Security: Privacy, Transparency and Technology

Security: Privacy, Transparency and Technology is a co-authored article by Sunil Abraham, Elonnai Hickok, and Tarun Krishnakumar. It was published in Digital Debates 2015: CyFy Journal, Volume 2 by the Observer Research Foundation. The piece examines how governments, institutions, and private actors can achieve a balance between three core governance objectives — privacy, transparency, and security — in an era of rapid technological change.

Contents

  1. Publication Details
  2. Abstract
  3. Context and Background
  4. Key Themes or Findings
  5. Full Text
  6. Citation

Publication Details

👤 Authors:
Sunil Abraham, Elonnai Hickok, and Tarun Krishnakumar
🏛️ Published in:
Digital Debates 2015: CyFy Journal, Volume 2, Observer Research Foundation
📅 Date:
2015
📘 Type:
Research Article
📄 Access:
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Abstract

This article explores the dynamic relationship between security, privacy, and transparency in governance. It argues that while security concerns often motivate greater surveillance and data collection, these measures must coexist with the principles of privacy protection and government accountability. The authors propose a balanced framework that aligns technological safeguards with democratic values, ensuring that innovation and state power do not undermine citizens’ rights.

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Context and Background

The authors draw on five years of research and advocacy in privacy and data protection. Their work includes participation in the Justice A.P. Shah Committee, which shaped the draft Privacy Bill being developed by the Department of Personnel and Training (DoPT). They also led the organisation of eleven multistakeholder roundtables across India to discuss a shadow Privacy Bill drafted by the Centre for Internet and Society (CIS), with contributions from privacy commissioners and data protection authorities from Europe and Canada.

Through these engagements, the paper situates India’s privacy debate in a global policy context, emphasising the importance of participatory dialogue in shaping technology governance. The authors note that transparency and accountability must evolve alongside security measures to maintain public trust.

Key Themes or Findings

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Full Text

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Citation

If you wish to reference or cite this publication, you may use one of the following standard citation formats.

APA style:

Abraham, S., Hickok, E., & Krishnakumar, T. (2015).
Security: Privacy, Transparency and Technology.
Digital Debates 2015: CyFy Journal, Volume 2, Observer Research Foundation.
https://sunilabraham.in/publications/security-privacy-transparency-and-technology/

BibTeX style

@article{abraham2015security,
author = {Abraham, Sunil and Hickok, Elonnai and Krishnakumar, Tarun},
title = {Security: Privacy, Transparency and Technology},
journal = {Digital Debates 2015: CyFy Journal, Volume 2},
institution = {Observer Research Foundation},
year = {2015},
url = {https://sunilabraham.in/publications/security-privacy-transparency-and-technology/}
}

MLA style

Abraham, Sunil, Elonnai Hickok, and Tarun Krishnakumar.
"Security: Privacy, Transparency and Technology."
Digital Debates 2015: CyFy Journal, Volume 2, Observer Research Foundation, 2015.
https://sunilabraham.in/publications/security-privacy-transparency-and-technology/

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