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India’s Move to Probe Any Computer Comes Under Top Court’s Lens

How far can a government keep an eye on the citizens of the world’s largest economy? The Supreme Court will soon tell.

India’s Move to Probe Any Computer Comes Under Top Court’s Lens
A view of the Supreme Court in New Delhi. (Source: PTI)

(Bloomberg) -- India’s top court will examine whether the government’s move to allow the interception and monitoring of information -- such as WhatsApp and Facebook messages -- on any computer infringes on the privacy of citizens in the world’s largest democracy.

A three-judge bench of India’s Supreme Court sought the government’s response to petitions filed by activists and an internet rights group. They are challenging a December directive they describe as a surveillance scheme. Headed by its chief justice, Ranjan Gogoi, the court said Monday it will consider requests to temporarily put on hold the government’s decision.

The court’s decision to examine issue is among the latest in a series of cases that have brought Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government in conflict with privacy rights groups and internet companies, which have been reluctant to support the country’s demand to share and decrypt messages and content.

Privacy Backlash

The government has recently faced backlash from the Supreme Court, which curbed use of digital identity program ‘Aadhaar’ and pushed the government to roll back plans for mass scrutiny of social media posts and emails. A rebuke from the court before general elections due before May could boost the country’s opposition, which has taken up the issue, claiming the government is resorting to surveillance to harass those not toeing the government line.

The government last month issued a notification that granted 10 intelligence and investigative agencies with powers of “interception, monitoring, and decryption of any information generated, transmitted, received, or stored in any computer resource." The government defended the order, saying it was a continuation of an old policy introduced by the previous Congress-led government.

Internet Freedom Foundation, a non-profit group that works on free speech and digital rights, challenged the government’s decision saying it was against citizens’ right to privacy, which was held as a fundamental right by the top court in 2017.

It also challenged provisions of India’s information technology law that allows the government to authorize interception of online content. “The said provisions enabling electronic surveillance are illegal and unconstitutional,” according to the petition by Internet Freedom Foundation.

To contact the reporter on this story: Upmanyu Trivedi in New Delhi at utrivedi2@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Unni Krishnan at ukrishnan2@bloomberg.net, Ruth Pollard, Atul Prakash

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