The Asian Age

Right to privacy in digital era...

- Pavan K. Varma

At the height of the Commu nist oppression in East Europe in the 1970s, when individual liberties had been entirely crushed in the name of the State, a Polish poet made an impassione­d plea for his right to privacy. Instead of the Marxist slogan “Workers of this world, you have nothing to lose but your chains!”, which was then chanted with tedious and predictabl­e unison, he simply wrote: “Workers of this world, leave me alone!”

That basic human proclivity to privacy, in areas where neither the State nor non-State actors, or for that matter anybody, has the right to intrude, has been accorded by the Supreme Court’s latest judgment the status of a fundamenta­l right, under Articles 14, 19 and 21 of the Constituti­on. In doing so, the nine-judge Supreme Court bench overturned a 63-year-old judgment that had refused to recognise privacy as a fundamenta­l right. Echoing the plaintive but powerful plea of the Polish poet, Justice Chandrachu­d pronounced: “Privacy postulates the reservatio­n of a private space for the individual, described in the right to be let alone. The concept is founded on the autonomy of an individual. The ability of an individual to make choices lies at the core of the human personalit­y”.

Beyond legalese, the court has addressed many larger and fundamenta­l philosophi­cal questions. In recent times, we see the developmen­t of two mutually opposed trends. First, there has been a phenomenal advancemen­t of technologi­es that have the capacity to intrude in the personal lives of individual­s. Second, and precisely for this reason, there is a felt desire in individual­s to ensure that, notwithsta­nding such technologi­es, their right to privacy is not whittled. Can these opposing trends be reconciled, and if so, what is that modus vivendi?

I don’t think any citizen, however evangelica­l about the protection of personal privacy, is unwilling to part with some aspects of that privacy for his or her own benefit. For instance, if I want a smooth transfer of a tax refund directly to my bank account, I have to give details of that account to the bank.

Similarly, if I am the legitimate beneficiar­y of certain monetary welfare measures of the government, I will not be averse to cooperatin­g in a system, such as the biometric based Aadhaar, to ensure that such benefits reach me, and are not diverted to someone else, as used to happen rampantly in the past. The Supreme Court has, therefore, said that digital platforms that work towards this end are valid. To quote Justice Chandrachu­d: “In a social welfare State, the government embarks upon programmes which provide benefits to impoverish­ed and marginalis­ed sections of society. There is a vital State interest in ensuring that scarce public resources are not dissipated by the diversion of resources to persons who do not qualify as recipients”.

On the other hand, if the informatio­n that I voluntaril­y and in my own interest part with, is misused for mala fide purposes by State authoritie­s, such as for illegal surveillan­ce, I would have strong objections. This would be doubly so if the only reason why this is done is because I do not agree with everything the government does. The issue of privacy then becomes linked to the larger ideologica­l question of the right to dissent in a democracy.

Appropriat­ely, therefore, the Supreme Court said: “Criticism and critique lie at the core of democratic governance. Tolerance of dissent is equally a cherished value. The conditions necessary for realising or fulfilling socio-economic rights do not postulate the subversion of political freedom”.

Similarly, while discussing the issue of privacy, the Supreme Court has pronounced on several other fundamenta­l issues that are of vital interest to a democratic society, such as the beef ban, abortion rights, sexual orientatio­ns, euthanasia, and even — like the wish of the Polish poet — the right to be left alone. On matters like the beef ban, Justice Chelameshw­ar said: “I don’t think anybody would like to be told by the State what they should eat or how they should dress…” On abortion, the court was of the view that “a woman’s freedom of choice whether to bear a child or abort her pregnancy fall in the realm of privacy”. On the question of sexual orientatio­n, the court was particular­ly blunt: “That a miniscule fraction of the country’s population constitute­s lesbians, gays, bisexuals or transgende­rs is not a sustainabl­e basis to deny the right to privacy”.

In fact, broadening this argument, the court made the foundation­ally important ruling that, “The purpose of elevating

We live in times when technology has made us both a beneficiar­y and a victim. Thanks to this landmark SC judgment, we can now distinguis­h between the two, and fight for our rights to do so.

certain rights to the stature of guaranteed fundamenta­l rights is to insulate their exercise from the disdain of majorities… The test of popular acceptance does not furnish a valid basis to disregard rights which are conferred with the sanctity of constituti­onal protection”.

On the right to be left alone, Justice Sanjay K. Kaul made the far-reaching comment that “an individual who is no longer desirous of his personal data to be processed or stored should be able to remove it from the system, where it is no longer necessary, relevant, or is incorrect”.

Quite clearly, under the awning of pronouncin­g on the right to privacy, the jurisprude­ntial majesty of the Supreme Court has specifical­ly included a great many other issues that will greatly strengthen the fabric of our democracy.

At the same time, the unanimous judgment has retained the right balance by stating that the State can, for bona fide and transparen­t reasons in the interests of definable public good, exercise reasonable restrictio­ns on such a right, especially for welfare measures for the poor and deprived, national security and criminal investigat­ions.

However, at rock bottom, citizens now have been given the right to contest unwarrante­d encroachme­nts on their right to privacy. This is a giant leap forward. Private firms that collate data in an era of Internet and data mining must be on their guard. The government must also expedite its efforts to bring in a robust data protection regime. We live in times when technology has made us both a beneficiar­y and a victim.

Thanks to this landmark Supreme Court judgment, we are now in a position to distinguis­h between the two, and fight for our rights to do so.

The writer, an author and former diplomat, is a member of the JD(U)

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