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Law must safeguard privacy in information age: Justice Chandrachud

Justice Chandrachud said “the influx of the Internet age has democratised speech for all individuals. Traditionally, government has controlled the platforms... individuals can now directly be in control of these platforms”.

By: Express News Service | New Delhi |
April 10, 2022 3:40:42 am
Justice D Y Chandrachud

Underlining that “privacy concerns are a serious issue in the information age”, Supreme Court judge Justice D Y Chandrachud on Saturday said that “our laws must evolve to address them”.

Delivering the Justice P M Mukhi Memorial Lecture here on ‘Reconciling Rights and Innovation: Examining the Relationship Between Law and Technology’, Justice Chandrachud delved into how Internet and technology have revolutionised the scope of people’s rights and their interactions with the government and the judiciary, adding that “solutions in the digital age also come with a cost”.

“The first kind of price…is through digital profiling of all persons. Every transaction of ours and every site that we visit leaves electronic tracks, generally without our knowledge. These tracks contain powerful means of information which provide knowledge of the sort of person that the user is and their interests. All of this data needs to be protected. In aggregation, this data may disclose the nature of an individual‘s personality: food habits, language, health, hobbies, sexual preferences, friendships, ways of dress and political affiliation,” he said.

“The second kind of price is the nature of changes in our society due to the vast amount of information available through the Internet. This can have negative affects…we can become susceptible to false information, we may be unable to verify the truth, or the information we receive may just become what is dictated by an algorithm, without any real choice on our part. The vastness of this information can also have a numbing effect, where we become so used to hearing about issues that they no longer even affect us,” he pointed out.

Justice Chandrachud said “the influx of the Internet age has democratised speech for all individuals. Traditionally, government has controlled the platforms… individuals can now directly be in control of these platforms”.

“The use of technology and the Internet has not only expanded the scope of an individual’s rights, but also their access to basic services that better help them realise these rights and liberties,” he said.

On the judiciary’s adoption of digital options, Justice Chandrachud who also heads the SC’s E-Committee said “the Covid-19 pandemic proved to be a spectacular accelerant to the virtual and digital courts project in India”.

Recalling the challenges when courts started hearing cases virtually following the national lockdown in March 2020, he said “several courts, including many among the district courts with little to no infrastructure or experience with virtual systems, stood up to the task and are now making a transition to permanent avenues of hybrid hearing models”.

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