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India next after PRISM: govt can soon legally read your mail

Nisha

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Do you browse civil rights sites? Often enter Niyamgiri or Kudankulam as search words? Call, text or mail friends reminding them about that weekly visit to the local slum to distribute medicines or teach kids? Or blog and tweet angrily about the live skeletons you encountered during a jungle holiday in a tribal belt? You better watch out.

Yesterday, The Guardian exposed how British agencies used the top-secret American eavesdropping program ‘PRISM’ — that carries out extensive, in-depth surveillance on live communications and stored information of virtually anyone anywhere in the world — to spy on its citizens. While the outrage in the UK already has the David Cameron government on the back foot and there is anxiousness among Indian netizens, few at home notice that India itself is not far behind on this dangerous global trend.

Representational image. Reuters
This April, our government started putting in place its Central Monitoring System to get access to everything in the country’s telecommunication network, ranging from your emails, social media exchanges, web browsing history, chats to phone calls and text messages. Forget public debates, not even Parliament had an opportunity to debate the move.

Nobody, however, can complain about this mega anti-privacy mechanism which is perfectly legal on paper. Then information technology minister Milind Deora told Parliament last December that the Rs 400 crore monitoring system would “lawfully intercept internet and telephone services”.

Indeed, India’s Information Technology Act 2000 has been amended twice in 2008 and 2011 and allows government officials to access personal emails, phone calls or text messages as part of reasonable security practices and procedures. The ‘reasonability’ remains conveniently undefined and depends on official discretion.

So what exactly does the government want to listen in on? Why do the human rights groups deny it the benefit of doubt in this age of terror? Anyway, why should you worry if you do not have something criminal to hide? Well, you could be jailed for life for, if nothing else, “exciting disaffection” — which includes “disloyalty and all feelings of enmity” — towards the government.

Section 124A of the IPC has remained unchanged since 1870 when the British framed the all-encompassing Sedition Act. It says “whoever by words, either spoken or written, or by signs, or by visible representation, or otherwise, brings or attempts to bring into hatred or contempt, or excites or attempts to excite disaffection towards the Government established by law in India shall be punished with imprisonment for life, to which fine may be added, or with imprisonment which may extend to three years to which fine may be added”.

Prominent freedom fighters including Mohandas Gandhi and Bal Gangadhar Tilak were booked under Section 124A during the raj. In the recent years, sedition charges have been slapped on paediatrician Dr Binayak Sen (for trying to improve public health standards in the state-forsaken hinterlands), writer Arundhati Roy (for repeating Jawaharlal Nehru’s view that accession of a disputed territory cannot be against the wishes of the people) and young Aseem Trivedi (for drawing an aesthetically-challenged and inconsequential cartoon).

The latest in the government’s arsenal is the all-season-any-reason invocation of the Maoist spectre. The first widely publicised case was that of Kamlesh Painkra in Chhattishgarh. A grassroots reporter, Painkra was the first journalist to report the gross human rights violations of the state militia called Salwa Judum in 2005. He was promptly dubbed a Maoist. His brother, a teacher, was arrested on charges of sheltering Naxalites and Painkra’s PDS licence, the family’s main source of income, was cancelled. Fearing death in a staged encounter, he left Chhattisgarh and the CRPF demolished his house in Bijapur to build a volleyball court for its jawans.

In 2009, Laxman Choudhury, a stringer with a vernacular newspaper in Odisha’s Gajapati district, was charged with having links to Maoists for writing on the police-drug mafia connection. He was booked under Sections 120 (B) and 124(A) — criminal conspiracy and sedition — for apparently receiving eight Maoist leaflets sent through a bus conductor and made to spend 10 weeks in jail before the high court granted him bail.

In March 2010, Gujarat police arrested Niranjan Mahapatra, a freelance journalist, for his alleged involvement with the Maoists. Gujarat police said they recovered plenty of Maoist literature written in Oriya from his rented accommodation, that Mahapatra was associated with a workers union, used to visit demolition sites in slums and networked with the affected, and that his source of income could not be immediately ascertained. And yes, his neighbours apparently told the cops that his house often remained locked for 15-20 days. Did you ever imagine that any of this could make a journalist a Maoist?

Then again, journalists have not been the only targets. In April 2010, Sunil Mandiwal, an assistant professor of Delhi University, was detained twice by the police for suspected links with Maoists. As usual, the cops claimed they recovered “Left-leaning” literature and books from Mandiwal’s home, which, for them, was evidence enough.

In June 2010, scientist Nisha Biswas, college professor Kaniska Chowdhury and writer Manik Mondal were arrested for visiting West Bengal’s Lalgarh area where they were surveying the severity of state-sponsored atrocities carried out by the central-state joint forces. Their crime included participation in street corner meetings organized by various human rights and resistance groups including the People’s Committee Against Police Atrocities (PCAPA).

In July, Debalina Chakraborty, a student of Jadavpur University, went on an indefinite fast after the state CID dubbed her a Maoist leader. Chakraborty, secretary of a women’s organisation working in tribal areas of Nandigram and Lalgarh, was booked under the Unlawful Activities Prevention Act (UAPA) by the cops after they recovered a letter from a Maoist courier written by one “Debu”.

Such instances are too many but for want of space, let’s jump to more recent ones. In December 2012, Kerala police arrested Gopal, a former scientist of the Indira Gandhi Centre for Atomic Research, Kalpakkam, and six others and booked them under the UAPA as Maoists. While Gopal was a vocal member of the Committee for the Protection of Civil Liberties (PUCL) in Tamil Nadu, others were active student union members and took part in various protest movements such as the anti-Kudankulam agitation.

Only last week, Anam Vivekananda Reddy, MLA from Nellore rural, dubbed Telangana Joint Action Committee chairman professor M Kodandaram a “terrorist” who was “preaching terrorism to students instead of giving lessons”. The professor, Reddy told the media, was working to strengthen the Maoists and deserved exemplary punishment including termination of his job at Osmania University.

Not all of us join rallies against injustice — social, environmental, political or economic — or visit slums and villages to help out the victims of a lopsided system. But most of us have a thing or two to say about the affairs of the state and those occupying our public offices. Not all of them use sanitised language in personal communications. Now that the biggest of brothers have built the capacity to snoop on every spoken and written word, even the most casual and inconsequential comments can be used against you.

Going by the instances cited above, and the sarkari sleuth’s ingenious ability to make a travesty of truth and common sense, most of us may soon qualify to be a Maoist, a sympathizer or, at any rate, merit a sedition complaint. It will all depend on if and when the authorities have scores to settle or need a few scapegoats.


http://www.firstpost.com/tech/after...-can-soon-legally-read-your-email-855683.html

The govt of India seems to be more of a threat than Maoists. If Maoists are able to attract all these educated and uncorrupt ppl then someone is not telling us the complete picture. The uneducated and corrupt govt of India tells us a different story. Who do we believe. Both have killed innocent ppl, so plz do not use that as a point of argument?
 
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Get a life man, fuk the maoist slime! Govt. does it for your security and has the decency to ask for your perusal, In China govts simply shove it down your throat. I'm happy this is happening finally anti - Indian sympathizer scum can be eradicated
 
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Get a life man, fuk the maoist slime! Govt. does it for your security and has the decency to ask for your perusal, In China govts simply shove it down your throat. I'm happy this is happening finally anti - Indian sympathizer scum can be eradicated




BIGGEST ANTI INDIAN SCUMBAGS ARE THE POLITICANS...READ THE DAMN ARTICLE TO SEE HOW INNOCENT PPL ARE BEING TARGETED MORON. SECONDLY, I AM A FEMALE SO PLZ ADDRESS AS SUCH.
 
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BIGGEST ANTI INDIAN SCUMBAGS ARE THE POLITICANS...READ THE DAMN ARTICLE TO SEE HOW INNOCENT PPL ARE BEING TARGETED MORON. SECONDLY, I AM A FEMALE SO PLZ ADDRESS AS SUCH.
Ma'am with due respect to your personal views i just want to say that the G.O.I. is doing an excellent job by targetting these "so called" innocent people(most of them are anti-nationals after all).
i read the name of a Deboleena Chakraborty in this article who has claimed that she is being allegedly "victimized" by the Police.now do you know the real identity of this "self proclaimed" innocent woman!she is the leader of Matangini Mahila Samity,which is a public front of the C.P.I.(Maoist).she is nothing but a maoist sympathizer who is a pain in the b**t of the Kolkata Police(i know all these because i am from Kolkata and live near the Jadavpur University which was her political domain):coffee:
 
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The problem here is the utter lack of transparency and the bureaucratic hurdles put in place of anyone attempting to find out what happened. There will be nothing to stop the politicians from consolidating their power and influence and governments from running over innocent civilians. When the pressure builds up, the only objective is to find a fall guy....and not so much about the evidence.

This is wrong on so many levels. Pity.
 
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Get a life man, fuk the maoist slime! Govt. does it for your security and has the decency to ask for your perusal, In China govts simply shove it down your throat. I'm happy this is happening finally anti - Indian sympathizer scum can be eradicated

yeah right.....please do not get sucked into this "does it for your security" trap .... No govt. should get soo much power over the people .... It has never ever ended right...

I'd rather have my privacy over my security...
 
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too much invasion of privacy, it should be authorized at right level.
 
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Any action with the intention of saving innocent lives is a good action!!
Even if a single incident is averted or even a single terrorist arrested I would consider it a good move!!
The only people worried about intrusion of privacy are the ones who have things to hide inside their closed closets...
 
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related news

New National Cyber Coordination Centre

The NCCC will carry out real-time assessment of cyber security threats and generate alerts for proactive actions by law enforcement agencies


Indians using the internet might be worried over the U.S. spy agencies snooping into their accounts and online data, but the government has set the ball rolling for creating its own multi-agency body — National Cyber Coordination Centre (NCCC) — that would carry out “real-time assessment of cyber security threats” and “generate actionable reports/alerts for proactive actions” by law enforcement agencies.

Though the government won’t say that they would be able to look into your Facebook or Twitter accounts as and when required, the fact remains that the setting up of the federal Internet scanning agency will give law enforcement agencies direct access to all Internet accounts, be it your e-mails, blogs or social networking data.

“The NCCC will collect, integrate and scan [Internet] traffic data from different gateway routers of major ISPs at a centralised location for analysis, international gateway traffic and domestic traffic will be aggregated separately ... The NCCC will facilitate real-time assessment of cyber security threats in the country and generate actionable reports/alerts for proactive actions by the concerned agencies,” says a secret government note.

All top government spy and technical agencies will be part of the NCCC that would be set up at a cost of around Rs. 1,000 crore. “The proposed cyber security architecture envisages setting up a National Cyber Coordination Centre [NCCC] which would be a multi-agency body under Department of Electronics and IT,” says the note.

Other government agencies that will play an active role in the NCCC include the National Security Council Secretariat (NSCS), Intelligence Bureau (IB), Research and Analysis Wing (RAW), Indian Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT-In), National Technical Research Organisation (NTRO), Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO), DIARA, Army, Navy, Air Force, and Department of Telecommunications.

Government sources said the government would also involve Internet service providers (ISPs) to ensure round-the-clock monitoring of the Internet, while expertise of other private sector organisations would be utilised when required. It will be India’s first layer for cyber threat monitoring and all communication with government and private service providers would be through this body only. The NCCC would be in virtual contact with the control room of all ISPs to scan traffic within the country, flowing at the point of entry and exit, including international gateway, they added.

Apart from monitoring the Internet, the NCCC would look into various threats posed by cyber attacks. “In recent months, we have seen growing cases of computer networks of government departments and organisations coming under cyber attacks. We have seen foreign spy agencies and hackers trying to get sensitive government data or hack important websites. For instance, hackers defaced CBI website and attempts were made to break into Indian Railways website. The NCCC would address these shortcomings,” said a senior government official.

Before the NCCC comes into being, the National Information Board (NIB) has mandated the Operational Group on Cyber Security to have dialogue with stakeholders and share information to prepare a road map for setting up the cyber monitoring agency.New National Cyber Coordination Centre | iGovernment.in
 
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About time. I chose safety over some superficial delusion called privacy.
 
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Govt. going to check my mails . Well , I don't mind .
 
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Any action with the intention of saving innocent lives is a good action!!
Even if a single incident is averted or even a single terrorist arrested I would consider it a good move!!
The only people worried about intrusion of privacy are the ones who have things to hide inside their closed closets...

And what happens when this technology is abused by the government?? Can you trust Indian politicians with this much power??
Every email, every phone conversation, every sms, every personal message is read by these people. The internet is supposed to encourage free speech however we just saw people being arrested for a facebook comment and now due to this move we will see many more such cases. Imagine people being arrested just because they wrote an email to their friend criticizing politicians.
The ends do not justify the means.
 
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Govt. going to check my mails . Well , I don't mind .

it can be abused by lower beurocracy and police. Do you want to pay to police for something your wrote in mail...?
such invasion to privacy must be done in special cases and be authorized at high level..
 
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