The Borneo Post (Sabah)

India proposes new e-commerce regulation­s with focus on data rules

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NEW DELHI/MUMBAI: India outlined a new draft policy for its burgeoning e-commerce sector, focusing on data localisati­on, improved privacy safeguards and measures to combat the sale of counterfei­t products.

The proposed overhaul, which would likely increase operating costs for the sector, comes two months after the country modified regulation­s governing foreign direct investment in ecommerce.

That forced retail giants Amazon.com Inc and Walmartown­ed Flipkart to restructur­e their Indian operations, and the latest reforms spell further upheaval.

“In the future, economic activity is likely to follow data,” the widely expected draft policy document said. “It is hence vital that we retain control of data to ensure job creation within India”.

The new rules call for the housing of more data centres and server farms locally, amid a broader push for data localisati­on by the South Asian nation, which is one of the world’s fastestgro­wing online markets.

India’s central bank in 2018 forced payments providers such as Mastercard and Visa Inc to store Indian users’ data locally.

“Steps will be taken to develop capacity for data storage in India,” the draft e-commerce rules said. “A period of three years would be given to allow industry to adjust to the data storage requiremen­t.”

Flipkart and Amazon said they were going through the draft rules and will share their inputs with the government.

The proposed rules also seek the creation of a “legal and technologi­cal framework” that can help impose restrictio­ns on the cross-border flow of data generated by users, moves that may affect not just e-commerce platforms but also social media firms such as Alphabet Inc’s Google and rival Facebook Inc. — Reuters

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