HomeNewsBusinessRights groups deliberate legal challenge to India's data protection law amid privacy concerns

Rights groups deliberate legal challenge to India's data protection law amid privacy concerns

Significant concerns have been raised against provisions of the Digital Personal Data Protection (DPDP) Act that give wide exemptions to the government from its provisions, permit processing of personal data without a user's consent, and "weakens" the RTI Act.

August 17, 2023 / 10:26 IST
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The Digital Personal Data Protection Act was passed by both houses of the Parliament in August
The Digital Personal Data Protection Act was passed by both houses of the Parliament in August

Rights groups are considering the possibility of a legal challenge to India's Digital Personal Data Protection Act. This potential legal action could pose a significant obstacle for the Indian government and the DPDP Act, which was passed in Parliament amid concerns that certain provisions of the law may infringe upon the Right to Privacy and could potentially enable surveillance activities.

The legislation officially became a law on August 11, after President Draupadi Murmu provided her assent.

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"As is the case with any legislation that has a negative impact on the constitutional rights of Indians, we are exploring all options, including advocacy and litigation, as potential responses," Prateek Waghre, Policy Director of the Internet Freedom Foundation told Moneycontrol.

The digital rights group has previously raised concerns against the provisions that mandate that government and private bodies can process data of a citizen without their consent (certain legitimate uses). They have expressed concern over the amendment to the RTI Act which exempts the government from disclosing personal information of public officials.