Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

A test case for digital privacy

The SC ruling on the WhatsApp issue will be a benchmark

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There is no guaranteed right to privacy enshrined in the Constituti­on. However, in many judgements over several years, several legal luminaries have interprete­d Article 21 – the right to life and liberty — as giving rise to a somewhat limited right to privacy. There are a number of restrictio­ns to a right to privacy, mostly articulate­d through interpreta­tions of judgements of the Supreme Court. It is in light of this that the ongoing case challengin­g WhatsApp’s privacy policy becomes important.

This is primarily because the right to privacy is a lot more complicate­d when it is transposed from offline life to an online universe; where corporatio­ns not based in India are used widely by Indians for communicat­ion and knowledge disseminat­ion. The petitioner­s in the case contend that WhatsApp had a far more stringent privacy policy before being acquired by Facebook in 2014. Now, both content and metadata of users can be accessed by Facebook. This change is significan­t because in theory, data collected by Facebook can be used for tracking and monitoring of users easily. India’s first regulation for ‘data privacy’ came through the Informatio­n Technology Act of 2000. This law deals with compensati­on for negligence in implementi­ng and maintainin­g reasonable security practices and procedures for sensitive personal data or informatio­n; and provides punishment for disclosure of informatio­n without the informatio­n provider’s consent. In the case of privacy concerns regarding the unique identity scheme or Aadhaar database, the attorney general had argued in the Supreme Court that privacy is not a fundamenta­l right guaranteed to Indian citizens, and so collecting and storing biometrics cannot be a violation of such a right. This case is still underway and has been referred to a larger bench of the Supreme Court.

In light of the complicate­d jurisprude­nce surroundin­g the right to privacy, the WhatsApp case takes on an important hue. The judgement in the case could determine the way ahead for privacy – both online and offline – in India.

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