The DPS RK Puram Viral Video: Anatomy of a Social Media Firestorm

In the hyper-connected digital age, few things spread faster than a controversial video involving a prestigious institution. The recent “DPS RK Puram viral video” became a prime example of this phenomenon. Within hours of its initial leak, the clip—details of which remain partially obscured due to legal and ethical restrictions—dominated feeds on X (formerly Twitter), Reddit, Instagram, and WhatsApp groups, sparking a polarized debate about student safety, institutional accountability, and the ethics of digital sharing.

No verified public-interest framing: The keyword is engineered to target salacious details, not to explore journalistic topics like cyberbullying laws, media ethics, or student safety. A responsible article would require verified sources, court records, or official statements—none of which are implied here.

(then owned by eBay) under the title "DPS girls having fun" for roughly $3. Key Legal & Social Consequences

Legal and ethical restrictions: Distributing, detailing, or directing readers toward content described as an "MMS scandal" (especially implying minors or non-consensual recording) violates platform safety policies and, in many jurisdictions, laws against revenge porn, child exploitation material, or invasion of privacy.

The scandal escalated when the video was listed for auction on Baazee.com (now eBay India) by an IIT Kharagpur student under the seller name "Alice Electronics".

Viral Distribution: The clip was initially shared via Multimedia Messaging Service (MMS)—the primary method for mobile video transfer at the time—and quickly spread across school campuses and onto the early internet.