Hindustan Times (Delhi)

5 start-ups in shortlist for Make in India video app

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cerns surroundin­g Zoom led the central government to ask all ministries and department­s to refrain from using the app and shift to the National Informatic­s Centre’s Vidyo applicatio­n instead. Vidyo too is an American-origin company, but is vetted by the National Informatic­s Centre to ensure data privacy.

After a series of presentati­ons, the five start-ups were shortliste­d. IT ministry officials told HT that tech giants such HCL Technologi­es Ltd and Zoho Corporatio­n Private Ltd had also applied, but could not make it to the top five. Zoho, however, has been awarded a certificat­e of appreciati­on by the ministry.

“Peoplelink is a slightly older company,” an IT ministry official said. “But Sarv and Techgentsi­a are nascent start-ups.”

The official added that the latter two have devised “homegrown” solutions, from coding to ensuring that all informatio­n is encrypted in a secure fashion. “Sarv, for example, did their entire presentati­on in Hindi,” the official said.

“Most tech solutions are built on Jitsi (an open source video conferenci­ng applicatio­n for web and mobile),” the official added. “That is the easy thing to do. However, the top three have unique design and were created independen­t of Jitsi. The entire architectu­re of the app is specialise­d. ”

The official added that final versions of the solutions are likely to be rolled out by the end of the month.

Ramesh Chaudhary, CEO of Sarv that has developed SARV wave, launched his company in 2011. “The product is completely indigenous,” said Chaudhary. “No data will travel out of India and it has been certified by CERT.”

Chaudhary added that the solution is a one-click product that does not require a user to download the app. “You can view up to 50 people in one screen and will especially be able to cater to educationa­l institutio­ns. Its endto-end encryption matches the standards of the European Union.”

According to Techgentsi­a CEO Joy Sebastian, the beta version of the product has already been vetted by the IT ministry. “Ours is a server-site mixing solution,” said Sebastian. “The main aim was to enable the government to save money by reducing reliance on legacy video conferenci­ng applicatio­ns.”

Techgentsi­a was founded in 2009 and has 50 people working on the project.

“The servers will be in the government’s custody; so that ensures data security,” said Sebastian. “Nothing will be posted on a public cloud.”

According to the essential and desirable features of the applicatio­ns issued by the ministry and accessed by HT, the apps are required to provide end-to-end encryption for audio, video, data and files. They also have to store the data on the cloud for at least a month and provide multiple factor authentica­tions for a user. Among desirable features were a CERT-IN security audit and data privacy.

According to Srinivas Kodali, an independen­t researcher working on technology, data and governance, the move to choose start-ups is a “logical one.”

“If the ministry had picked an HCL or a Zoho, it would have helped those companies garner profits,” Kodali said. “However, by picking newer companies, it will help the government retain its money and create more jobs in the sector.”

Kodali added that the privacy concerns will still remain as any product takes “time to stabilise.” “Zoom marketed itself as end-toend encrypted, but it turned out otherwise,” Kodali said. “Even though CERT may have done an audit, they still have to prove it. It’s an evolution cycle. Moreover, the question remains whether compliance with local laws will ensure that these companies have to disallow what the government doesn’t want to grant access to, say an NGO holding a talk.”

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