Sunil Abraham and Open Magazine

Open Magazine is an Indian weekly known for its long-form reporting, political commentary, and essays on public affairs, culture, and contemporary power structures. Its technology-related coverage often situates digital developments within broader debates about governance, freedom of expression, and the State’s relationship with emerging platforms.

Within this reporting, Sunil Abraham appears as a cited voice offering context on questions of internet regulation, surveillance, platform governance, and the social consequences of technology policy. These references typically emerge in analytical or interpretive pieces rather than routine news reporting, reflecting moments when digital issues intersect with wider political or institutional concerns.

This cluster brings together all available media mentions of Sunil Abraham published in Open Magazine, serving as a focused reference point for readers tracking how technology and public policy debates have been addressed in the magazine’s journalism.

📣 Media Mentions

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  1. Genetic Profiling: Is it all in the DNA?
    6 August 2015
    Analysis of India's Human DNA Profiling Bill 2015, examining the collision between forensic science advancement and privacy concerns, featuring debates between government scientists and civil liberties advocates.
  2. Section 66A: Delete
    26 March 2015
    A feature examining the Supreme Court's 2015 judgment striking down Section 66A of the IT Act, tracing its misuse, legal challenge, and implications for online speech in India.
  3. Survival of the Savviest
    17 April 2014
    Examination of social media's emerging role in India's 2014 Lok Sabha elections, exploring how Facebook, Twitter, Google Hangouts and WhatsApp transformed political campaigning and voter engagement.
  4. The World Wild Web
    2 February 2012
    Examination of internet censorship tensions in early 2012, contrasting Kapil Sibal's calls for social media controls, the US SOPA legislation, and India's IT Act amendment that enabled opaque takedown regimes.

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