Masking Personal Data to Protect Privacy Crucial for India, Say Experts
Masking Personal Data to Protect Privacy Crucial for India, Say Experts is a Mint news report by Deepti Govind published on 11 December 2017. The piece covers a panel discussion on data privacy at the Global Technology Summit hosted by Carnegie India, at which Sunil Abraham of the Centre for Internet and Society (CIS) outlined the CIS proposal for tokenisation of Aadhaar-based KYC requirements as a privacy safeguard.
Contents
Article Details
- 📰 Published in:
- Mint
- 📅 Date:
- 11 December 2017
- 👤 Author:
- Deepti Govind
- 📄 Type:
- News Report
- 📰 Newspaper Link:
- Read Online
Full Text
Bengaluru: Using the concept of de-identification to protect an individual's right to privacy and creating laws that constantly re-evaluates the difference between harmful and good use of data is crucial for India, according to an expert panel on data privacy.
That could mean developing a token system that lets the Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI) hold a master-list of data through Aadhaar, while generating token numbers for all other Know Your Customer (KYC) requirements, suggested the panel at the Global Technology Summit hosted by think-tank Carnegie India.
"If we can implement de-identification principles in government collection and storage of data, even if that data is displayed on the website it cannot be correlated to an individual. And if it can't be correlated to an individual then immediately that data is not as dangerous as it could be," said Rahul Matthan, partner at Trilegal and a Mint columnist.
In theory, de-identification could include anything from deleting or masking personal identifiers, like names, to generalizing or suppressing others, like an individual's pin code.
Finding a way to protect privacy is critical for India, with the Supreme Court hearing petitions challenging the mandatory linking of Aadhaar to avail various social and welfare benefits.
One of the grounds for challenge is that the use of biometric information of an individual encroaches upon the individual's privacy.
The Centre for Internet and Society, a Bengaluru-based research organisation, proposed that the UIDAI use tokens for KYC requirements. Under this method an individual can use a smart card and a personal identification number (PIN), rather than biometrics, at a UIDAI-controlled booth and generate a token number. That token number can be submitted to a telephone operator or a bank.
"UIDAI is currently considering this. They call it the dummy or virtual Aadhaar numbers. Under this a single agency cannot pull off the surveillance completely by themselves. So there is both a technical and institutional check," said Sunil Abraham, executive director of the Centre for Internet and Society.
Another method could be shifting the emphasis to revoking consent rather than grant of consent to collect and store data.
This could be done using the same method that currently exists to filter unwanted calls and messages on phones via the do-not-disturb registry. But over and above these, creating the right regulatory framework is important.
"It has become absolutely necessary to have in place a law which governs the usage of misuse of data," said former Supreme Court justice B.N. Srikrishna.
Srikrishna used to head a 10-member committee of experts constituted by the government to study various issues related to data protection, make specific suggestions on the principles to be considered and suggest a draft data protection bill.
The data protection law must balance the interests of all three stakeholders—the common citizens, data collectors and the state—and not focus on just one or two, Srikrishna said on Friday. There should also be methods in place to penalize or impose fines on companies or agencies in case of data breaches or misuses, he added. But imposing fines is not the ideal solution, according to experts.
"It's really critical that we think about building in incentives to do better. If every violation results in a huge penalty, for instance, then the posture of companies will be a secretive, protective, legal defence posture rather than one that strives to constantly improve practices and technologies," said Facebook Inc.'s global deputy chief privacy officer, Stephen Deadman.
Mint was a media partner for the Global Technology Summit, which was held on 7 and 8 December.
Context and Background
The article was published during the period when the Supreme Court’s constitutional bench was hearing challenges to Aadhaar’s mandatory linkage requirements — a set of cases that culminated in the Justice K.S. Puttaswamy (Retd.) v. Union of India judgment of September 2018, which upheld Aadhaar’s validity for government welfare programmes but struck down its mandatory linking to bank accounts and mobile numbers by private entities.
The CIS tokenisation proposal that Abraham describes — essentially replacing direct biometric authentication with a token-based system to limit centralised surveillance risk — reflected a position CIS had been developing in its submissions and research since at least 2013. The UIDAI’s subsequent introduction of “Virtual ID” and masked Aadhaar features in early 2018 bore a resemblance to this approach, though questions about their adequacy as privacy safeguards continued to be debated.
Justice B.N. Srikrishna, quoted here, went on to chair the committee that produced the first draft Personal Data Protection Bill in July 2018. That bill went through multiple revisions over the following years before a substantially revised version — the Digital Personal Data Protection Act — was passed in August 2023.
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