HomeNewsBusinessTelecom Bill 2023: After Meta, Signal, Proton, Mozilla, 57 other platforms raise concerns

Telecom Bill 2023: After Meta, Signal, Proton, Mozilla, 57 other platforms raise concerns

In a letter addressed to Minister of Communication Ashwini Vaishnaw, the signatories warned that the new Telecom Bill was a threat to end-to-end encryption and platforms, which use such features, may "choose to not operate in India"

December 21, 2023 / 20:06 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
The Telecommunications Bill 2023 was passed in the Rajya Sabha on December 21
The Telecommunications Bill 2023 was passed in the Rajya Sabha on December 21

After Meta, Signal Foundation, a non-profit that runs the encrypted messaging platform Signal, along with Proton, Mozilla and 87 other platforms raised concerns regarding The Telecommunications Bill 2023 on December 21 citing threat to encryption and privacy stemming from its provisions and has urged the government to withdraw the bill.

The bill was passed in the Rajya Sabha earlier in the day and now awaits the President's approval to become a law.

Story continues below Advertisement

Earlier in the day, Moneycontrol reported how global tech giant Meta is also concerned that over-the-top applications, for instance, messaging apps such as WhatsApp or Signal, can come under the regulatory ambit of the proposed law, due to the bill's broad definitions.

Signal Foundation, Proton, Tor Project, Mozilla are among the 60 organisations that on December 21 wrote to the Ministry of Communications urging it to withdraw The Telecommunications Bill 2023, citing threats to encryption and privacy.