Internet Governance Blog

by kaeru — last modified Oct 18, 2011 06:40 AM

IANA Transition Stewardship & ICANN Accountability (I)

Posted by Jyoti Panday at Jun 20, 2015 12:00 PM |

This paper is the first in a multi-part series, in which we provide a background to the IANA transition and updates on the ensuing processes. An attempt to familiarise people with the issues at stake, this paper will be followed by a second piece that provides an overview of submitted proposals and areas of concern that will need attention moving forward. The series is a work in progress and will be updated as the processes move forward. It is up for public comments and we welcome your feedback.

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Mastering the Art of Keeping Indians Under Surveillance

Posted by Bhairav Acharya at May 30, 2015 08:00 PM |

In its first year in office, the National Democratic Alliance government has been notably silent on the large-scale surveillance projects it has inherited. This ended last week amidst reports the government is hastening to complete the Central Monitoring System (CMS) within the year.

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The Four Parts of Privacy in India

Posted by Bhairav Acharya at May 30, 2015 12:00 PM |

Privacy enjoys an abundance of meanings. It is claimed in diverse situations every day by everyone against other people, society and the state.

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Paper-thin Safeguards and Mass Surveillance in India

Posted by Chinmayi Arun at May 20, 2015 10:20 AM |

The Indian government's new mass surveillance systems present new threats to the right to privacy. Mass interception of communication, keyword searches and easy access to particular users' data suggest that state is moving towards unfettered large-scale monitoring of communication. This is particularly ominous given that our privacy safeguards remain inadequate even for targeted surveillance and its more familiar pitfalls.

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TRAI and the Disclosure of Personal Information

Posted by Nehaa Chaudhari and Vidushi Marda at May 10, 2015 09:16 AM |

The Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI), in March 2015 invited comments on its Consultation Paper for the regulation of over-the-top (OTT) services. In an unprecedented wave of public participation, TRAI received over a million e-mails in support of net neutrality.

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DeitY says 143 URLs have been Blocked in 2015; Procedure for Blocking Content Remains Opaque and in Urgent Need of Transparency Measures

Across India on 30 December 2014, following an order issued by the Department of Telecom (DOT), Internet Service Providers (ISPs) blocked 32 websites including Vimeo, Dailymotion, GitHub and Pastebin.

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The Hazards of a Non-neutral Internet

Posted by Geetha Hariharan at Apr 18, 2015 09:00 PM |

Spurred by recent events, India’s policy circles are dancing to the complex tunes of net neutrality. Airtel came under fire for pricing calls made over the Internet differentially; it has since withdrawn this plan. Airtel and Reliance Communications are caught in the storm as Airtel Zero and Internet.org, the Facebook-spearheaded product for low-cost Internet access, face stiff criticism for violating net neutrality. Companies like Flipkart, which earlier supported these products, have stepped back and are throwing their weight behind net neutrality. The Department of Telecommunications has set up a six-member panel to consult on net neutrality.

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Multiple Aspects Need to be Addressed as the Clamour Grows for Network Neutrality

Multiple Aspects Need to be Addressed as the Clamour Grows for Network Neutrality

Posted by Sunil Abraham at Apr 16, 2015 01:33 PM |

In the global debate there are four violations of Network Neutrality that are considered particularly egregious.

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Don't Do Nothing. Take a Stand on Net Neutrality.

Posted by T. Vishnu Vardhan at Apr 15, 2015 06:05 AM |
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Are you wondering what Net Neutrality is, and why the term has suddenly got so much attention in India among the Netizens? Do you need to be concerned about Net Neutrality? We will try to address these in this short post on Net Neutrality.

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Shreya Singhal and 66A

Most software code has dependencies. Simple and reproducible methods exist for mapping and understanding the impact of these dependencies. Legal code also has dependencies --across court orders and within a single court order. And since court orders are not produced using a structured mark-up language, experts are required to understand the precedential value of a court order.

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The Supreme Court Judgment in Shreya Singhal and What It Does for Intermediary Liability in India?

Even as free speech advocates and users celebrate the Supreme Court of India's landmark judgment striking down Section 66A of the Information Technology Act of 2000, news that the Central government has begun work on drafting a new provision to replace the said section of the Act has been trickling in.

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GSMA Research Outputs

Posted by Elonnai Hickok at Apr 04, 2015 01:15 AM |

This is a collection of research under our GSMA project that we have undertaken in collaboration with Privacy International. The research has sought to understand different legal and regulatory aspects of security and surveillance in India and consists of blog entries and reports. Any feedback or comment is welcome.

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Security, Governments and Data: Technology and Policy

Posted by Elonnai Hickok at Mar 31, 2015 06:00 PM |

On January 8, 2015, the Centre for Internet and Society, in collaboration with the Observer research foundation, hosted the day long conference "Security, Governments, and Data: Technology and Policy" The conference discussed a range of topics including internet governance, surveillance, privacy, and cyber security.

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Three reasons why 66A verdict is momentous

Earlier this week, the fundamental right to freedom of expression posted a momentous victory. The nation's top court struck down the much-reviled Section 66A of the IT Act — which criminalized communications that are "grossly offensive", cause "annoyance", etc — as "unconstitutionally vague", "arbitrarily, excessively, and disproportionately" encumbering freedom of speech, and likely to have a "chilling effect" on legitimate speech.

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What 66A Judgment Means For Free Speech Online

What 66A Judgment Means For Free Speech Online

This week India's Supreme Court redefined the boundaries of freedom of speech on the internet. With the Court's decision in Shreya Singhal & Ors. v. Union of India, Section 66A of the Information Technology Act, 2000, has been struck down in entirety and is no longer good law.

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India's Supreme Court Axes Online Censorship Law, But Challenges Remain

India's Supreme Court Axes Online Censorship Law, But Challenges Remain

The Supreme Court of India took a remarkable step to protect free expression on March 24, 2015, striking down controversial section 66A of the IT Act that criminalized “grossly offensive” content online. In response to a public interest litigation filed by Indian law student Shreya Singhal, the court made this landmark judgement calling the section “vague”, “broad” and “unconstitutional”. Since Tuesday's announcement, the news has trended nationally on Twitter, with more than 50,000 tweets bearing the hashtags #Sec66A and #66A.

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Fear, Uncertainty and Doubt

Much confusion has resulted from the Section 66A verdict. Some people are convinced that online speech is now without any reasonable restrictions under Article 19 (2) of the Constitution. This is completely false.

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Historic day for freedom of speech and expression in India

In a petition that finds its origin in a simple status message on Facebook, Shreya Singhal vs Union of India marks a historic reinforcement of the freedom of speech and expression in India.

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Internet censorship will continue in opaque fashion

A division bench of the Supreme Court has ruled on three sections of the Information Technology Act 2000 - Section 66A, Section 79 and Section 69A. The draconian Section 66A was originally meant to tackle spam and cyber-stalking but was used by the powerful elite to crack down on online dissent and criticism.

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What Does Facebook's Transparency Report Tell Us About the Indian Government's Record on Free Expression & Privacy?

Given India's online population, the number of user data requests made by the Indian government aren't very high, but the number of content restriction requests are not only high on an absolute number, but even on a per-user basis.

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