A Lifetime of Five Years on the Internet
A Lifetime of Five Years on the Internet is a news article by Subir Ghosh published in DNA India on 19 May 2013. Written to mark the fifth anniversary of the Centre for Internet and Society, the article draws extensively on quotes from Sunil Abraham on the evolution of internet policy debates in India, covering privacy legislation, the IT Act, shared spectrum, broadband access, and patent and copyright policy.
Contents
Article Details
- 📰 Published in:
- DNA India
- 📅 Date:
- 19 May 2013
- 👤 Author:
- Subir Ghosh
- 📄 Type:
- News Article
- 🔗 Original URL:
- Not available online
Full Text
Centre for Internet and Society observes its fifth anniversary on Sunday.
Five years is a long time in the internet space. The past five years, certainly, has been. And so has it been for the Centre for Internet and Society that completes five years here.
When a group of citizens got together to come under a platform called CIS five years ago, they had wanted to work on policy issues about the internet that had a bearing on society. They, in fact, still do; except that the new media space itself has undergone a metamorphosis. Five years ago social media was just starting off, few people had smart phones, and online speech was not a burning issue.
Sunil Abraham, executive director of city-based CIS, affirms this, and goes on to assert: "Five years ago, privacy was not a mainstream concern. Today, many different actors and stakeholders are interested in the configuration of the draft Privacy Bill. We first warned the public about the draconian measures in the IT Act during the 2008 amendment. Four years later, many more people are familiar with problematic sections and are adopting various strategies to amend the Act and it's associated rules."
Likewise, five years ago, people dismissed "shared spectrum" as a pipe dream; today "shared spectrum" is mentioned in the National Telecom Policy. CIS usually thinks ahead, and works on a range of issues.
"For internet adoption in India to grow dramatically from the dismal statistics today, we need to ensure continued access to cheap devices and affordable and ubiquitous broadband," says Abraham.
"With Ericsson suing Micromax for Rs100 crore, the mobile wars have come to India. If we have to protect innovation in sub-100 dollar devices, we need to configure our patent and copyright policy carefully."
But since CIS works primarily on policy issues, shouldn't it have been based in Delhi rather than in Bangalore? "We do have a small office in Delhi. But we are headquartered in Bangalore because we need to keep learning from technologists and the technical community," explains Abraham.
When an organisation calling itself the Centre for Internet and Society (www.cis-india.org) observes its fifth anniversary, it shouldn't surprise anyone that many of the activities related to the anniversary celebrations (May 20-23) have precious little to do with the internet, and is more about society itself. And yes, an entire evening is devoted to Kannada. There's a talk by Chandrashekhara Kambara on 'Kannada in the modern era,' and another by UB Pavanaja titled 'From Palm Leaf to Tablet – Journey of Kannada'.
"We are looking at the complete eco-system. For instance, during the digitalisation of TV in India, what will happen to the internet? Do TV promoting policies undermine the growth of broadband? On the second day we look at the connection between another older technology - cinema and the Internet."
Context and Background
This article was published on the eve of CIS’s fifth anniversary celebrations, held in Bangalore from 20–23 May 2013. Written for a general readership, it uses the anniversary as a hook to survey the landscape of internet policy in India and the role CIS had played in shaping public discourse around it. Abraham’s quotes trace a clear arc: from a time when privacy, the IT Act, and shared spectrum were niche concerns to a point where each had become a live policy debate with multiple stakeholders engaged.
The piece also reflects the character of CIS as an organisation rooted in Bangalore’s technical community rather than Delhi’s policy corridors, a deliberate positioning that Abraham addresses directly. The anniversary programme itself, with sessions on Kannada language, cinema, and television policy alongside internet governance, illustrates the breadth of the organisation’s remit and its interest in the relationship between older and newer media.
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