[Another Bombshell!
Now, from Justice Srikrishna headed govt. appointed committee to look into
Aadhaar, and other, data use and security.

《The public and private sector are collecting and using personal data on an
unprecedented scale. While data can be put to beneficial use, unregulated
and arbitrary use of data, especially personal data, raise concerns
relating to centralisation of databases, profiling of individuals,
increased surveillance and a consequent erosion of individual autonomy,”
the paper notes.》

Given the composition of the Committee, not much faith can be pinned on it.
Nevertheless.]

https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/centre-collecting-using-personal-info-illegally-says-govt-committee/articleshow/63457864.cms?from=mdr

Centre collecting, using personal info illegally, says govt committee

Chethan Kumar | TNN |

Mar 26, 2018, 04:29 IST

BENGALURU: At a time when discussions on data privacy have put the Centre
in a spot in the Supreme Court, the Committee of Experts (CoE) under
Justice (retd) BN Srikrishna has said the government is “collecting and
using personal data in certain contexts, like intelligence gathering and
counter-terrorism, without the backing of any law”.

“The public and private sector are collecting and using personal data on an
unprecedented scale. While data can be put to beneficial use, unregulated
and arbitrary use of data, especially personal data, raise concerns
relating to centralisation of databases, profiling of individuals,
increased surveillance and a consequent erosion of individual autonomy,”
the paper notes.

The committee, which released the paper in November 2017 and is currently
in the process of conducting consultations, has also considered the SC
judgment on privacy, whose lead petitioner, Justice (retd) KS Puttaswamy,
told TOI that collection and use of data without laws can lead to erosion
of privacy as it leaves the citizen with no forum to challenge.

While stating that processing of information in the interest of national
security, or the security of the state, is permissible as long as the
government is able to demonstrate that it is necessary to achieve the
purpose, the committee says the challenge lies in ensuring the derogations
to an individual’s right to privacy must be permissible only if it is
necessary for these objectives.

Speaking about prior legislation for data protection, the paper points to
the Information Technology (IT) Act of 2000 and notes that there are many
discrepancies despite the introduction of Information Technology
(Reasonable Security Practices and Sensitive Personal Data or Information)
Rules, 2011, known as SPDI Rules.

“SPDI Rules apply only to corporate entities and leave government and
government bodies outside its ambit; the rules are restricted to ‘sensitive
personal data’, which includes attributes like sexual orientation, medical
records and history, biometric information et al and not the larger
category of personal data,” the paper notes.

The committee said that the absence of effective enforcement machinery
raises concerns about the implementation of the SPDI Rules, making a
comprehensive law to protect personal data.

Arguing that certain exemptions — as in the UK and European Union’s General
Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) — must be provided to the government when
it comes to using data for national security, it bats for proper
regulation. “The law may provide exemptions for Information collected for
investigation and prosecution; Maintenance of national security and public
order. But exemptions must be defined to ensure that data processing is
done only for the stated purpose. It must be demonstrable that the data was
necessary for the purpose. In order to ensure that the exemptions are
reasonable and not granted arbitrarily, an effective review mechanism must
be devised,” the paper notes.

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Peace Is Doable

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