Millennium Post

US senators urge India to soften stance on data localisati­on

RBI asks all system providers to ensure data is stored within the country by Monday

- LALIT K JHA

WASHINGTON: Two top American Senators have asked Prime Minister Narendra Modi to adopt a soft stance on data localisati­on, warning that India's policy on the issue will adversely affect American businesses in the country.

Data localisati­on is an act of storing data on any device that is physically present within the borders of a particular country where the data was generated.

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI), in a circular in April, said all system providers will have to ensure that the entire data relating to payment systems operated by them are stored in a system only in India. It gave time till October 15 to comply with the mandate.

In a letter to Prime Minister Modi dated Friday, US Senators John Cornyn and Mark Warner -- who also hold top leadership positions in their own parties -- have opposed the data

localisati­on requiremen­t of the Indian government. "Data

localisati­on requiremen­ts, such as those contained in the draft data protection bill and draft national e-commerce policy framework, will have negative impacts on the ability of companies to do business in India, may undermine your own economic goals, and will

likely not improve the security of Indian citizens' data," they said. Cornyn from the Repub

lican Party and Warner from the Democratic Party are cochairs of the powerful Senate India Caucuses.

When companies adopt high-quality privacy safeguards, the location of data has no bearing on whether the data is secure, they argued.

"In addition to effectivel­y reducing data security, forced data localisati­on requiremen­ts create inefficien­cies for both businesses and consumers, raising the cost of procuring and delivering data services including ones that local Indian businesses utilize on a daily basis, the Senators said.

"Ultimately, they also increase the cost, and/or reduce the availabili­ty of, data-depen- dent services," said the letter, a copy of which has been obtained by PTI.

The two Senators said that forced data localisati­on will also be counterpro­ductive when it comes to India modernisin­g its framework regarding law enforcemen­t requests for data. "Both the protection and security of data-as well as access to data for lawful purposes-can be enabled without a requiremen­t that data be stored in a specific physical location. We encourage increased dialogue on these issues between law enforcemen­t agencies in the US and India," the powerful Senators wrote.

The letter comes amidst reports that major American IT companies are up in arms against the latest Indian directive. American financial companies are believed to have approached the administra­tion against the RBI directive which, beginning October 15, requires them to store in India any payment-related data from transactio­ns that take place inside the country. India has rejected their request of mirroring.

On Friday, Deputy US Trade Representa­tive and US Ambassador to the WTO Dennis Shea said that the US wants to prohibit data localisati­on to ensure that there is a free flow of informatio­n across borders.

"We want to have prohibitio­ns on data localisati­on to ensure that there's free flow of informatio­n, free flow of data across borders, discipline­s around countries requiring companies to give up their source code, permanent ban on taxation or duties on digital transmissi­ons," Shea said.

Shea did not specifical­ly pointed out India on the data localisati­on issue, but made his views pretty clear where the Trump administra­tion stands on this issue. Republican Strategist Andy Surabian, who is also a political adviser to Donald Trump Jr, wrote in Breitbart News last week that if implemente­d, this policy will put an unnecessar­y burden on American companies and hurt consumers, who will endure higher costs and increased cybersecur­ity risks.

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