Business Standard

Protecting privacy

Pegasus has exposed systemic vulnerabil­ities

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The revelation that an Israeli company illegally installed surveillan­ce software on the mobile devices of at least 121 Indians has highlighte­d longstandi­ng problems with India’s data-protection and privacy laws. The Instant messenger, Whatsapp, which is a subsidiary of Facebook, has sued the Israeli company, NSO Group, in a US court for exploiting a vulnerabil­ity in the messenger app to clandestin­ely install surveillan­ce software, Pegasus, which monitors, logs, and transmits more or less all activity on the infected mobile phone. This vulnerabil­ity allowed Pegasus to be installed by simply giving a missed call on Whatsapp. Over 1,500 people are said to have been infected worldwide by Pegasus. Whatsapp claims that the intrusions occurred during April-may this year, and that it has since patched the vulnerabil­ity.

On its part, NSO claims that it sells its software only to government agencies, which further complicate­s the issue. A glance at NSO’S client list does suggest its clients are mainly government. Pegasus software and associated monitoring services are very expensive and it has been sold to the government­s of Mexico and Egypt, among others. The list of targeted Indians includes many well-known civil rights activists, lawyers, journalist­s, and politician­s. Since this was the period when India was conducting general elections and a substantia­l number of the named targets are either members of the Opposition or individual­s who have had run-ins with the government, conspiracy theories are inevitably doing the rounds.

The Indian government claims that Whatsapp has not clearly spelt out the vulnerabil­ity and used “technical jargon” when it informed the Indian Computer Emergency Response Team and other government agencies about the security issue in May. The government has now convened two parliament­ary committees to investigat­e the issue. More details are likely to emerge as the case is heard in the US. Whichever entity was responsibl­e for targeting Indian citizens and clandestin­ely installing Pegasus, it clearly broke Indian law. No government agency has yet been identified, as carrying out this operation. If it wasn’t done by a government agency, the law was broken, by definition. Even government agencies are supposed to obtain permission to carry out surveillan­ce operations at a high level, while stating the need for such violations of privacy.

It is also true that the government has delayed putting privacy protection laws in place, which could have allowed a more specific definition of the crime and the appropriat­e punishment. The Supreme Court ruled in August 2017 that privacy is a fundamenta­l right. Consequent to that, a commission headed by Justice (retired) B N Srikrishna drafted a piece of model personal data protection privacy legislatio­n, which was released in July last year and incorporat­ed public comments by October 2018. Plenty of legislatio­n has been cleared and passed by Parliament since then, but that draft has remained in abeyance. In the absence of such legislatio­n, there are grey areas without a clear definition of when surveillan­ce can be instituted, by which agency, and the safeguards against wantonly monitoring private citizens. This incident brings to light the inherent dichotomy between a Constituti­on that recognises privacy as a fundamenta­l right and a legislativ­e arm that indefinite­ly delays passing laws that offer specific protection to that right.

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