Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Data protection bill could get Cabinet nod next week

- Rajeev Jayaswal and Vidhi Choudhary

NEW DELHI: The Union Cabinet is likely to consider the final draft of the Personal Data Protection Bill next week so that the important legislatio­n can be introduced in Parliament next month.

The law, once passed, will protect citizens’ personal informatio­n such as health and financial data, religious or political affiliatio­n, caste, tribe, gender, sexual orientatio­n and biometric informatio­n. “Within one week it will be brought before the Cabinet,” law and justice, and electronic­s and informatio­n technology minister Ravi Shankar Prasad said.

The government wants to introduce the legislatio­n in the next session of Parliament which will pass the vote-on-account, and is expected to be the last session before Lok Sabha elections, senior government officials with direct knowledge of the matter said on condition of anonymity.

The law will make it difficult for unscrupulo­us elements to share personal details of an individual, they added.

The need for a new legislatio­n has been felt as the Informatio­n Technology Act, which provides for privacy and security of data in digital form, has its limitation­s, the officials said. They added that the final draft of ‘the Personal Data Protection Bill, 2018’, which is “almost” ready to be tabled in the Cabinet, is based on the recommenda­tions of the Justice BN Srikrishna Committee.

The ministry of electronic­s and informatio­n technology (Meity) constitute­d the committee on July 31, 2017. The committee submitted its report a year later along with a draft law. The government has finalised the draft law after a wider consulta- tion that ended on October 10.

Meity is also making efforts to amend the existing Informatio­n Technology Act to curb fake news, especially by checking its distributi­on through social media and instant messaging services.

The ministry will on Saturday invite multiple civil society organisati­ons to discuss issues related to data, surveillan­ce and the regulation of content on social media to prevent misuse of these platforms and curb the spread of fake news, the officials said.

Last month, the government, under the IT Act, Intermedia­ries Guidelines (Amendment) Rules 2018, proposed to break end-toend encryption and introduce systems for retaining data and informatio­n so that the origin of messages on some platforms can be traced. It advocated for the use of “automated tools” to proactivel­y detect and remove “unlawful informatio­n” and asked social media platforms to set up a business entity in India. Intermedia­ries are platforms such as Facebook and Twitter. The government will receive feedback on these rules till January 15.

Speaking about the proposed changed in the law, Arun Prabhu, partner at the law firm Cyril Amarchand Mangaldas, said, “Amendment rules create onerous obligation­s on both small and large intermedia­ries.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India