Living in a Fish Bowl

Living in a Fish Bowl is an opinion article published in The Telegraph (India) on 16 July 2014, written by Shuma Raha. The piece examines India’s inadequate privacy protections following the European Court of Justice’s landmark ruling on the ‘right to be forgotten’, featuring commentary from Sunil Abraham and Apar Gupta on the country’s fragmented privacy legislation, delayed data protection reforms, and the tension between individual privacy rights and legitimate public interest.

Contents

  1. Article Details
  2. Full Text
  3. Context and Background
  4. External Link

Article Details

📰 Published in:
The Telegraph (India)
✍️ Author:
Shuma Raha
📅 Date:
16 July 2014
📄 Type:
Opinion
📰 Newspaper Link:
Read Online

Full Text

If you do a Google search for journalist and television personality Barkha Dutt, a raft of scurrilous information about her pops up. It isn't tucked away somewhere on the 10th page either — it's all up front, right there in autosuggest, almost prompting you to go and check it out. And thanks to Google's search algorithm, the more people click on that link, it further strengthens the score for that hit.

Dutt says she has brought the matter to the attention of Google, but to no avail. "I have lost interest in the whole struggle," she says. "But Google definitely needs to do something about the slanderous, inaccurate, fictional information out there that creates a narrative of its own."

Well, in Europe at least, the tech giant has taken a step in that direction. Late last month, it started erasing search results that threw up information deemed to be irrelevant, outdated or excessive. The move came after the European Court of Justice ruled that Internet search engines would have to allow people the 'right to be forgotten' in specific cases and accordingly, take down information about them.

The European Court ruling has triggered a huge debate since an individual's right to be forgotten seems to be at complete loggerheads with people's right to know. Nevertheless, it's a landmark decision when it comes to right to privacy on the Internet. After all, the online space has perma-memory and inaccurate or irrelevant or outdated information about a person can be embedded there forever, damaging him or her in manifold ways.

So how far are we in India from securing the right to be forgotten on the Internet?

The short answer to that is, very far. That is because India does not have a well-defined privacy regime wherein one could envisage a court of law handing out a similar — and some would say a somewhat radical — order on a Google or a Bing.

"The right to be forgotten is a bit too advanced for us," says Sunil Abraham, director, Centre for Internet and Society, a non-profit organisation that works on policy issues relating to freedom of expression and privacy. "After all, we are yet to come up with a privacy and data protection regime that implements the best practices of European countries."

Adds Apar Gupta, a Delhi-based lawyer, who has written extensively on privacy issues, "Sector specific privacy legislation do exist, but they do not provide substantive rights or efficient remedy in case of violations."

No one disputes that India should get a right to privacy law, especially one that relates to the collection, processing and use of personal data. Right now the government's surveillance mechanisms like the Central Monitoring System and the Lawful Interception and Monitoring Systems allow security agencies and income tax authorities to intercept communication, snoop on phone conversations, read emails and SMSes with little or no safeguards for privacy protection.

A right to privacy bill has, in fact, been in the works since as early as 2011. But the government has been dragging its feet over it. Early this year, a new version of the draft bill was leaked to the press. But few are happy with it. On the positive side, it raises the penalty for unlawful interception of communication from Rs 1 lakh to Rs 2 crore and increases penalties for other offences such as obtaining personal data under false pretexts. But crucially, it almost wholly exempts intelligence agencies from the purview of the law, thereby allowing them unbridled access to personal information. Of course, no one knows if this leaked draft is indeed the official one.

Experts say that the government should really formulate a right to privacy law based on the recommendations of a committee chaired by Justice A.P. Shah. The report, which was published in 2012, proposes that the right to privacy be statutorily extended to all Indians. It recommends, among other things, the appointment of privacy commissioners and the formulation of certain national privacy principles such as taking the consent of the individual prior to the collection of data, allowing him the choice to withdraw such consent, limiting the use of personal information to the stated purpose and so on. The privacy principles would apply to all data collectors in both private and public sectors.

There are, of course, a number of provisions in existing laws that relate to privacy. For example, Rule 419A of the Indian Telegraph Rules, 1951, sets down certain privacy safeguards such as maintaining details about the officer ordering an intercept of telecommunication.

Moreover, Section 66E of the Information Technology Act, 2000, prescribes punishment for the violation of privacy in the context of capturing private images of a person without his or her consent. Section 43A lays down that a body corporate will be liable to pay compensation in case it fails to protect personal data gathered in the course of its operation and Section 79 stipulates that intermediaries — entities such as Google, Facebook, Twitter — would have to take down any information stored or transmitted by them that is found to be grossly harassing, defamatory, blasphemous, obscene, pornographic and so on, within 36 hours of being notified.

Of course, this section of the IT Act has been roundly criticised as arbitrary and Draconian, but that is another story.

The point is that despite the fair number of privacy provisions, in the absence of a comprehensive law, the untrammelled and unauthorised use of personal data cannot be ruled out. "Every country in the world collects personal data. But once the data are collected for a particular purpose they should not be used for any other purpose. The law has to be in a position to catch the violators," says Kamlesh Bajaj, CEO of Data Security Council of India, an organisation that works to promote data protection and privacy best practices.

As always, the key issue is that an individual's right to privacy has to be balanced with public interest. And it is in that context that experts feel that even if India were to have a privacy law, it is probably not ready for something akin to the European Court ruling on the right to be forgotten. As Gupta says, "It raises a real danger of public personalities blocking legitimate journalism on grounds of privacy. This is specially true in a country like India which permits a high degree of illegality in the name of secrecy and confidentiality."

Abraham agrees with that view. "I'm not sure if the right to be forgotten will enhance privacy or usher in a level of censorship," he says.

As Europe grapples with that debate, India's privacy warriors are asking for something far more fundamental — a comprehensive law that guarantees the right to privacy to all.

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Context and Background

This opinion piece appeared shortly after the European Court of Justice’s May 2014 ruling in Google Spain v AEPD, which established the right to be forgotten within EU jurisdiction. The ruling obliged search engines to remove links to information deemed inadequate, irrelevant, or excessive upon request—a decision that sparked considerable debate about balancing individual privacy against press freedom and public access to information.

Raha’s article used this European development as a lens through which to examine India’s privacy shortcomings. Sunil Abraham’s observation that the right to be forgotten was “a bit too advanced for us” reflected a stark reality: India lacked even foundational data protection infrastructure that European nations had built over decades. Whilst the EU had implemented the Data Protection Directive in 1995, India in 2014 had no omnibus privacy legislation, only scattered provisions across roughly fifty different statutes offering inconsistent and often inadequate protections.

The piece highlighted a leaked 2014 draft privacy bill that proposed raising penalties for unlawful interception but controversially exempted intelligence agencies almost entirely. This exemption embodied a recurring pattern in Indian surveillance legislation—security considerations consistently overriding privacy safeguards. The Central Monitoring System and Lawful Interception and Monitoring Systems mentioned allowed extensive state surveillance with minimal judicial oversight, a concern that would intensify in subsequent years.

Apar Gupta’s warning about public figures potentially blocking legitimate journalism under privacy claims proved prescient. India’s subsequent experience with intermediary liability rules and content takedown mechanisms demonstrated how privacy and defamation claims could indeed be weaponised against press freedom, particularly given weak institutional checks and the judiciary’s inconsistent approach to balancing competing rights.

The Justice A.P. Shah Committee report of 2012, which the article cited, remains significant as it represented the most comprehensive attempt at that time to articulate privacy principles for India. Its recommendations—privacy commissioners, consent requirements, purpose limitation—anticipated elements that would later appear in draft data protection legislation. However, implementation remained elusive, with successive governments failing to translate these recommendations into enforceable law.

The article’s publication came three years before the Supreme Court’s 2017 Puttaswamy judgment would declare privacy a fundamental right under Article 21 of the Constitution. That watershed ruling fundamentally altered India’s privacy landscape, making constitutional what had previously been only a fragmented statutory and common law concept. It provided the legal foundation that advocates like those quoted in Raha’s piece had been seeking, though translating that constitutional guarantee into effective data protection legislation would prove a protracted process.

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