The current legal dispute brings back the SSC examination controversy which has persisted through multiple events. Eduquity Technologies Pvt. Ltd., which conducts SSC examinations, filed a defamation lawsuit worth ₹2.5 crore against YouTuber Nitish Rajput because he spread false information about their company through his online activities.
Rajput published a video which questioned different elements of the SSC examination process. Rajput used Right to Information Act responses and accessible public documents to demonstrate how SSC exam operations were conducted through changes in tender rules and vendor selection and operational practices. He suggested those elements would create a risk that the recruitment process would lose its fairness and reliability.
The video became popular among government job seekers who have complained about various technical issues and exam delays and centre management problems during SSC exams.
Eduquity Technologies has alleged that the content of the video is misleading and damaging to its reputation. The company has filed a petition with a Delhi court which demands both financial compensation and video removal. Rajput has refused to delete the video because he believes his assertions come from validated evidence which reflects common worries among SSC candidates.
Student groups and aspirant organizations have started to organize their activities because the legal process continues. Various groups now investigate their own legal options while they plan to take their case to the Supreme Court. Their demands include an independent judicial review of the SSC’s recruitment mechanism, particularly the process of appointing exam-conducting agencies and managing large-scale examinations.
The case comes at a time when public recruitment systems across India are facing heightened scrutiny. The Supreme Court has intervened in examination irregularity matters because of previous instances, which created hope among candidates that the court would make a similar ruling in the SSC case.
The courts currently handle the legal battle between Nitish Rajput and Eduquity. The case has become a unifying cause which attracts thousands of competitive exam candidates who demand more open and answerable and improved systems for India’s examination process.