Business Wire India
The report argues that the Digital India Act must be future-ready to overcome the existing gaps in the Information Technology Act, 2000. It notes that certain provisions of the IT Act are at odds with emerging technology, rendering some use-cases illegal and denying their benefits to society. In addition, new digital activities may be incompatible with existing definitions, creating roadblocks for enforcement and business uncertainty. Examples include online gaming, the metaverse, and autonomous cars, all touted as technologies of economic significance.
A key lever for future-readiness, the report contends, is the inclusion of a taxonomy of appropriate terms in the Digital India Act that can bring all digital businesses, including those that may emerge in the future, within the purview of the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MEITY). The MEITY’s position as nodal ministry does not prevent other wings of the Government from participating in digital governance. Indeed, it should not because it would lead to considerable capacity concerns. Rather, MEITY and different sectoral ministries must coordinate their efforts on digital governance. Another important recommendation in the report is the Digital India Act must espouse co-regulation. State-led governance is sub-optimal because it involves the introduction of static laws that may or may not be out of touch with technological realities. Similarly, self-regulation can be too watered down and consequently, ineffectual.
Finally, the report argues that the Digital India Act must engender trust through greater emphasis on accountability, transparency, and fundamental rights. Towards this, it recommends that the Indian state must:
- Introduce a specialized judicial oversight of digital governance measures that is supported by an independent research body.
- Make executive rule-making more transparent through open consultations and exploratory memoranda.
- Enable detailed transparency reporting by companies by minimising confidentiality requirements around surveillance requests
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