Deccan Chronicle

Data privacy needs safeguards

- Baijayant ‘Jay’ Panda The writer is a BJD member of the Lok Sabha. The views expressed here are personal. @PandaJay on Twitter

Improving our “Ease of Doing Business” rank has been on the cards for some time and as a part of that a conscious effort to haul everyone on a digital platform is being made. Last October, India was reportedly hit by its largest financial data breach which affected nearly 32 lakh debit cards across 19 banks, highlighti­ng the concerns of many who have been questionin­g data security. In the past few years, the urban citizen has progressiv­ely taken to applicatio­n-based services, online shopping and e-payments. A measure of this growth is the increase in mobile wallet transactio­ns from `10 billion in 2012-13 to more than `490 billion in 2015-16.

The economy had been steadily moving towards online transactio­ns but with demonetisa­tion, there was a significan­t surge. The reduction in cash circulatio­n resulted in a sudden dependency on digital options for all sections of society. Frequent usage of digital options peaked. BHIM was launched to make cashless transactio­ns more accessible and has crossed 17 million downloads already.

Online transactio­ns are merely an aspect of the larger Digital India campaign. Recently, the government has announced that after April 1, 2017, below poverty line families will not be provided monthly rations if they fail to link their Aadhaar number with the food and civil supplies department. Evidently, a digital approach to governance is on the agenda with initiative­s such as Bharat Net, Digi-Locker and the Digital India platform.

This will certainly eliminate duplicatio­n of benefits and reduce costs for verificati­on drasticall­y. With ready availabili­ty of transactio­ns history as well as credit worthiness, it will integrate individual­s and SMEs with a larger variety of creditors and increase bargaining power.

The benefits of such governance are being recognised widely with successful examples of direct bank transfers possibly paving the way for Universal Basic Income soon. But there are certain risks to this approach, which are not as frequently discussed. There are polarised views for and against moving towards digital governance altogether. The use of Aadhaar for authentica­tion, payments, creation of a national repository for documents through digi-locker, among others, are viewed by some with scepticism. The concern of groups opposed to it seems to be that digitisati­on is being “force-fed” to the masses without proper infrastruc­ture and despite privacy concerns. They fear that availabili­ty of personal data with the government will make it unsecure and enhance surveillan­ce.

Though these concerns have some merit, it is unfair to demonise Aadhaar. The growth of a digital citizen is a joint result of increased Internet access, e-commerce and social media. Data brokerage and misuse is a risky byproduct of the same. Absent Without Aadhaar, there is still ample informatio­n available with private parties like Google, Facebook, Amazon, E-bay, Flipkart, etc. Recent reports have boldly claimed that data brokers are selling personal data such as age, marital status, residentia­l address, phone numbers, purchase history and income profiles for dirt cheap prices. Technologi­cal advances have made it possible to track a person’s location, profile their preference­s and transactio­ns. In 2015, the minister for communicat­ions and informatio­n technology said in a written reply to the Lok Sabha that on an average 5,000 intercepti­on orders are passed every month. That year India was ranked the second most intrusive country by Google in terms of requests for data on users. Perhaps, a better outcome would require defining the rights and liabilitie­s of digital citizens, private players and boosting digital governance.

The present system suffers from four thematic flaws. First, the contours of privacy are not clear. Globally, the right to privacy is recognised by the Universal Declaratio­n of Human Rights 1948, of which India is a signatory. In 2016, the UN General Assembly passed a resolution acknowledg­ing human rights on the Internet, including privacy. The Indian Constituti­on does not explicitly guarantee the right to privacy, and this remains a subject of debate. Though the Supreme Court has in earlier decisions provided a limited right to privacy, the question of whether it is a fundamenta­l right is sub-judice. Turning the clock back a few years, Western citizens conceded their privacy rights to traffic authoritie­s by allowing surveillan­ce through cameras. Today, with the advancemen­t of technology, the informatio­n collected by these cameras is filtered through anthropolo­gical and criminolog­ical research-based algorithms to provide informatio­n about possible hotspots for crime. This tool of predictive policing helps in better allocation of resources. Similarly, in India, the digital citizen has to acknowledg­e that issues of national security and prospects of better governance in some cases form a limitation to the right to privacy.

Second, the Indian scenario is plagued by overlappin­g legislatio­n governing this area which are outdated and vague. Intercepti­on of data can be allowed under three separate laws — the Indian Post Office Act 1898, Indian Telegraph Act 1885 and Informatio­n Technology Act 2000.

Third, the threshold and manner of intercepti­on are suspect on account. Absence of a positive right to privacy and data protection coupled with a widely couched power to intercept any data leads to legitimate apprehensi­on. Surveillan­ce in the United States, albeit controvers­ial, has a more scientific approach with bulk collection of metadata, use of algorithms analysing patterns and the requiremen­t to obtain warrants upon probable cause to listen to a phone call or read emails. In India, critics say the power to intercept for “investigat­ion of any offence” could well be stretched to apply to a situation where a possible traffic violation is being investigat­ed. There is no comprehens­ive list of “intercepti­ng agencies” and their scope available in the public domain. Orders on surveillan­ce requests by intercepti­ng agencies are required to be granted by the Union home secretary or a state home secretary in a timebound manner. No standard procedure is in place for exchange of relevant informatio­n between intercepti­ng authoritie­s. Systems like the Central Monitoring System (CMS) and Network Traffic Analysis (NETRA) used for surveillan­ce are establishe­d by executive process and the review of surveillan­ce orders is also through an executive process. Checks and balances, which form the core of any democratic process, are absent here. Given the quantum of intercepti­on orders handed out monthly, a team within the home ministry can look at this aspect and be subject directly to parliament­ary review.

Lastly, the vulnerabil­ity of data is a core concern. This debate is overshadow­ed by apprehensi­ons that Aadhaar data, stored through private players, may be susceptibl­e to theft and misappropr­iation during transmissi­on and private players will shrug off responsibi­lity thereafter. Again, these concerns go beyond Aadhaar, personal data and usage patterns are exchanged commercial­ly to feed into advertisem­ents or articles that we see online. An absolute restrictio­n on these would make unviable the modern economy as we know it. It would be prudent to mandate maintenanc­e of basic security protocols by all private players, restrict exchange of data without proper consent, make it mandatory to inform the end user in case of a breach and a redressal mechanism for this. Maintenanc­e of Aadhaar data, being sensitive personal informatio­n, can be held to a higher standard of accountabi­lity. It’s a fool’s errand to resist digital advancemen­ts or deny big data’s underbelly. Better governance through digitisati­on isn’t some evil design. It’s the next stop in our current growth trajectory. However, it must be accompanie­d by guaranteei­ng the digital citizen’s right to privacy, ensuring best efforts of data security and narrowly defining the exception of surveillan­ce.

Better governance through digitisati­on isn’t some evil design... However, It must be accompanie­d by guaranteei­ng the digital citizen’s right to privacy, ensuring best efforts of data security and narrowly defining the exception of surveillan­ce.

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