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Contents
Synopsis –Need of Personal Data Protection law to safeguard citizens’ right to privacy.
Introduction –
- Last year, WhatsApp announced its controversial terms and privacy policy. It required users to accept the terms in order to continue using the platform’s services.
- However, after a long conflict, the company recently notified the Delhi High Court that it would not implement its amended privacy policy until the Personal Data Protection Bill took effect.
- However, The Personal Data Protection Bill has been pending for more than 3 years and the absence of the legislation causes huge concern.
What was WhatsApp new Terms of Service [ToS] –
The Businesses to operate easily – WhatsApp claims that the new privacy policy was required because it needs to share some information with Facebook in order to develop e-commerce capabilities in the app.
Under the new conditions, corporate accounts will be able to exchange private, personal data and information from those who engage with them.
- Violates the right to privacy – The revised ToS violates the right to privacy provided by the Constitution, as well as a 2016 pledge by WhatsApp to provide users with an opt-out from data sharing.
- It will share users’ personal information and data with Facebook, primarily to boost ad-related income sources.
- Sharing of Metadata – WhatsApp may share one’s metadata, which is effectively anything other than the conversation’s actual content.
- This means, the new policy virtually gives a 360-degree profile into a person’s online activity.
- At the moment, there is no government control or regulatory supervision of this level of visibility into a person’s private and personal actions.
Effect of WhatsApp’s new ToS in other countries-
- In EU- This ToS is not applicable to EU users since it breaches the GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation), the World’s most advanced and comprehensive data privacy law.
- In US- This ToS cannot be applied as it violates privacy and data protection laws.
Steps taken by India in order to formulate legislation-
- In 2017, the union government formed the committee [led by retired Supreme Court Judge Justice BN Srikrishna] to deliberate on a data protection framework.
- In July 2018, the committee proposed a Personal Data Protection Bill with multiple protection levels and consent required before each step of data collection and processing. However, that proposal was never presented to Parliament.
- In Dec 2019, the redrafted version presented in parliament, which was criticized as Orwellian due to broad monitoring and data-gathering powers granted to government agencies. That draft bill has not been passed into law, and no Bill has been presented since 2019.
Way forward-
Legislation on data protection should be formulated which safeguards the rights provided to the Citizens, protect individual privacy, ensure autonomy, allow data flow for a growing data ecosystem.