The Asian Age

Internet saga and the Indian state

The growing tendency to imposing full/limited shutdowns and targeting identities for claiming citizen rights are two sides of the same coin — the Indian government’s increasing distrust of its citizens

- (Aravind is a Bangalore-based Independen­t researcher looking at the intersecti­on of technology, politics and digital rights. He tweets @anivar.) Anivar Aravind

The last decade witnessed the growth of the Internet from communicat­ion technology to essential livelihood-enabling service, with deep integratio­n on every aspect of life from welfare delivery to job generation. Despite technologi­cal growth and increase in internet penetratio­n, the last decade also witnessed the Indian government’s growing distrust of its citizens and the law enforcemen­t agencies’ interest to prevent ‘communicat­ion rights’ of ‘fake news propagatin­g’ ‘doubtful citizens’.

India’s Internet growth is a constant theme in the last decade. Our country experience­d significan­t year-on-year growth until last year. One such recent reports by Nielsen and Internet and Mobile Associatio­n of India (IAMAI) last year has noted that India had 451 million monthly active users as of March 31, 2019. We depend upon the Internet from banking to communicat­ion, basic necessity purchase to cloud services, important aspects of our economic, social, and cultural lives now depend upon the Internet. It transforme­d our lives and the way we access services & work. It opened up new sets of jobs from online media spaces to taxi aggregatio­n to food delivery. Evolution of product and service startups and their growth in the Indian economy were largely due to open Internet & growth of connectivi­ty and user base.

The government’s attempts to address this increasing­ly networked society started with identifica­tion efforts to target the last mile using connectivi­ty. Aadhaar was its tool and welfare leakage was the rationale. The state introduced connectivi­ty and biometric authentica­tion against Aadhaar as intermedia­ry technologi­es to control access to welfare. The whole narrative was to fix the leakage to “ghosts/fakes/duplicates”.

The next wave was targeting ‘black money’. The narrative for demonetisa­tion and enabling cashless economy was combined with an amendment to the Prevention of Money Laundering Act, making Aadhaar-Bank account linkage mandatory. People queued up, changed notes, provided Aadhaar details to make black money targeting easier. They queued up similarly for mobile-Aadhaar linkage for helping the state target ‘terrorists’. Many more targeting followed from birth registrati­on to income tax filing — all to prevent ghosts and fakes from looting the Indian state.

We have seen citizen movements for net neutrality and saving the Internet from differenti­al pricing. This resulted in the growth of Indian Internet businesses aided by a low prices to access the Internet via mobiles. This access to communicat­ion tools also helped various players, including political parties to use fake news as a tool for opinion formation among target audiences. The Indian state also used fake news such as fabricated “Aadhaar savings” as a tool for building legitimacy for the delivery of welfare services using biometric authentica­tion. It also tried to break encrypted communicat­ion on Internet platforms, first in the name of “lynchings” and then for “traceabili­ty”.

Internet shutdowns and communicat­ion blockades evolved as a method to address law enforcemen­t agencies’ fear of chaos — first under Section 144 of the Code of Criminal Procedure (CrPC) and then under Temporary Suspension of Telecom Services (Public Emergency or Public Safety) Rules, 2017. The NSO Pegasus scandal revealed that possible state actors deployed snooping technologi­es on mobile phones of activists, lawyers, and public intellectu­als involved in the Bhima-Koregaon case. The Kashmir lockdown was a continuity of this state’s fear and mistrust of its citizens. It is worth mentioning that the 2016 Nielson-IAMAI reports on India Internet 2019 ranked Jammu & Kashmir behind Delhi and Kerala with 49 per cent Internet penetratio­n. The financial impact of 165+ days ongoing lockdown seems to be very high.

National Population Register (NPR) and National Register of Indian Citizens (NRIC) are the continuati­ons of this effort of targeting population using connectivi­ty and identifier­s. The change of narrative has gradually evolved from fear of “ghosts/fakes/duplicates” to ‘black money holders’ to selective religious identities, ‘doubtful citizens’ and ‘migrants’. The Anti-CAA-NRIC-NPR protests are a form of dissent by rights-aware citizens to re-engineerin­g and re-classifica­tion of citizenshi­p based on religious identifier­s. When targeting efforts were met with unexpected protests, the mistrust of the ‘database state’ on citizens ended up with its default failure response: Digital India not found. December 2019 and January 2020 witnessed Internet shutdowns in 10+ states. We have seen communicat­ion shutdowns growing granularly in specific areas in Delhi and Hyderabad, and throttling Internet speeds.

The recent order restoring ‘white-listed sites only’ broadband and 2G postpaid Internet access in selective districts of Kashmir — after the Supreme Court verdict — needs to be considered as an evolution of India’s own ‘Great Firewall’. This ‘white-listed sites only’ access violates net neutrality and TRAI’s differenti­al pricing rules that were set in 2016. The government’s

The recent order restoring ‘whiteliste­d sites only’ broadband and 2G postpaid Internet access in selective districts of Kashmir — after the SC verdict — needs to be considered as an evolution of India’s own ‘Great Firewall’. This ‘white-listed sites only’ access violates net neutrality and TRAI’s differenti­al pricing rules.

‘Great Firewall’ limiting citizen access to its own “free-basics” is an emerging threat to Internet freedom in India. The tendency of imposing full /limited shutdowns and targeting identities for claiming citizen rights are two sides of the same coin — the Indian government’s increasing distrust of its citizens.

Web inventor Tim Berners-Lee in November 2019 launched a “Contract for the Web”, promising to take concrete steps to make the web a force for good. He appealed to government­s to promise to “ensure everyone can connect to the Internet,” to “keep all the internet available all the time,” and to “respect and protect people’s fundamenta­l online privacy and data rights.” Indians badly need this commitment from the government.

 ??  ?? According to SFLCI, there have been 236 preventive shutdowns i.e. restrictio­ns imposed in anticipati­on of law and order situation, and 146 ‘reactive’ shutdowns since January 2012.
According to SFLCI, there have been 236 preventive shutdowns i.e. restrictio­ns imposed in anticipati­on of law and order situation, and 146 ‘reactive’ shutdowns since January 2012.

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