Tech professionalData privacy law, IT Act, cybercrime, IP in software
💡 Key PointThis section gives you awareness and foundational understanding. For any specific legal matter, always consult a qualified advocate (lawyer). Laws change — verify current provisions.

📚 Types of Law — The Complete Map

Law is broadly divided into two categories: Public Law and Private Law

CategoryWhat it governsExamples
PUBLIC LAW — between individual and the state
Constitutional LawThe supreme law of the land — structure of government, fundamental rights, directive principlesRight to equality (Art 14), Right to speech (Art 19), Right to life (Art 21)
Criminal LawOffences against society — state prosecutes the accusedIPC (Indian Penal Code), BNSS (replaced CrPC), POCSO, Prevention of Corruption Act
Administrative LawControls actions of government bodies and public authoritiesRTI Act, judicial review of administrative decisions
Tax LawIncome tax, GST, customs, corporate taxIncome Tax Act 1961, GST Act 2017
PRIVATE LAW — between individuals and organisations
Contract LawAgreements between parties — when they are valid and enforceableIndian Contract Act 1872 — offer, acceptance, consideration, capacity
Tort LawCivil wrongs causing harm — right to compensationNegligence, defamation, nuisance, product liability
Property LawOwnership, transfer, and rights over propertyTransfer of Property Act 1882, Registration Act 1908
Family LawMarriage, divorce, inheritance, adoption, maintenanceHindu Marriage Act, Special Marriage Act, Muslim Personal Law, Succession Acts
Labour & Employment LawRights and obligations in the employer-employee relationshipIndustrial Disputes Act, Payment of Wages Act, EPF Act, Factories Act
Company LawFormation, governance, and winding up of companiesCompanies Act 2013, SEBI regulations, Insolvency & Bankruptcy Code
Intellectual Property LawProtection of creative and inventive workCopyright Act, Patents Act, Trademarks Act, Trade Secrets
Consumer LawProtection of buyers of goods and servicesConsumer Protection Act 2019
SPECIALISED LAW
Cyber/IT LawDigital transactions, cybercrime, data protectionIT Act 2000, DPDP Act 2023, IT (Amendment) Act 2008
Environmental LawProtection of the environment and natural resourcesEnvironment Protection Act, Water Act, Air Act, Wildlife Protection Act
International LawRelations between nations, treaties, tradeUNCITRAL, WTO agreements, bilateral treaties
Banking & Finance LawBanking regulations, securities, insuranceRBI Act, SEBI Act, IRDA Act, FEMA

🔴 Criminal Law — IPC/BNS, CrPC/BNSS

The three new criminal laws (effective July 2024)

India replaced its colonial-era criminal laws with three new codes in 2024:

Old Law (replaced)New LawWhat it covers
Indian Penal Code (IPC) 1860Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS) 2023Criminal offences and punishments
Code of Criminal Procedure (CrPC) 1973Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita (BNSS) 2023Criminal procedure — arrest, trial, bail
Indian Evidence Act 1872Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam (BSA) 2023Rules of evidence in court

Key criminal law concepts everyone should know

  • FIR (First Information Report) — you have the RIGHT to file an FIR for a cognisable offence. Police cannot refuse to register it. If they refuse, complain to the Superintendent of Police or file a complaint in court directly.
  • Bail — your right to temporary release while trial is pending. Bailable offences: bail is a right. Non-bailable offences: bail is at court's discretion.
  • Right to legal counsel — under Article 22 of the Constitution, every arrested person has the right to be defended by a lawyer of their choice. If you cannot afford one, the state must provide legal aid (Legal Aid Board).
  • Presumption of innocence — you are innocent until proven guilty beyond reasonable doubt.
  • Section 302 BNS (murder) — death or life imprisonment. Intention and knowledge are key elements.
  • Section 318 BNS (cheating) — deceiving someone to deliver property or do an act. Common in online fraud cases.

What to do if you are wrongly accused

  1. Do NOT panic or make statements without a lawyer present
  2. Contact a criminal lawyer immediately
  3. Apply for anticipatory bail if you fear arrest
  4. Preserve all evidence in your favour (messages, documents, witnesses)
  5. Remember: you have the right to remain silent — you cannot be compelled to be a witness against yourself (Article 20)

📋 Civil Law — Contracts, Property, Family

Contract Law — Indian Contract Act 1872

A valid contract requires: offer + acceptance + consideration + free consent + capacity + lawful object. All six must be present. If any is absent, the contract is void or voidable.

  • Free consent — consent obtained by coercion, undue influence, fraud, misrepresentation, or mistake is not free consent → contract is voidable at the affected party's option
  • Consideration — something of value must be exchanged. A promise to do something for nothing is generally not enforceable (gift vs contract)
  • Breach of contract — if one party fails to perform, the other can sue for: damages (compensation), specific performance (court orders the party to perform), or rescission (cancel the contract)

Property Law — what every buyer must know

  • Sale Agreement vs Sale Deed — sale agreement is a PROMISE to sell. Sale Deed (registered) is the ACTUAL transfer. Never pay the full amount on a sale agreement alone.
  • Registration — the Sale Deed must be registered at the Sub-Registrar's office. Unregistered sale deeds are inadmissible as evidence of transfer.
  • Encumbrance certificate — check that the property has no loans, mortgages, or legal disputes. Get this from the Sub-Registrar's office before buying.
  • RERA (Real Estate Regulation Act 2016) — protects home buyers from builder fraud. Builders must register projects with RERA. File complaints at your state RERA if builder delays or misrepresents.

Family Law — marriage, divorce, inheritance

India has personal laws based on religion plus secular laws:

CommunityMarriage lawSuccession law
Hindus (incl. Sikh, Buddhist, Jain)Hindu Marriage Act 1955Hindu Succession Act 1956
MuslimsMuslim Personal Law (Shariat) Application ActMuslim Personal Law
ChristiansIndian Christian Marriage Act 1872Indian Succession Act 1925
Any religion / inter-faithSpecial Marriage Act 1954Indian Succession Act 1925
Daughter's inheritance rightsThe Hindu Succession (Amendment) Act 2005 gave daughters equal rights as sons in ancestral property, regardless of whether the father was alive before the amendment. Supreme Court confirmed this applies retroactively (Vineeta Sharma v Rakesh Sharma, 2020).

👔 Employment & Labour Law

Your rights as an employee — India

The four Labour Codes (2019-2020) consolidate 29 existing labour laws but are being implemented gradually. Until then, the old laws apply:

  • Payment of Gratuity Act 1972 — after 5 continuous years with one employer, you are entitled to gratuity. Formula: (Last basic salary × 15 × Years) ÷ 26. This is a legal right, not a bonus. Employer must pay within 30 days of resignation.
  • EPF Act 1952 — 12% of basic salary contributed by you and 12% by employer to your PF account. Check your UAN on the EPFO portal. Employer must deposit monthly — failure is a criminal offence.
  • Industrial Disputes Act 1947 — governs retrenchment (layoff), closure, strikes. Employer cannot retrench 100+ employees without government permission. 30 days notice and retrenchment compensation (15 days wages per year) required.
  • POSH Act 2013 (Prevention of Sexual Harassment) — every organisation with 10+ employees must have an Internal Complaints Committee (ICC). File complaints within 3 months of incident.
  • Maternity Benefit Act 1961 — 26 weeks paid maternity leave for organisations with 10+ employees. Cannot be terminated during maternity leave.

Employment contract — what to read before signing

  • Notice period — typically 30-90 days in IT. Must serve or buy out. If employer terminates without cause, they pay notice pay.
  • Non-compete clause — widely used in India but largely unenforceable for employees. Courts protect the right to work. However, NDA (non-disclosure) IS enforceable.
  • Moonlighting clause — know what your contract says before taking side projects.
  • Garden leave — some companies require you to serve notice at home (not working) — they still must pay full salary.

💡 Intellectual Property Law

Protecting your creative and inventive work

IP TypeWhat it protectsDurationRegistration
CopyrightOriginal creative works — books, code, music, art, films, softwareLife of author + 60 yearsAutomatic on creation (registration advisable for evidence)
PatentInventions — new, useful, non-obvious processes or products20 years from filingMust file at Patent Office (India or PCT for international)
TrademarkBrand name, logo, slogan that distinguishes goods/services10 years, renewableFile at Trademark Registry, IP India
Trade SecretConfidential business information — formulas, processes, customer listsAs long as kept secretNo registration — protect through NDAs and access controls

Software and IP — what tech professionals must know

  • Code is copyright — your code is automatically protected by copyright from the moment you write it. Copying another's code without licence is infringement.
  • Open source licences matter — using GPL code in your commercial software requires you to open-source your code. MIT and Apache 2.0 licences are more permissive.
  • Work for hire — code you write as an employee typically belongs to your employer (check your employment agreement's IP assignment clause).
  • Software patents — India does not allow pure software patents (Section 3(k) of Patents Act). But algorithms with technical application may qualify.

💻 IT Law and Cyber Law

India's digital law framework

  • IT Act 2000 (amended 2008) — India's primary cyber law. Covers: electronic contracts, digital signatures, cybercrime offences, data protection (Section 43A), interception and surveillance powers.
  • DPDP Act 2023 (Digital Personal Data Protection Act) — India's comprehensive data privacy law. Key rights: right to know what data is collected, right to correction, right to erasure, right to grievance redressal. Companies must get explicit consent before processing personal data.
  • Cybercrime offences under IT Act: Section 66 — computer-related offences (hacking). Section 66C — identity theft (3 years + ₹1 lakh fine). Section 66D — cheating by impersonation using computer (3 years). Section 66E — violation of privacy. Section 67 — publishing obscene material.

Reporting cybercrime in India

  • Portal: cybercrime.gov.in — file online complaints for all cyber offences
  • Helpline: 1930 — national cybercrime helpline, available 24/7
  • For financial fraud: call your bank immediately, then call 1930 within 24 hours for best chance of recovery
  • Local cyber police station: for serious offences like cyberstalking, sextortion, identity theft

🎓 For Law Students — Career Paths and Resources

If you are studying law, this platform gives you

A practical, structured overview of all major areas of Indian law with real-world applications. Most law textbooks cover doctrine; this section connects doctrine to real scenarios that matter in practice.

Career paths in law

Career pathWhat you doQualification
LitigationAppear in courts, argue cases for clientsLLB + enrolment with Bar Council
Corporate LawM&A, contracts, company compliance, IPOsLLB, often LLM
In-house CounselLegal team inside a company — contracts, disputes, complianceLLB + corporate experience
Judicial ServicesBecome a judge (District Judge) via state competitive examLLB + state exam
Civil ServicesIAS, IPS, IRS — law is excellent preparationLLB + UPSC exam
IPR SpecialistPatent prosecution, trademark filing, IP litigationLLB (science background helpful for patents)
Cyber Law / Tech LawData privacy, tech contracts, cybercrimeLLB + tech knowledge
Legal Aid / NGOFree legal services for underprivilegedLLB + social commitment
Arbitration / ADRResolve commercial disputes without courtsLLB + arbitration training

Key Indian law exams and bodies

  • CLAT — Common Law Admission Test for NLU admissions
  • AIBE — All India Bar Examination (must pass after LLB to practice)
  • Judicial Services exam — each state conducts its own for district judge positions
  • SEBI, RBI, Competition Commission — regulatory bodies that hire law graduates
💡 Key PointFor law students: the most in-demand combination in 2025 is LLB + understanding of technology. Companies need lawyers who understand AI regulation, data privacy, fintech regulation, and tech contracts. This platform helps you build that tech understanding alongside your legal foundation.

🎯 Common Legal Questions Answered

LAW · BEGINNER
What is the difference between civil law and criminal law?
Criminal law deals with offences against society as a whole — the state prosecutes the accused. The purpose is punishment and deterrence. Examples: murder, theft, rape, fraud. The standard of proof is 'beyond reasonable doubt' — very high. Punishment includes imprisonment, fines, or in extreme cases, death penalty. Civil law deals with disputes between private parties — individuals, companies. The purpose is compensation and remedy. Examples: breach of contract, property disputes, divorce, negligence causing harm. The standard of proof is 'balance of probabilities' — lower than criminal. Remedy is typically damages (money), specific performance, or injunction. Key difference in practice: in criminal law, police and the state machinery are involved. You report to police, they investigate, public prosecutor argues the case. In civil law, you (the plaintiff) file a civil suit, hire your own lawyer, and the state provides only the court forum. A single incident can give rise to both: someone who defrauds you can be prosecuted under BNS (criminal) and also sued civilly for recovery of money.
LAW · INTERMEDIATE
What rights does an employee have when terminated in India?
Rights on termination depend on: the size of the organisation, the reason for termination, and which laws apply. Notice pay: your contract specifies the notice period (typically 30-90 days in IT). If the employer terminates you without this notice, they must pay notice pay as compensation. If you resign, you must serve the notice or pay the buyout. Gratuity: if you have completed 5+ years of continuous service, you are entitled to gratuity (15 days basic salary per year of service). This is a legal right regardless of how you were terminated, unless termination was for proven misconduct after due inquiry. Wrongful termination: an employer cannot terminate you without following due process. For organisations above 100 workers (in some states 300), retrenchment without government permission is unlawful. Even for smaller organisations, termination must follow the principles of natural justice — show cause notice, opportunity to respond. Standing orders (for factories and establishments above 100 workers) define the procedure for disciplinary action. Employment verification: after termination you are entitled to a relieving letter and experience certificate. Employer cannot legally deny these if you have served the notice period. If they refuse, you can approach the Labour Commissioner.
Continue Learning
🛡️ Digital Safety🧠 Human Essentials🏠 All Topics
LAW · BEGINNER
What are the key IT and data protection laws every professional in India should know?
Information Technology Act 2000 (IT Act): India's primary law governing digital activities. Key sections: Section 43 — penalty for unauthorised access to computer systems (civil liability). Section 66 — computer-related offences (imprisonment up to 3 years, fine). Section 66C — identity theft (imprisonment up to 3 years, fine up to ₹1 lakh). Section 66D — cheating by impersonation using computer (imprisonment up to 3 years). Section 66E — violation of privacy — capturing/publishing private images without consent (imprisonment up to 3 years). Section 67 — publishing obscene material online. Section 72 — breach of confidentiality and privacy by service providers. Digital Personal Data Protection Act 2023 (DPDP Act): India's new comprehensive data protection law. Key obligations: obtain consent before collecting personal data, tell users what data is collected and why, allow users to access and correct their data, notify users of data breaches within 72 hours, appoint a Data Protection Officer for significant data fiduciaries. Penalties up to ₹250 crore per violation. Companies processing large volumes of Indian personal data must comply. Every IT professional handles personal data — knowing these laws is professional responsibility, not optional.
LAW · ENGINEER
What is a Non-Disclosure Agreement (NDA) and what should you check before signing?
An NDA (Non-Disclosure Agreement) is a legally binding contract where you agree to keep certain information confidential and not share it with third parties. You sign NDAs constantly in tech: before a job interview (company shares product roadmap), when joining a company (as part of employment agreement), when discussing a potential business partnership, when a vendor shows you their proprietary system. Key things to check before signing: Scope of confidential information — what exactly is covered? Overly broad NDAs that cover "all information you learn" can prevent you from using general skills you develop. Definition should be specific. Duration — how long does the obligation last? 1-2 years is normal for business discussions. Perpetual (forever) NDAs for employment are common but note that trade secrets are often protected indefinitely anyway. Exclusions — standard exclusions that protect you: information already publicly known, information you already knew before signing, information you independently developed, information you learned from a third party who was legally free to share it. These exclusions should be in the NDA. Governing law — which state/country law applies? Mutuality — is it mutual (both parties protect each other's information) or one-sided (only you are bound)? For employment NDAs, one-sided is normal. For partnerships, mutual is standard. Post-employment restrictions — some NDAs include non-compete clauses limiting where you can work after leaving. In India, very broad non-compete clauses after employment ends are generally not enforceable — Indian courts have consistently ruled that unreasonable restraints on trade are void under Section 27 of the Indian Contract Act.
LAW · ENGINEER
What are your legal rights as an employee in India regarding intellectual property?
IP created during employment: generally, any work you create as part of your job duties belongs to the employer. This is the default under Indian copyright law — employer owns work made in the course of employment. Your employment agreement almost certainly confirms this. IP created outside employment: if you create something on your own time, using your own resources, completely unrelated to your employer's business — you own it. However: if your employment contract has a very broad IP assignment clause (some claim ownership of everything you create during employment), this can complicate matters. Read your employment contract's IP clause carefully before starting a side project. Code written for the employer: belongs to the employer. Do not include employer's proprietary code in personal projects or open-source contributions without explicit written permission. Open-source contributions: many companies have policies on this. Some encourage it (and own contributions made during work hours). Some require review/approval. Check your company's open-source policy. Moral rights: under Indian copyright law, even if you assign copyright to your employer, you retain moral rights — the right to be identified as the author and the right to object to derogatory treatment of your work. Practical advice: if you have a significant personal project or startup idea, discuss IP ownership with a lawyer before joining a new employer, especially if the project is adjacent to what the employer does.
LAW · BEGINNER
What should you do if you receive a legal notice or demand letter?
Stay calm and do not ignore it — ignoring a legal notice does not make it go away and often makes things worse. Do not respond immediately or emotionally — a hasty response can be used against you. First steps: read carefully and understand exactly what is being claimed — who is making the claim, what they say you did, what they are demanding (money, action, cessation of activity). Check the deadline — legal notices often have response deadlines (15-30 days is common). Note the deadline but do not let urgency pressure you into a bad response. Consult a lawyer before responding — even one consultation with an advocate is worth it. They can tell you whether the claim has merit, how to respond strategically, and what not to say. Do not post about it on social media — anything you say publicly can complicate your legal position. Preserve all evidence — do not delete emails, messages, files, or records related to the dispute. Document everything from this point forward. If it involves your employer — tell your HR/legal team immediately. Your employment agreement may require this and the company may be obligated to defend you. Types of common legal notices in tech careers: IP infringement (using someone else's code/design), defamation (online posts about a company or person), contractual disputes (non-payment, scope disputes with clients), employment disputes (wrongful termination, salary non-payment). In India: receiving a legal notice does not mean a lawsuit has been filed. Many notices are sent as a negotiating tactic. A good lawyer can often resolve the matter without court proceedings.
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