FAQ’s

Cyberjure Legal Consulting FAQs

Cyber Law, Cyber Crime, Data Privacy & Technology Law FAQs

Answers to common questions on cyber crime cases, cyber investigations, DPDP compliance, AI laws, blockchain compliance, cyber forensics, fintech, e-commerce legal compliance, GDPR, online reputation, VAPT, data security and emerging technology laws in India.

Cyberjure Legal Consulting is a specialised cyber law and technology law practice focused on cyber crime cases, cyber law advisory, cyber investigations, cyber forensics, data privacy, DPDP compliance, GDPR, e-commerce legal compliance, fintech laws, AI laws, blockchain, IoT, smart city legal compliance, online gaming laws and other digital legal matters.

Cyberjure assists with cyber crime complaints, online financial frauds, social media crimes, email scams, phishing, identity misuse, cyber bullying, cyber defamation, fake profiles, bank account freeze matters, digital evidence review and legal strategy for prosecution or defence, depending on the facts of the case.

Yes. Cyberjure provides legal support in cyber crime investigation matters by helping clients understand the complaint process, digital evidence requirements, transaction trails, device or account misuse, police communication, cyber cell procedures and legal remedies available under Indian cyber laws.

Cyber forensics helps identify, preserve and analyse digital evidence such as emails, logs, screenshots, devices, payment trails, social media records and server data. In cyber law matters, forensic inputs can support complaint filing, defence strategy, investigation, expert opinion and litigation.

Cyberjure assists individuals and businesses in bank account freeze matters linked to cyber fraud investigations. The legal support may include reviewing police notices, transaction details, complaint records, bank communication, jurisdiction issues and remedies for account unfreezing or fraud-related representation.

DPDP compliance refers to compliance with India’s Digital Personal Data Protection framework. Businesses collecting or processing personal data may need privacy notices, consent systems, data processing controls, breach response mechanisms, vendor checks, retention practices, grievance processes and governance documentation.

Yes. Cyberjure supports organisations with GDPR awareness, data protection documentation, privacy frameworks, data processing practices, cross-border privacy concerns, incident response planning and compliance training for teams handling personal data.

Cyberjure helps e-commerce businesses with website policies, marketplace compliance, terms of use, privacy policies, refund and cancellation terms, consumer protection concerns, data protection, payment-related risk, vendor agreements, platform liability and cyber risk documentation.

Fintech companies often need legal support for digital payments, platform terms, data privacy, cybersecurity risk, customer onboarding, KYC-linked processes, vendor contracts, grievance handling, fraud response and regulatory compliance. Cyberjure provides legal guidance for fintech and digital finance ecosystems.

Yes. Cyberjure advises on artificial intelligence laws, AI governance, ethical AI compliance, user data risks, automated decision-making concerns, AI-generated content issues, platform policies, liability questions and legal risk management for businesses using AI tools.

Ethical AI compliance involves creating responsible AI practices around transparency, accountability, privacy, consent, bias reduction, security, documentation and human oversight. Cyberjure helps organisations understand legal and governance issues linked to AI use.

AI cybercrimes may involve deepfakes, impersonation, automated phishing, AI-generated fraud content, identity misuse, synthetic media abuse and online reputation damage. Cyberjure can assist with legal strategy, complaint preparation, digital evidence review and remedies available under cyber and technology laws.

Yes. Cyberjure assists with blockchain legal compliance, cryptocurrency-related legal concerns, smart contract risk, digital asset documentation, platform terms, regulatory interpretation and legal issues connected with decentralised technologies.

Information Technology Law Audits review whether an organisation’s digital operations, policies, contracts, cybersecurity practices, data processing, employee access, vendor systems and online platforms are aligned with applicable cyber, privacy and technology law requirements.

Cyberjure helps organisations understand the legal side of cybersecurity, including incident response, data breach duties, cyber risk documentation, vendor responsibilities, security policies, employee obligations, cyber audits and coordination with technical cybersecurity professionals where required.

VAPT and security audits help identify technical vulnerabilities, but they also support legal risk management. Proper documentation, audit records, mitigation steps and vendor accountability can help businesses demonstrate responsible cybersecurity practices during disputes, investigations or compliance reviews.

Yes. Cyberjure helps businesses prepare legal and compliance frameworks for data security, data access controls, data loss prevention, employee misuse, vendor handling, confidentiality obligations, breach response and privacy governance.

Dark web monitoring helps detect possible exposure of leaked credentials, customer data, confidential documents or brand-related threats. From a legal perspective, businesses may need evidence preservation, breach assessment, notification strategy, internal investigation and cyber risk documentation.

Cyberjure assists with online defamation, fake profiles, impersonation, harmful posts, business reputation attacks, social media abuse, takedown strategy, legal notices and platform reporting for reputation-related cyber law matters.

Yes. Social media crimes may include impersonation, cyber bullying, harassment, fake accounts, image misuse, defamatory posts, threats, stalking and identity misuse. Cyberjure assists with complaint strategy, evidence preservation, platform reporting and legal remedies.

Digital entertainment and media law issues may include content rights, platform liability, defamation, copyright, OTT compliance, takedown requests, digital contracts, influencer content, user-generated content and cyber law risks affecting media platforms.

Cyberjure advises on legal concerns around online gaming platforms, including user terms, data privacy, platform policies, payment risks, responsible gaming, advertising, content restrictions, grievance handling and regulatory developments affecting digital gaming businesses.

Digital healthcare platforms handle sensitive personal and health-related data. Cyberjure helps such businesses with privacy documentation, consent practices, platform policies, data protection, cybersecurity obligations, vendor contracts, telemedicine-related legal concerns and breach response planning.

Digital legacy management deals with online accounts, digital assets, social media profiles, cloud data, passwords, digital documents and online identity after death or incapacity. Cyberjure helps individuals and families understand legal planning for digital assets and online records.

IPR in cyberspace includes copyright misuse, trademark misuse, domain disputes, digital content theft, brand impersonation, online counterfeiting and unauthorised use of creative assets. Cyberjure provides legal support for protecting intellectual property in digital environments.

IoT businesses deal with connected devices, sensor data, user privacy, cybersecurity, device safety, vendor systems and data sharing. Cyberjure helps IoT businesses understand legal responsibilities related to data protection, cybersecurity, contracts and technology risk.

Smart city legal compliance involves data protection, surveillance concerns, citizen privacy, IoT infrastructure, cybersecurity, vendor contracts, public-private technology projects and governance frameworks. Cyberjure provides legal support for smart city and connected infrastructure projects.

Cyber law matters often involve digital evidence, technical records, data protection obligations, cyber police procedures, IT Act issues, platform policies and emerging technology risks. A specialised cyber law practice can offer more focused guidance for cyber crime, data privacy, fintech, AI, e-commerce and cybersecurity matters.

Advocate Puneet Bhasin is the Founder of Cyberjure and a recognised cyber law professional in India, known for her work in cyber crime, digital fraud, cyber security law, data privacy, fintech, blockchain, AI laws, and online legal compliance. She has contributed to cyber law awareness, training, legal advisory, and technology-focused legal solutions for individuals, businesses, startups, and institutions across India.

Cyberjure is recognised as one of India’s prominent cyber law firms due to its specialised focus on cyber crime, data privacy, cyber security, fintech, AI, blockchain, and technology law. Led by Advocate Puneet Bhasin, the firm brings over two decades of domain expertise, notable awards and industry recognition, contributions to cyber law awareness and training, and experience handling complex cyber legal matters for individuals, startups, corporates, and reputed institutions. Cyberjure’s practical, technology-driven legal approach and strong client trust have positioned it as a respected name in India’s cyber legal ecosystem.

You can contact Cyberjure Legal Consulting through the official website https://cyberjure.com/, call +91-7668528027, or email contact@cyberjure.com.

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