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Context
Background
Why is the Digital India Act Important?
Digital Personal Data Protection Bill, 2022
What are the Main Points in the Digital India Act?
In addition to a brand new legislative framework surrounding data and information security, the Digital India Act highlights the following areas:
The IT Act of 2000 was significantly outdated and had almost no mentions of the “internet” during its inception. The Digital India Act aims to create new regulations surrounding the newest, most relevant technology in today’s society as India approaches the threshold of most-internet connected country in the world.
The IT Act also has no mention of cybersecurity and is not built to regulate the relatively new industry. With business-critical technologies like the cloud, IoT devices, and social media, the Digital India Act aims to address security and privacy concerns with new technology and not just regulate it for responsible use.
Intermediaries was introduced as a new concept in the IT Rules of 2021, but only defined rules for social media platforms. Intermediaries are any company or platform that facilitates information sharing or provides online services. The other online platforms were classified as “pure intermediaries” and grouped together.
However, one of the main problems with IT Rules is that digital intermediaries have been grouped by company size and user base rather than the features or services they provide. A single company can offer multiple services, making it hard to regulate as a whole.
The Digital India Act will begin to categorize all online intermediaries into different buckets, such as cloud service providers (CSPs), social media platforms, internet service providers (ISPs), metaverse, OTT providers, online gaming, and more. The act also aims to appoint a regulating body to hand out penalties for violations of rules.
In the past, online intermediaries, such as social media platforms, were given a “safe harbour” legal immunity, effectively protecting them from third-party content posted on their respective platforms because they had no control over it. However, because the intermediaries were given immunity, they lacked moderation of third-party content, often leading to a lack of fact-checking and non-removal of content violations.
Under the Digital India Act, each intermediary category will be subject to new regulations with a heavy focus on fact-checking to prevent misinformation or misuse of data. Additionally, these platforms will now instead be held accountable for any content violations or cybercrimes that occur on their websites. Instead of relying on the government to flag these violations, the legal obligation now falls on these platforms to moderate and remove disallowed content, including major social media companies such as Facebook and Twitter.
With the inevitable takeover of AI and ML technology permeating through businesses, the Digital India Act wants to get ahead of the wave by focusing on one major aspect: accountability.
With India leading the Global Partnership on Artificial Intelligence (GPAI) in 2023, India is poised to become a world leader in establishing international initiatives to support responsible use of AI technology. Although AI has boundless opportunities to build and innovate, it also represents new avenues for misuse and harm.
Protecting user safety and privacy will continue to be the center of the Digital India Act, which hopes to adequately address and monitor the use of AI in today’s world.
The Ministry of Electronics and IT (MeitY) plans to classify new forms cybercrime, such as cyberbullying, impersonation, identity theft, identify fraud, doxxing, and malicious unauthorized sharing of personal information, as new criminal offenses under the Digital India Act. Previously, these offenses were penalized through fines and not criminalized through the IT Act.
In fact, the IT Act of 2000 borrowed many of the cybercrime penalties through real-world experiences, which are no longer applicable through the evolution of online-facing experiences such as online dating or online gaming. By centering the laws around protecting the user and criminalizing user harm, the Digital India Act can future-proof itself against any innovation and technological developments that may come in the following years.
To help build up Indian content creators and their digital platforms, the Digital India Act wants to reexamine the disproportionate relationship between big adtech companies and their control over monetization and revenue sharing. With global adtech companies like Amazon and Google dominating the ad space, it has become extremely difficult for Indian content creators to negotiate revenue sharing and become visible on a global scale. Content creators will now also be penalized for spreading false information, much like online intermediaries.
In a similar context of regulating big adtech companies, the Digital India Act wants to prevent domination of the digital space by big tech companies. Because India has largely been unregulated regarding their digital policies, many local and foreign startups have been discouraged from entering the Indian tech space.
The Indian government wants to challenge big tech control and allow smaller businesses to begin building up the infrastructure and small e-commerce space. This also allows Indian citizens to choose the best service for them rather than defaulting to one or two options of the major companies.
Part of the goal, , is to increase India’s cyber resiliency and sovereignty so that the country will have the ability and access to all technology and platforms without relying so heavily on foreign services.
Must Read Article: https://www.iasgyan.in/daily-current-affairs/digital-india-act
MAINS PRACTICE QUESTION Q. Digital India Act replacing the IT Act, 2000, is a welcome move for strengthening the digital ecosystem and cyber-security space in the country. However, the need of the hour is implementation of laws effectively and in a time bound manner by addressing the concerns in the legislation stage itself. Elucidate. |
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