• About Us
    • Our team
    • Code of Conduct
    • Disclaimer Policy
  • Policy
    • Privacy
    • Copyright
    • Refund Policy
    • Terms & Condition
  • Submit Post
    • Guideline
    • Submit/Article/Blog
    • Submit-Event/Job/Internship
  • Join Us
    • Intership
    • Campus Ambassador
  • Media Partnership
  • Advertise
    • Magazine
    • Website
  • Contact us
Saturday, July 4, 2026
  • Login
  • Register
law Jurist
Advertisement
  • Home
  • Articles
    • Articles
  • CASE LAWS
    • CRPC
    • IPR
    • Constitution
    • International Law
    • Contract Laws
    • IBC
    • Evidence Act
    • CPC
    • Property Law
    • Companies Act
    • CRPC
    • AI and law
    • Banking Law
    • Contact Laws
    • Criminal Laws
  • Law Notes
    • CPC Notes
    • Contract Laws Notes
    • Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita
    • International Law Notes
    • Constitution Notes
    • Companies Act Notes
    • Banking Law Notes
    • Evidence Act Notes
  • Opportunities
    • Internship
    • Moot Court
    • Courses
    • Seminar
  • Careers
    • Law School Update
    • Judiciary
    • CLAT
  • JOURNAL
  • Legal Documents
  • Bare Act
  • Lawyers corner
  • Draftmate
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Articles
    • Articles
  • CASE LAWS
    • CRPC
    • IPR
    • Constitution
    • International Law
    • Contract Laws
    • IBC
    • Evidence Act
    • CPC
    • Property Law
    • Companies Act
    • CRPC
    • AI and law
    • Banking Law
    • Contact Laws
    • Criminal Laws
  • Law Notes
    • CPC Notes
    • Contract Laws Notes
    • Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita
    • International Law Notes
    • Constitution Notes
    • Companies Act Notes
    • Banking Law Notes
    • Evidence Act Notes
  • Opportunities
    • Internship
    • Moot Court
    • Courses
    • Seminar
  • Careers
    • Law School Update
    • Judiciary
    • CLAT
  • JOURNAL
  • Legal Documents
  • Bare Act
  • Lawyers corner
  • Draftmate
No Result
View All Result
law Jurist
No Result
View All Result

Data Protection and Privacy in India.Towards a Comprehensive Legislative Framework in the Digital Age.

Law Jurist by Law Jurist
3 July 2026
in Articles
0

Author: Sandeep Kumar Pandey, a Final-Year LL.B. Student at Hari Sahay Law College, Gorakhpur Uttar Pradesh

Introduction

India stands at a defining crossroads in the governance of digital rights. With over 391 million internet subscribers and an ambitious Digital India programme driving rapid expansion of online services, the question of how personal data is collected, stored, processed, and protected has moved from academic debate to urgent national necessity. Yet India’s legal architecture for data protection remains fragmented, reactive, and ill-equipped for the scale and sophistication of threats that citizens now face.

Privacy and the Constitutional Foundation

The concept of data privacy does not find explicit mention in the Indian Constitution. Nevertheless, the judiciary has, over time, woven privacy into the fabric of Article 21, which guarantees that no person shall be deprived of life or personal liberty except according to procedure established by law. The Supreme Court’s evolving interpretation of ‘life’ has extended it to encompass all those aspects that make a person’s existence meaningful, complete, and dignified a reading that logically encompasses the right to control one’s personal information.

The question before a nine-member Constitution Bench headed by the Chief Justice of India is whether privacy is a fundamental right. Regardless of the outcome, the moment is ideal for India to undertake a systematic reconstruction of its privacy laws. A constitutional right without an enforceable statutory framework is, in practice, a hollow guarantee. Recognition alone cannot protect a citizen whose data is harvested, monetised, or breached without her knowledge or consent.

The Age of Data and the Scale of Risk

We live in what commentators rightly call the ‘age of data.’ Private companies ranging from social media platforms to email services and messaging applications  store enormous volumes of personal information, much of it held on servers located outside India’s territorial jurisdiction. Both Facebook and WhatsApp count more than 200 million active users in India, making India one of the largest data-generating nations in the world. India has, in fact, surpassed the United States in total Facebook users yet it remains without a dedicated data protection statute.

This asymmetry carries serious consequences. Data-colonising corporations use collected information in myriad ways: targeted advertising, behavioural profiling, credit scoring, and increasingly, influence over political opinion. Individuals exercise limited control over how their data is used; in many cases, they do not even possess undisputed ownership of their own personal information. Meanwhile, company databases remain under constant risk of cyberattacks, and misuse of personal data by third parties for fraud, phishing, identity theft, and financial scams has grown proportionately with internet penetration.

The Inadequacy of Existing Legislation

India’s primary instrument for cyber governance is the Information Technology Act, 2000 enacted at a time when the scale of today’s data economy was barely imaginable. Originally aimed at providing legal infrastructure for e-commerce and according legal sanctity to electronic records and digital signatures, the Act was not designed as a privacy statute. Its Chapter IX provides for penalties and adjudication of offences, and an Adjudicating Officer empowered with civil court powers may award compensation not exceeding one crore rupees a figure that bears no rational relationship to the scale of harm a major data breach can inflict.

The Information Technology (Amendment) Act, 2008 took the first tentative steps toward data protection, introducing Section 43A, which imposes liability on companies for failure to maintain reasonable security practices, and Section 72A, which penalises disclosure of information in breach of a lawful contract. Section 67C mandates preservation and retention of information by intermediaries, with imprisonment of up to three years for wilful contravention. These provisions, while useful, remain scattered, narrow in scope, and wholly insufficient against the systemic data risks of 2024.

The Privacy (Protection) Bill, 2013 sought to address this gap by focusing specifically on the protection of personal and sensitive personal data  requiring consent of the data provider and establishing rules for collection, storage, processing, transfer, and disclosure. It was never enacted.

The European Standard and India’s Obligation

The contrast with the European Union is instructive. The General Data Protection Regulation, implemented in May 2018, aims at harmonising data privacy laws across Europe and imposes penalties of up to four percent of a company’s worldwide annual turnover for serious breaches  a deterrent proportionate to the power of the entities being regulated. GDPR requires companies to ensure that even their vendors are fully compliant as a condition of doing business. It establishes purpose limitation, data minimisation, the right to erasure, and mandatory breach notification as enforceable obligations.

To recognise privacy as a fundamental right in India without enacting comparable enforceable regulations would be, as observers have rightly noted, akin to raking water up a hill. Rights require remedies; remedies require institutions.

What Must Be Done

A credible Indian data protection framework must rest on several pillars. Security of personal data must be mandatory, with immediate breach notification to affected individuals and a regulatory authority. Data subjects must have the right to access, correct, and erase their personal information. Violations by both government and private entities must attract meaningful penalties

imprisonment and substantial fines  sufficient to deter non-compliance rather than treat it as cost of business. Mass surveillance and individual profiling without legal cause must be explicitly prohibited.

At the same time, the framework must be calibrated to legitimate national security interests. The Darknet and encrypted online channels are increasingly exploited for illegal trade, trafficking, and money laundering. Regulations that unduly restrict the operational capacity of intelligence and law enforcement agencies would compromise national security. The solution lies in narrowly defined, judicially supervised exceptions not a blanket government exemption that swallows the right.

India also urgently needs an independent regulatory body structured along the lines of Data Protection Commissioner offices in Canada and Ireland  with genuine autonomy from executive direction, technical expertise, and adequate enforcement powers.

Conclusion

The digital future India is building must be one in which citizens are not merely users but rights-holders. Data generated by over a billion people cannot remain the unregulated property of corporations and state agencies. A comprehensive, rights-centred data protection law is not a luxury for a later stage of development  it is a prerequisite for a democratic digital society. The time to legislate is now.

Previous Post

Decriminalisation of Corporate Offenses in India: Reforming Compliance or Diluting Accountability?

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recent Posts

  • Data Protection and Privacy in India.Towards a Comprehensive Legislative Framework in the Digital Age.
  • Decriminalisation of Corporate Offenses in India: Reforming Compliance or Diluting Accountability?
  • The Invisible Mind behind the Visible Law: Judicial Psychology and the Quest for Objectivity in Legal Interpretation.
  • Bridging the Gap: Policies and Practices for Social Inclusion in Universities.
  • Traditional Indian Legal Knowledge

Recent Comments

  1. бнанс зареструватися on (no title)
  2. Binance注册 on (no title)
  3. registro da binance on (no title)
  4. crea un account binance on (no title)
  5. binance anm"alningsbonus on (no title)

Archives

  • July 2026
  • June 2026
  • May 2026
  • April 2026
  • March 2026
  • February 2026
  • January 2026
  • December 2025
  • November 2025
  • October 2025
  • September 2025
  • August 2025
  • July 2025
  • June 2025
  • May 2025
  • April 2025
  • March 2025
  • February 2025
  • January 2025
  • December 2024
  • November 2024
  • October 2024
  • September 2024
  • August 2024
  • July 2024
  • June 2024
  • May 2024
  • April 2024
  • March 2024

Categories

  • About Us
  • Articles
  • Articles
  • Bare Acts
  • Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita
  • Careers
  • CASE LAWS
  • Companies Act
  • Constitution
  • Constitution Notes
  • Contact Laws
  • Contract Laws
  • Criminal Laws
  • CRPC
  • IBC
  • Internship
  • IPR
  • Law Notes
  • Lawyers corner
  • Moot Court
  • Property Law
  • Seminar
  • Startup

Description

Law Jurist is dedicated to transforming legal education and practice. With a vision for change, they foster an inclusive community for law students, lawyers, and advocates. Their mission is to provide tailored resources and guidance, redefining standards through innovation and collaboration. With integrity and transparency, Law Jurist aims to be a trusted partner in every legal journey, committed to continuous improvement. Together, they shape a future where legal minds thrive and redefine impact.

Contact US

Gmail : lawjurist23@gmail.com

Phone : +91 6360756930

Categories

  • About Us
  • Articles
  • Articles
  • Bare Acts
  • Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita
  • Careers
  • CASE LAWS
  • Companies Act
  • Constitution
  • Constitution Notes
  • Contact Laws
  • Contract Laws
  • Criminal Laws
  • CRPC
  • IBC
  • Internship
  • IPR
  • Law Notes
  • Lawyers corner
  • Moot Court
  • Property Law
  • Seminar
  • Startup

Search

No Result
View All Result
  • About Us
  • Bare Act
  • Code of Conduct
  • Contact us
  • Disclaimer Policy
  • Home 1
  • Join Us
  • Legal Documents
  • Our team
  • Policy
  • Privacy
  • Submit Post
  • Website
  • About Us
  • Refund Policy
  • Terms & Condition
  • Policy
  • Submit Post
  • Join Us
  • Media Partnership
  • Advertise
  • Contact us
  • Articles
  • CASE LAWS
  • About Us

Made with ❤ in India. © 2025 -- Law Jurist, All Rights Reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • About Us
  • Bare Act
  • Code of Conduct
  • Contact us
  • Disclaimer Policy
  • Home 1
  • Join Us
  • Legal Documents
  • Our team
  • Policy
  • Privacy
  • Submit Post
    • Submit-Event/Job/Internship
  • Website
  • About Us
    • Our team
    • Code of Conduct
    • Disclaimer Policy
  • Refund Policy
  • Terms & Condition
  • Policy
    • Privacy
    • Copyright
  • Submit Post
  • Join Us
    • Internship
    • Campus Ambassador
  • Media Partnership
  • Advertise
  • Contact us
  • Articles
  • CASE LAWS
  • About Us

Made with ❤ in India. © 2025 -- Law Jurist, All Rights Reserved.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms below to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In