Eastern Eye (UK)

India scraps ‘controvers­ial’ data protection bill of 2019

MINISTER SAYS GOVERNMENT WILL REDRAFT ‘COMPREHENS­IVE’ NEW LAW

-

INDIA’S government last Wednesday (3) withdrew a data protection and privacy bill which was first proposed in 2019 and had alarmed big technology companies such as Facebook and Google, announcing it was working on a new comprehens­ive law.

The 2019 law had proposed stringent regulation­s on cross-border data flows and proposed giving the Indian government powers to seek user data from companies, seen as part of prime minister Narendra Modi’s stricter regulation of tech giants.

A government notice said the decision came as a parliament­ary panel’s review of the 2019 bill suggested many amendments, leading to the need for a new “comprehens­ive legal framework”. The government will now “present a new bill”, the notice added.

IT minister Ashwini Vaishnaw told Reuters the government has started drafting the new bill, “which is in good, advanced stages”, with a public release “very close”. The government aims to get the new bill approved and made into law by early 2023 in the parliament’s budget session, he said.

The 2019 privacy bill was designed to protect Indian citizens and establish a so-called data protection authority, but it had raised concerns among Big Tech giants that it could increase their compliance burden and data storage requiremen­ts. “It is good that there will be a redraft from scratch,” said Prasanto Roy, a New Delhi-based consultant who closely tracks India’s technology policy.

“However, India still has no privacy law in sight. That’s leaving data regulation open to a wide variety of sectoral regulation­s, something a common privacy law could have harmonised.”

Asked about consultati­on with stakeholde­rs on the new bill, Vaishnaw said the process “won’t be that long” because the parliament­ary panel that reviewed the old bill had already gathered industry feedback.

India says such regulation­s are needed to safeguard the data and privacy of citizens. Lawmakers have said concerns about misuse of sensitive personal data have risen exponentia­lly in India.

Companies including Facebook, Twitter and Google have for years been concerned with many other separate regulation­s India has proposed for the technology sector, often straining ties between New Delhi and Washington.

After India’s privacy law plan of 2019, it also floated new proposals to regulate “non-personal data”, a term for data viewed as a critical resource by companies that analyse it to build their businesses. The parliament­ary panel had said such non-personal data should be included in the purview of the privacy bill.

The bill also exempted government agencies from the law “in the interest of sovereignt­y” of India”, a provision privacy advocates at the time said would allow agencies to abuse access.

“One has to wait and watch if the new bill is any better,” said Apar Gupta, the executive director at advocacy Internet Freedom Foundation. (Reuters)

 ?? ?? OPPOSITION: Big tech companies such as Google, Facebook and Twitter had resisted the 2019 privacy bill
OPPOSITION: Big tech companies such as Google, Facebook and Twitter had resisted the 2019 privacy bill

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom