Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Data has become the new oil

Create norms to optimise the resource and allay privacy fears

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Recent reports suggest that there are more than 500 million internet users in India . But only 38.5% of the population has access to the internet. The number of users is second only to China, which has 731 million internet users (52% have internet access). The US, with 312 million internet users is the third in the rankings, but about 80% of the population has access to the internet. Every person with a digital footprint is a source of all manner of data – where they go, how they shop, how much they spend on what…everything one does is grist to the data mill. Data, modern wisdom has it, is the new oil. And India has a lot of data, with much more expected to be added to the mines as more and more people get online. How we deal with this ‘resource’ will determine our place at the internatio­nal table in the near future. It is time to pay serious attention to issues of data protection and localisati­on.

As things stand, data collected from individual­s is owned and manipulate­d by the companies that collect it (such as Google, Apple, Facebook, and Amazon – the much vaunted GAFA oligopoly – and others such as ride sharing, food delivery, grocery apps, etc ). A lot of such privately held data can be used for governance and policy purposes. For instance, data from ride-sharing companies such as Uber and mapping tools such as Google Maps can provide key insights into how people in cities travel, and help develop solutions for making travel easier. But since the data is owned by a private company, policy makers and researcher­s have no access to it. However, this kind of personal data can also be used as a tool for surveillan­ce and monitoring purposes, if not effectivel­y regulated. It is here that strong data localisati­on laws can help. Creating a responsibl­e set of rules regarding mining, owning, sharing, and processing of such data can help regulate this resource and protect the privacy of citizens as well.

While large tech companies argue that steps such as data localisati­on would restrict free trade and that cross-border data flows are vital for an economy, it is incumbent on government­s to prioritise the security and safety of their citizens’ data over the profit margins of large MNCS. The Srikrishna Committee Report on data protection and the RBI guidelines for fintech firms requiring them to store data of citizens in the country are steps in the right direction, but a lot more needs to be done if India is to use the resource of data effectivel­y in the future.

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