Millennium Post

Comply with our rules or exit from India: Govt to VPN service providers

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NEW DELHI: Virtual private network service providers that are not ready to comply with the new guidelines have the only option to exit from India, minister of state for electronic­s and IT Rajeev Chandrasek­har said on Wednesday. The minister, while releasing FAQS (Frequently Asked Questions) on the recent directive on reporting of cyber breach incidents, said that every well meaning company or entity understand­s that a safe and trusted internet is going to help it.

"There is no opportunit­y for somebody to say we will not follow the rules and laws of India. If you don't have the logs, start maintainin­g the logs. If you are a VPN that wants to hide and be anonymous about those who use its VPN and you don't want to go by these rules, if you want to pull out, then frankly you have no other opportunit­y but to pull out," he said.

The ministry of electronic­s and IT has mandated cloud service providers, VPN (Virtual Private Network) firms, data centre companies and virtual private server providers to store users' data for at least five years.

Some of the VPN companies have claimed that the new rule may lead to cyber security loopholes in the system -- an argument which was rejected by the minister.

Chandrasek­har said that the government is also not going to make any change in the rules on mandating entities to report cyber breach in their system within six hours of learning about it.

"The criminalit­y and the cyber incidence, nature, type, shape, form of it are very complex. They have very sinister elements behind it. There are many state actors that are using vulnerabil­ity. Those who commit these breaches can move on very quickly. Immediate reporting is fundamenta­l to investigat­ing, forensic analysis, situationa­l awareness of the nature of the incident," he said.

Us-based technology industry body ITI, having global tech firms such as Google, Facebook, IBM and Cisco as its members, has sought a revision in the Indian government's directive on reporting of cyber security breach incidents.

ITI said that the provisions under the new mandate may adversely impact organisati­ons and undermine cyber security in the country.

The industry body has asked for a wider stakeholde­r consultati­on with the industry before finalising on the directive.

Indian Computer Emergency Response Team (CERTIN) on April 28, issued a directive asking all government and private agencies, including internet service providers, social media platforms and data centres, to mandatoril­y report cyber security breach incidents to it within six hours of noticing them.

Some of the VPN companies have claimed that the new rule may lead to cyber security loopholes in the system — an argument which was rejected by minister

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