Geospatial bill tweak soon?

NEW DELHI: As the Centre gets ready to study suggestions received on the draft 
Geospatial Information Regulation Bill, which proposes up to Rs 100 crore fine 
or seven years' imprisonment for wrong depiction of India's map, home ministry 
sources indicated it may agree to "sensible" suggestions to improve upon its 
provisions.

"We will go through the feedback we have received on the draft bill, and if 
there are any sensible suggestions, they will be agreed to. While we may not 
scrap the bill altogether, as there is clearly a need to regulate geospatial 
information, we may alter it by bit or majorly, depending on suggestions," said 
a ministry official.

The home ministry had uploaded the draft bill on its website on May 4, inviting 
comments and suggestions within 30 days. With expiry of the June 3 deadline for 
submitting comments on the bill, slammed by public policy experts for its vague 
wording and harsh penalties, the home ministry's internal security division 
will now compile and evaluate the suggestions received from various 
stakeholders.

The home ministry, said an official, will adopt a flexible approach while 
vetting the final draft to be put up before the Union Cabinet. Sources 
suggested that valid points or criticism will be looked into and improvements 
made, wherever possible, to make the bill more reasonable, realistic and easy 
to implement.

The draft Geospatial Information Regulation Bill, 2016, which exempts 
government bodies, lays out regulation of acquisition, publishing, and 
dissemination of maps and geospatial data. It proposes to do this through a 
licensing regime where a 'security vetting authority' will approve and license 
maps. Violation of the law, where "wrong" or unlicensed maps or geospatial data 
are depicted or shared can attract fines ranging from Rs 10 lakh to Rs 100 
crore and/or a jail term of up to seven years. 

Experts say this would have direct consequences for various businesses that use 
location data - say cab services like Uber or Ola, or navigation maps like 
Google Maps. It could even impact sharing of maps on a smaller scale, as every 
created map of any part of the country falls into the purview of the draft bill.


http://m.timesofindia.com/india/Geospatial-bill-tweak-soon/articleshow/52825636.cms

Geospatial bill tweak soon?

NEW DELHI: As the Centre gets ready to study suggestions received on the draft 
Geospatial Information Regulation Bill, which proposes up to Rs 100 crore fine 
or seven years' imprisonment for wrong depiction of India's map, home ministry 
sources indicated it may agree to "sensible" suggestions to improve upon its 
provisions.

"We will go through the feedback we have received on the draft bill, and if 
there are any sensible suggestions, they will be agreed to. While we may not 
scrap the bill altogether, as there is clearly a need to regulate geospatial 
information, we may alter it by bit or majorly, depending on suggestions," said 
a ministry official.

The home ministry had uploaded the draft bill on its website on May 4, inviting 
comments and suggestions within 30 days. With expiry of the June 3 deadline for 
submitting comments on the bill, slammed by public policy experts for its vague 
wording and harsh penalties, the home ministry's internal security division 
will now compile and evaluate the suggestions received from various 
stakeholders.

The home ministry, said an official, will adopt a flexible approach while 
vetting the final draft to be put up before the Union Cabinet. Sources 
suggested that valid points or criticism will be looked into and improvements 
made, wherever possible, to make the bill more reasonable, realistic and easy 
to implement.

The draft Geospatial Information Regulation Bill, 2016, which exempts 
government bodies, lays out regulation of acquisition, publishing, and 
dissemination of maps and geospatial data. It proposes to do this through a 
licensing regime where a 'security vetting authority' will approve and license 
maps. Violation of the law, where "wrong" or unlicensed maps or geospatial data 
are depicted or shared can attract fines ranging from Rs 10 lakh to Rs 100 
crore and/or a jail term of up to seven years. 

Experts say this would have direct consequences for various businesses that use 
location data - say cab services like Uber or Ola, or navigation maps like 
Google Maps. It could even impact sharing of maps on a smaller scale, as every 
created map of any part of the country falls into the purview of the draft bill.

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