
In 2026, our office is no longer just a building. It is a series of Slack channels, Zoom calls, and WhatsApp groups. While this makes work faster, it also creates a new challenge like Digital Sexual Harassment. Many people still think harassment only happens in person. They think, If I didn’t touch anyone, it isn’t a PoSH issue. While all this is happening, the law has changed.
In 2025 and 2026, Indian courts and the Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA) made it clear that your workplace is any digital space where you interact with colleagues.
Here are 7 digital behaviors that are now officially considered sexual harassment in 2026.
1. The Always-On Personal Ping
With remote work, we are always connected. However, sending personal, non-work messages to a colleague late at night is now a major red flag.
- Why it’s harassment: If a manager or coworker repeatedly sends personal Goodnight texts or asks personal questions outside of work hours, it creates a uncomfortable environment. In 2026, Right to Disconnect guidelines often overlap with PoSH to protect employees from such unwanted attention.
2. The Emoji Trap
In 2026, a simple emoji can be evidence. Using emojis like the Wink 😉, Kiss 💋, or Fire 🔥 with a colleague who hasn’t asked for them can be considered non-verbal sexual harassment.
- The Rule: The PoSH Act focuses on the impact on the receiver, not your intent. Even if you meant it as a joke, if it makes your colleague uncomfortable, it is a violation.
3. Virtual Leering on Video Calls
Just because you are behind a screen doesn’t mean you can’t stare.
- The Behavior: Persistently staring at a colleague’s video feed in a suggestive way, or making comments about their clothes, hair, or bedroom background during a professional call.
- The Law: Under the 2025 PoSH updates, virtual leering is treated with the same seriousness as physical leering in a hallway.
4. Sharing Forwards and Memes in Work Groups
We all have that one WhatsApp group for the team. But sharing memes, GIFs, or Reels that have sexual jokes or gender-based insults is a crime.
- The Consequence: Even if you didn’t create the meme and just forwarded it, you are responsible for spreading sexually colored remarks.
5. Social Media Stalking
In 2026, your professional life and social media are linked. Following a colleague on Instagram and Like-bombing their old private photos or sending compliments in their DMs is now seen as an extension of workplace harassment.
- The Ruling: Courts have ruled that since the relationship started at work, these actions are work-related misconduct, even if they happen on a personal app.
6. AI Misuse and Deepfakes
This is the most dangerous trend of 2026. Using AI tools to create Deepfake images or videos of a colleague is a severe PoSH violation and a criminal offense.
- The Risk: Even creating a funny AI-generated image of a colleague in a suggestive pose is enough for immediate termination and police action under the Bhartiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS) 2024.
7. Inappropriate Status Updates
Posting Status updates on WhatsApp or LinkedIn that are directed at a specific colleague with sexual hints or insults (also known as Sub-tweeting or Status-shaming) counts as digital harassment.
Physical vs. Digital: What’s the Difference?
The law treats them equally. If it makes a woman feel unsafe, it is PoSH.
| Requirement | What it means for your Startup |
|---|---|
| Internal Committee (IC) | A group of 4 people (mostly women) who handle safety issues. |
| PoSH Policy | A simple rulebook that explains what bad behavior looks like. |
| Annual Training | A short workshop or online course to teach employees their rights. |
| The Penalty | If you don’t do this, you can be fined up to ₹50,000. Repeat mistakes can cost more. |
Steps to Stay Safe Digitally
- Keep it Professional: If you wouldn’t say it in a physical board room, don’t type it in a chat.
- Respect the Clock: Avoid sending non-urgent messages after work hours.
- Think Before You Emoji: Stick to professional emojis like 👍, ✅, or 🙏.
Conclusion
In 2026, your digital footprint is your professional identity. A single inappropriate message or a forwarded joke can end a career. At Kelp, we help organizations update their policies to include these new digital realities.
Creating a safe digital workplace isn’t just about following the law it’s about building a culture of respect that exists even when the cameras are off.




























