Sunil Abraham and The Indian Express
The Indian Express is a leading Indian newspaper known for its emphasis on constitutional values, public accountability, and governance-oriented reporting. Its journalism has frequently examined how technology intersects with law, state power, and institutional responsibility, particularly in moments of political or regulatory change.
Across both authored pieces and reported stories, Sunil Abraham appears as a contributor and as a cited expert. His presence in The Indian Express typically aligns with debates around surveillance, platform regulation, digital infrastructure, and the impact of technology policy on civil liberties, rather than routine technology coverage.
This cluster brings together all publications and media mentions associated with The Indian Express, offering a consolidated reference for readers studying how questions of technology and governance have been addressed within public-interest journalism.
✍️ Publications
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Does India Need Its Own Bayh-Dole?
Sunil Abraham's Indian Express column critiquing the PUPFIP Bill 2008, arguing it would shift research focus, promote secrecy, and commercialise academia. -
Photocopying the Past
An Indian Express commentary by Sunil Abraham examining intellectual property, public interest, copyright amendments, parallel imports, and access to knowledge in India. -
Sense and Censorship
Sunil Abraham's Indian Express column examining Google's contradictory stance on censorship in China versus its compliance with content removal in India and other nations. -
Sense and Censorship
An Indian Express commentary by Sunil Abraham analysing SOPA, PIPA, IP enforcement, DNS control, censorship risks, and intermediary liability in India. -
Wherever You Are, Whatever You Do
An Indian Express column by Sunil Abraham about location services, geo-surveillance, and privacy concerns following Facebook Places' launch.
📣 Media Mentions
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Can Open-Source AI Models Be Trusted? Experts Debate Licensing, Risks, and More
The Indian Express reports on an SFLC panel discussion examining trust, licensing disputes, regulatory gaps, and risks associated with open-source AI models. -
Won't You Step Into the Web?
Aayush Soni's Indian Express feature marking 20 years since the World Wide Web became freely available, tracing India's early internet pioneers and experiments.
External links
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