Burden Of Data Protection Bill Would Have Hurt Startups: Rajeev Chandrasekhar

Burden Of Data Protection Bill Would Have Hurt Startups: Rajeev Chandrasekhar

SUMMARY

Rajeev Chandrasekhar: Big tech firms would have just hired more lawyers to comply if there was a complicated privacy law

The government pulled the PDP Bill on Wednesday (August 3) after a joint parliamentary committee suggested 81 amendments to the bill

At a November 2021 event, the additional secretary to the IT Ministry claimed that the concept of ‘data fiduciaries’ within the bill could help Indian startups

In the immediate aftermath to pull the plug on the Personal Data Protection Bill (PDP Bill), 2019, the government said that compliance for startups would have become significantly more difficult had the bill been passed into law.

Apart from personal data protection, the bill also included policies such as cybersecurity, data management and safety and a national data governance policy.

Rajeev Chandrasekhar, the Minister of State for Electronics and Technology said, “Big tech firms would have just hired more lawyers to comply if there was a complicated privacy law. The burden of such legislation would have hurt startups.”

However, Chandrasekhar restated the Indian government’s bullishness on data privacy.

“I have always emphasised that data privacy is anyway a fundamental right of all citizens, according to the Supreme Court’s ruling. What the data protection law does is it just specifies do’s and don’ts for those who collect the data,” the minister said.

At a press briefing, Chandrasekhar said that the bill in its current form was designed in 2018 for the limited purpose of privacy after the Right to Privacy was recognised as a fundamental one by the Supreme Court in 2017.

Chandrasekhar commented on the joint parliamentary committee’s report, stating, “It was found that there is a need for a comprehensive redrawing of the laws and rules, taking into account some of the JPC’s comments and the contemporary challenges and future opportunities that arise here.”

To be sure, last year, the additional secretary of the IT Ministry Dr Rajendra Kumar said that the Personal Data Protection Bill was set to boost India’s digital economy

At a November 2021 event, Kumar claimed that the concept of ‘data fiduciaries’ within the bill could help Indian startups. A reasonable assumption would also include India’s tech startup ecosystem as part of the digital economy.

Other shortcomings notwithstanding, the Personal Data Protection Bill, 2019, provides a ‘backdoor’ to the government. In the bill’s provisions. The bill gives certain rights to the individual, referred to as a data principal. Data fiduciaries, or the companies that collect and process personal data, can only do so with the consent of the data principal.

However, in certain circumstances, the data can be processed without consent, including instances when the state asks for it. This point has been called into question as being an enabler of government surveillance.

For the uninitiated, New Delhi pulled the PDP Bill on Wednesday (August 3) after a joint parliamentary committee suggested 81 amendments to the bill. The bill had been in discussion in India’s Parliament since 2019. The government is now working on a new data protection bill from scratch.

Step up your startup journey with BHASKAR! From resources to networking, BHASKAR connects Indian innovators with everything they need to succeed. Join today to access a platform built for innovation, growth, and community.

You have reached your limit of free stories
Become An Inc42 Plus Member

Become a Startup Insider in 2024 with Inc42 Plus. Join our exclusive community of 10,000+ founders, investors & operators and stay ahead in India’s startup & business economy.

2 YEAR PLAN
₹19999
₹7999
₹333/Month
UNLOCK 60% OFF
Cancel Anytime
1 YEAR PLAN
₹9999
₹4999
₹416/Month
UNLOCK 50% OFF
Cancel Anytime
Already A Member?
Discover Startups & Business Models

Unleash your potential by exploring unlimited articles, trackers, and playbooks. Identify the hottest startup deals, supercharge your innovation projects, and stay updated with expert curation.

Burden Of Data Protection Bill Would Have Hurt Startups: Rajeev Chandrasekhar-Inc42 Media
How-To’s on Starting & Scaling Up

Empower yourself with comprehensive playbooks, expert analysis, and invaluable insights. Learn to validate ideas, acquire customers, secure funding, and navigate the journey to startup success.

Burden Of Data Protection Bill Would Have Hurt Startups: Rajeev Chandrasekhar-Inc42 Media
Identify Trends & New Markets

Access 75+ in-depth reports on frontier industries. Gain exclusive market intelligence, understand market landscapes, and decode emerging trends to make informed decisions.

Burden Of Data Protection Bill Would Have Hurt Startups: Rajeev Chandrasekhar-Inc42 Media
Track & Decode the Investment Landscape

Stay ahead with startup and funding trackers. Analyse investment strategies, profile successful investors, and keep track of upcoming funds, accelerators, and more.

Burden Of Data Protection Bill Would Have Hurt Startups: Rajeev Chandrasekhar-Inc42 Media
Burden Of Data Protection Bill Would Have Hurt Startups: Rajeev Chandrasekhar-Inc42 Media
You’re in Good company