New Data Privacy Bill Will Be Ready Soon, Nirmala Sitharaman Reportedly Confirms
New Data Privacy Bill Will Be Ready Soon, Nirmala Sitharaman Reportedly Confirms 386k26
New Data Privacy Bill would address every such concern most of us had on the privacy Bill, said Nirmala Sitharaman. 5x4j62
Written by Nithya P Nair, Edited by Richa Sharma | Updated: 7 September 2022 17:35 IST
The Personal Data Protection Bill 2019 was withdrawn by the government in August 2o3o1s
Highlights
Government of India is working on a new Data Protection Bil
The 2019 Bill raised concerns among big technology companies
t Parliamentary Committee recommended 12 recommendations
ment
India will get a new data privacy bill "soon", Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman confirmed on Wednesday. The Information Technology minister Ashwini Vaishnaw is working on it, said the minister, adding that the new Bill would address every such concern most of the people had on the privacy Bill. Last month, the government withdrew the controversial Personal Data Protection Bill announcing it was working on a new comprehensive law. The 2019 Bill proposed stringent regulations on cross-border data flows and suggested giving the government powers to seek data from companies.
As per a report by PTI, Sitharaman made remarks about the introduction of new data privacy bill today while speaking at the India Ideas Summit organised by the US-India Business Council.
"We will soon have a new Data Privacy Bill, which will be a product of consultations and will address every such concern most of us had on the privacy Bill," she reportedly said.
The Personal Data Protection Bill 2019 was withdrawn by the government in August after parliamentary 's review of the 2019 bill suggested many amendments. The Union Minister of Electronics and Information Technology Ashwini Vaishnaw had earlier said that the t committee have recommended 81 amendments in a Bill of 99 sections. There are said to be over 12 more recommendations and a new bill would be presented that would fit into the comprehensive legal framework.
The Bill had raised concerns among big technology companies such as Google that it could increase their compliance burden and data storage requirements.
Nithya P Nair is a journalist with more than five years of experience in digital journalism. She specialises in business and technology beats. A foodie at heart, Nithya loves exploring new places (read cuisines) and sneaking in Malayalam movie dialogues to spice up conversations. More