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Cyber experts say 'playground open' for influencing elections

by Admin — last modified May 03, 2018 03:17 AM
Cyber experts said that under the provisions provided by 43 (A) of Indian IT Act, two types of data collection are completely legal: first, the data shared by the user in the public domain and secondly, the data published by the social platforms, like Facebook.

This article was published in the Economic Times on May 2, 2018. Sunil Abraham was quoted.


With the Karnataka Assembly elections round the corner, the cyber experts have said that it is quite possible to influence elections in India.

Talking to ANI, cyber expert Sunil Abraham did not rule out the possibility of influencing the voters as India does not have data protection law in place.

He said under the provisions provided by 43 (A) of Indian IT Act, two types of data collection are completely legal: first, the data shared by the user in the public domain and secondly, the data published by the social platforms, like Facebook and Twitter, which was shared by the user for his/her friends.

"Both these types of data are not considered sensitive personal data. Under Indian law, if they are collecting your biometrics, passwords and health information only then they need your consent," Abraham told in an exclusive interview.

Replying a question about the chances of political parties influencing elections, Abraham said, "One cannot answer this question with a clear yes or no. But, the more a political party has in its database about you; the more they can micro-target you for various types of advertising."

He, however, said with the literacy level of Indian internet users, the chances are high that they can be manipulated.

"Once they do this, especially in a country where 30 percent of the public is illiterate and only 10 percent of public knows English and many-many users have just come online, there is a high chance that these users can be manipulated," the cyber expert said.

When asked can it be termed influence, he said, "It will definitely be an influence. Most of the internet users in India have just come online, they don't have media literacy; they have not consumed older technologies like television and broadcast media like radio sufficiently enough so it is easy for these users to get fooled by the content that is propaganda and fake news etcetera."

Abraham said it is unlikely that India will have a data protection law before 2019 general elections, which means the playground is open for people with a clever idea to manipulate voters.

"India is working on data protection laws from last eight years. With the existing laws; all the political parties, social media companies, and search engine optimization companies etcetera can do what they want and they won't get into trouble. So, it is very unlikely that this data protection law is going to be approved by Parliament the 2019 elections. So for the 2019 elections, it is going to be very exciting times because anybody who has any clever idea when it comes to manipulating voters, they will definitely try it. Because, there is no law to stop them from trying those tricks," the cyber expert said.

Replying to another question about India's position in data security, he said, 'India is lagging as per the global trend across the world. The European Union's world-class data protection law called 'General Data Protection Regulation' is being followed by all the countries with the exception of the US. About 108 countries have the data protection laws which look similar to the EU's General Data Protection Regulation."

He, however, added, "We shouldn't be upset because making a law in a big country like India takes time. Shri Krishna Committee is going to present the draft of the Indian data protection law and hopefully, within one or two years India will have data protection law."

Another expert Shubhamangala Sunil told ANI that "In India, our data is not secure today. Be it politicians or businesses, they want the database of people. Many data breaches have already happened and they are being used for different propagandas".

She said the union government and state governments should come forward and tell people about data security measures instead of people complaining about the data breach.

She also said India is at least 10 years behind in comparison with the world in the cyber security domain.

The comments of the experts have come in the backdrop of recently data breach in the Facebook wherein its CEO Mark Zuckerberg faced US Congress for two days over the data theft. The Facebook-Cambridge Analytica data scandal involves the collection of personally identifiable information of up to 87 million Facebook users and almost certainly a much greater number that Cambridge Analytica began collecting in 2014.