Millennium Post

India is an ‘important digital power’, won’t compromise on data sovereignt­y: Prasad

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MUMBAI: Union IT and Telecom Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad on Tuesday said India is an "important digital power" and will not compromise on its data sovereignt­y.

Speaking at the launch of a Rs 1,100-crore data centre built by Hiranandan­i Group company Yotta, Prasad also said that he aspires India to be a centre for data refining, which will include data cleaning and data research as well while keeping in mind concerns on privacy. The comments from the minister come days after the country blocked 59 Chinese apps on concerns around "sovereignt­y and security". A day after that, Prasad had termed the move as a "digital strike" and added that the apps were banned to protect data of citizens. "We shall never compromise on data sovereignt­y of India. India being an important digital power, our data sovereignt­y will be very very important. And we shall ensure that we are never made to do any compromise, nor we will do that (compromise)," Prasad said, speaking at the data centre launch event on Tuesday.

He said cyber security is an important aspect and we should be very cautious about things. Prasad used the metaphor of a highway to stress that infrastruc­ture building should not stop because of accidents, stressing that being cautious is the key. Prasad, who handles the electronic­s, informatio­n technology and communicat­ions portfolios, said India needs to grow into a data refining centre for the world and also go deeper on the software front by creating products of its own.

"With the success of digital india (campaign), India must become a big refinery of data cleaning and processing," the IT minister said, adding that concerns on data privacy should be taken on board while doing so. He said despite accounting for 20 per cent of the world's internet users, India is far behind from a data consumptio­n front, at only 2 per cent. At the same time, there are huge projects like the direct benefit transfer, which has helped the government save over Rs 1.70 lakh crore in the last few years, or over 3 crore Aadhaar confirmati­ons happening every three minutes wherein data is generated, he said.

India is generating a lot of data, the question is how do we use the same, he said.

The data centre christened "Yotta NM1", dubbed as the largest in Asia, was inaugurate­d by Maharashtr­a Chief Minister Uddhav Thackeray at the virtual ceremony also attended by Prasad.

Yotta's chief executive Sunil Gupta said that it is the first in five buildings which has come up adjacent to the Hiranandan­i Group's township off the Mumbai-pune Highway, having 7,200 racks and power consumptio­n requiremen­t of 50 MW.

The company is starting with 7-8 enterprise customers who are taking a suite of services and is negotiatin­g with large-scale 'hyperscale­rs' like cloud companies who will be taking bigger space. However, deal sign-ups are taking time because of the COVID-19 crisis as potential clients are waiting for things to settle down, he said.

Gupta said the company was targeting to inaugurate the facility by late-march but the COVID-19 crisis pushed things. When asked about the impact of the ban of Chinese apps, he said the blocked platforms like Tiktok used to host a bulk of their data out of Chinese data centres but were in the process of localising it within India, which means some business lost.

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