The Asian Age

’ Tis the season of leaks, peep and squeaks

- Manish Tewari NO CLARITY ON AI S. S. Paul Nadia, West Bengal RESOLVE CONFLICTS WILL KHAPS STOP?

Is data the new oil? If it is, then given the myriad mutations of data, is there any kind of data that is sacrosanct? If some data is indeed inviolable then does anyone, especially the state have the right to mine it, warehouse it and exercise proprietar­y control over it? These are some serious questions that need to be articulate­d given the fact that we are in a season of data leaks, peep and squeaks.

Decriers of the data- oil equivalenc­e paradigm underscore the fact that oil is limited hydrocarbo­n resource while data is a renewable being churned out in more than generous doses every day. There is but a finite amount of oil on Earth that can be extracted. The worth of oil comes from its scarceness and the difficulty of mining it from new and untapped locations. However, it is progressiv­ely becoming easier to churn out massive amounts of data.

Designatin­g data as the new oil serves to only delineate the study and analysis of a hitherto unexplored horizon as the brave new frontier of the technology universe. The insights that a deep dive into the undulating oceans of data can provide, in turn impels companies and even states to discern novel methods of monetising and weaponisin­g it respective­ly.

Oil is a single- use commodity while data can be recycled and reprocesse­d for fresh purposes and discernmen­ts. Not too far in the past if anecdotal evidence available in the public space is any guide data generated from a clinical trial of a medication ordinarily used to treat coronary ailments was reused. It led to the innovation of a second use for the drug ostensibly for destroying a protein associated with nearly half of all cancers.

In the next two years alone 40 zettabytes of data will be created — an amount so humungous that there are no utilitaria­n frames to exhibit its size and scope. A zettabyte ( ZB) is a unit of digital informatio­n storage used to denote the size of data. It is equivalent to 1,024 exabytes or 1,000,000,000,000,000,000, 000 bytes.

If we were to accede to the logic that data is the new oil then a data refinery is but its logical extension. It would mean that new sources of crude data would have to be provisione­d to enable this enterprise to generate revenue from this resource. Raw data from multiple sources would flow into this factory, including people contribute­d proprietar­y data, procured data, open source data and streaming data. The enterprise would then crunch the data to create new intellectu­al properties through a combinatio­n of processes proprietar­y informatio­n, domain expertise, analytics, software and permutatio­ns of data sets. This freshly cultured data would then be stored in databases customised to the mode and gauge of the data just as oil derivative­s such as gasoline, heating fuel and motor oil are stored in various cisterns. The refined data products would then be disseminat­ed to consumers over the Internet as analytic acumen or used to foster new products. However, all this would have to be done within an ecosystem of legal, regulatory and contractua­l obligation­s that would have to concurrent­ly evolve strictly circumscri­bing the usage of data all along the value chain from the raw feed to the finished product if data ownership issues have to be properly addressed.

Herein lies the conundrum for there are some forms of data primarily human biometrics that should not but be squeezed, teased and creased out of human beings without informed consent.

That is primarily the entire problem with the Aadhaar programme. When it was launched there was hardly any worthwhile thought given to the doctrine of informed consent. People were offered a stark black and white utopia of an identity traded off against handing over to the state the most intimate of personal data. Millions of internal migrants and others were captivated by the power of the magic number that would unlock keys to the bugbear of their daily existence, the inability to access state and private services that are essential for a dignified if not empowered living like a ration card, bank account, voter identity card, Pan card and other such statutory and nonstatuto­ry essentials. Others signed up out of sheer ignorance.

Nobody thought anything of parting with his or her personal details for the utopia of transiting from a nameless, faceless existence to the one with a demonstrab­le identity was both seductive and easy. In the process the government

First and foremost the time has come to take a fresh look at the entire Aadhaar programme if we the people are not to become new oil for the data refinery called the Government of India... acquired proprietar­y control over personal, immutable and unalterabl­e data of a billionplu­s people precisely the kind of basic raw material required for a humungous data refinery.

To stifle any serious deliberati­on around the entire issue the NDA/ BJP government rammed the Aadhaar ( Targeted Delivery of Financial and Other Subsidies, Benefits and Services) Bill, 2016 subterfuge as money bill through Parliament without a thorough considerat­ion by a parliament­ary standing committee whereby safeguards could have been suggested as to how all the data collected in the absence of a legal architectu­re should be treated. Moreover the government has shared that data with private players of all shades enabling them to stockpile their own data troves without letting the citizens have any inkling of it.

The Aadhaar programme has changed the fundamenta­l compact between the citizen and the state. Rather than the state organicall­y flowing out of the collective free will of the sovereign, people have become but an object at the end of an extended leash in hands of an omnipotent state. It can be argued that people are also coerced into parting with their personal details when they obtain visas or arrive at foreign airports — the stripping before the white man analogy of a freshly minted Union minister. Even that is problemati­c and needs to be dealt with. However, first and foremost the time has come to take a fresh look at the entire Aadhaar programme if we the people are not to become new oil for the data refinery called the Government of India.

The writer is a lawyer and a former Union minister. The views expressed are personal. Twitter handle @ manishtewa­ri Apropos your editorial, At last, govt serious about privatisin­g AI?

( March 31), the government seems to lack clarity on its motives for disinvesti­ng its stake in Air India, never mind the overall benefits of such an exercise. By not being sure of what it is selling out for, the government runs the risk of getting private investors in for wrong reasons and this could well derail the process itself. APROPOS YOUR news report, Diplomatic row: India, Pak bury hatchet ( March 31), India and Pakistan had alleged that their diplomats were being harassed by the other side. Both the countries have now mutually agreed to resolve matters related to the treatment of diplomats and diplomatic premises in line with 1992 “code of conduct” for the treatment of diplomatic/ consular personnel in India and Pakistan. It is difficult to recall when we heard last a good news on India- Pakistan relations. Issues between the two countries can be resolved if Pakistan is sincere, positive and assertive and can rein in the villains of India- Pak relations. M. C. Joshi Lucknow DESPITE THE Supreme Court’s verdict holding khap panchayat diktats to consenting/ eloping youth as illegal, it’s too early to breathe a sigh of relief on this issue. For, the desire to prevail over others is so strong among the public in general and khap panchayats in particular, that, instead of coming in the open with their diktats, they may henceforth operate undergroun­d on this issue and do away with such youth quite clandestin­ely. The pressing need of the hour is an elite lawenforce­ment machinery with committed public prosecutor­s.

R. N. Shanbhag

Mumbai

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