HomeNewsBusinessWill the proposed Data Accessibility Policy free more data, or lock it up tighter behind legalese?

Will the proposed Data Accessibility Policy free more data, or lock it up tighter behind legalese?

Every tenet preached by open-data evangelists everywhere is in the draft. Yet, there are the dodgy bits.

February 28, 2022 / 17:14 IST
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India’s governments have had a patchy record of implementing transparency and accountability-enhancing legislation.  (Photo by FOX from Pexels)
India’s governments have had a patchy record of implementing transparency and accountability-enhancing legislation. (Photo by FOX from Pexels)

The draft Data Accessibility and Use Policy 2022 is significant not merely for its content but also its contrast with the country’s larger background context. The usefulness of sharing data is immeasurable, not merely for India to achieve its ambition of a $5 trillion economy (mentioned in paragraph 1.2 of the draft), but also to improve the vigour of practice of democracy (nowhere mentioned in the policy).

One cannot argue with the policy’s 13 objectives (para 1.2). The policy principles (para 5) are unobjectionable data must be ‘open by default’, there must be operational transparency, interoperability, integration and technology agnosticism, practices and systems must be user-centred, with privacy and security. Access must be equal and non-discriminatory, there must be regulatory clarity and structured enforcement, sharing must be proactive, particularly for innovation and research, intellectual property must be protected and, most important, there must be well-defined accountability for all stakeholders. Every tenet preached by open-data evangelists everywhere is in the draft.

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Read also: Five problems with Draft India Data Accessibility & Use Policy, 2022

From the process standpoint, the coordinating process comprises of an India Data Office under the ministry of electronics and information technology, data management units headed by chief data officers in each ministry, and an India Data Council comprising these officers to deal with interinstitutional and intergovernmental coordination, covering technical matters such as data standards, as also to define high-value datasets.