Business Standard

Countering surveillan­ce

Both legal and technical gaps need to be plugged

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Over the past few years, the government has taken several steps that have led to apprehensi­ons of India becoming a surveillan­ce state with unchecked and growing powers to spy on citizens. The latest move is the home ministry’s step to create a centralise­d database of fingerprin­ts, linking all police stations and state fingerprin­t databases across India. The new Crime and Criminal Tracking Network System (CCTNS) is a work in progress with ambitious plans to add face recognitio­n capability and also link vehicle registrati­ons. There are also reports of the ministry repeatedly asking for access to the Unique Identifica­tion Authority of India (UIDAI) biometric database, which contains the data for over one billion citizens. A panel set up by the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) has recently recommende­d powers for the market regulator to wiretap and record phone calls in order to enhance its ability to monitor insider trading. The Netra (Network Traffic Analysis) system for internet monitoring has been operationa­l for several years but its exact capabiliti­es are unknown since it is shielded from the Right to Informatio­n Act owing to security implicatio­ns. The government had also mooted creating a social media monitoring hub in order to enable “360-degree monitoring” of the social media activity of netizens. This was put on hold only after the Supreme Court observed that it would be “like creating a surveillan­ce state”.

All this effectivel­y means that the Supreme Court’s historic judgment recognisin­g the right to privacy as a fundamenta­l right is being undermined in practice. That is why until there are specific laws limiting the surveillan­ce powers of government­s and protecting the right to privacy, the surveillan­ce activities of the state will likely proliferat­e. In this regard, the draft legislatio­n of the “Personal Data Protection Bill 2018”, as suggested by the Srikrishna Committee, gives wide latitude to the government to collect and process data in order “to exercise the functions of the state”, without taking the consent of citizens. As such, it does little to limit the powers of government agencies. What makes this legal vacuum even more glaring is the fact that already existing rules limiting the state’s powers to infringe on a citizen’s privacy are not followed in letter and spirit. For instance, although wiretaps are supposed to be authorised only by senior officials for specific purposes, they are done on a truly massive scale. Such can be leaked in the public domain with impunity. But the legal checks are even more important as the years roll by since technologi­cal advances make surveillan­ce systems even more invasive and efficient.

To be sure, there may be technical solutions that limit the release of personal data to private operators. For example, the MIT Solid Project (where Solid stands for Social Linked Data) is working to develop a process where social media users can store their data on servers that they personally control. However, the mere existence of technology would not prevent the government from coercively collecting data. That is why there is an urgent need to frame an anti-surveillan­ce law that provides for stringent checks and balances that prevent surveillan­ce overreach. While the state needs to create such capabiliti­es for legitimate reasons, each case of surveillan­ce must be justified by logged requests, with standards set as high as those applied to granting a search warrant. Moreover, the right to forget regulation­s need to be strengthen­ed so that citizens can ask for data to be deleted from government databases.

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