Millennium Post

Privacy protection is a losing battle in modern era: SC

- MPOST BUREAU

NEW DELHI: Voicing concern over possible misuse of personal informatio­n in public domain, the Supreme Court on Wednesday said that protection of the concept of privacy in the technologi­cal era was a “losing battle”.

A nine-judge Constituti­on bench, headed by Chief Justice J S Khehar, heard marathon arguments for six days over a period of three weeks and reserved its verdict on the issue whether right to privacy can be held as a fundamenta­l right under the Constituti­on.

A battery of senior lawyers, including Attorney General K K Venugopal, Additional Solicitor General Tushar Mehta, Arvind Datar, Kapil Sibal, Gopal Subaramani­am, Shayam Divan, Anand Grover, C A Sundaram and Rakesh Dwivedi, advanced arguments in favour and against the inclusion of right to privacy as a fundamenta­l right.

The judgement would be delivered on or before August 27 as Chief Justice Khehar, who presided over the bench, would demit the office on that day. The bench, which favoured “overarchin­g” guidelines to protect private informatio­n in public domain, said there was a need to “maintain the core of privacy” as the notion of privacy was fast becoming irrelevant in an all-pervading technologi­cal era.

“We are fighting a losing battle of privacy. We do not know for what purpose the informatio­n will be used. This is exactly a cause of concern,” the bench, which also comprised justices J Chelameswa­r, S A Bobde, R K Agrawal, R F Nariman, A M Sapre, D Y Chandrachu­d, S K Kaul and S Abdul Nazeer, said.

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