Data Disputes Mediation and Arbitration Center to start under FDPPI

FDPPI (Foundation of Data Protection Professionals in India) is the Champion organization in Personal Data protection in India. Started in September 2018 under the leadership of Naavi, FDPPI has made significant strides in establishing itself as the torch bearer of Data protection in India to the extent that its byline “Think Data, Think FDPPI” makes real sense.

In its bid to provide End to End data protection services, FDPPI today provides “Certification in Data protection laws of India and other major laws” through two programs titled Module-I and Module-G.

FDPPI also is working on the “Unified Personal Data Protection Framework” namely PDPSI (Personal Data Protection Standard of India” so that organizations may be compliant with Personal data protection Act of India as at present and as proposed with extensions for GDPR and other data protection laws to which an organization in India is exposed.

The third leg of serving the Data Protection community namely providing a “Grievance Redressal mechanism” for

a) Data Principals (Data Subjects) and the Data Fiduciaries (Data Controllers)

b) Data Principals and Consent Managers  or

c) Data Principal and another Data Principal

d) Data Fiduciary and Data Processor or a sub contractor

e) Data Processor and a sub contractor etc

Now FDPPI has started work on establishing a “Data Disputes Mediation and Arbitration Center” to address Alternate Dispute Resolution Mechanism required by the industry.

Initially the “Mediation” wing will start operations. Subsequently, a “With Recourse Arbitration” meaning Arbitration without prejudice to the Adjudication proceedings provided under the legacy system would be introduced.

The arbitration and mediation would meet the expectations of Indian Arbitration Act as amended and will also be in tune with the technical standards indicated by UNCITRAL.

The entire infrastructure for the same is available under odrglobal.in which will be made available for online arbitration. The professionals to conduct the arbitration would be drawn from the trained senior professionals who are experts in the field of Data Protection with more than 10 years of legal and technical expertise.

Hopefully, with this FDPPI will be able to provide the required support to the Data Protection industry even before the Personal Data Protection Bill becomes an Act.

Cyber Law College is also organizing the necessary mandatory training in Indian Arbitration Act to those who are participating in this activity.

More details will be made available through FDPPI.

Naavi

 

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Pharma data breaches should stop once data protection law comes into force

Three major cyber attacks in the Indian pharma industry in the last few months have left people wondering whether there is a pattern indicating the reason for this spurt. First was the Breach Candy Hospital one in February 2020 where over 121 million medical records were compromised. Of these, 120 million were images stored in the Digital Imaging and Communications in Medicine system consisting of X-rays, scan reports, etc. One million records contained Aadhaar information, medical history, etc. The data breach reportedly occurred because the access system of the hospital was compromised. Though this was an alarming data breach, the matter was hushed up and there was no apparent investigation by the Indian Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT-IN) or any further announcements in the media.

In October 2020, Dr Lal PathLabs reported a data breach of millions of records because their Cloud records reportedly did not have a password for access. Again, this was brushed under the carpet and no action was initiated by CERT-IN.

More recently, Dr Reddy’s Laboratories, which was testing a Covid vaccine from Russia, was attacked. Questions must be asked whether the lack of prompt action by CERT-IN earlier emboldened the criminals to continue their attacks on these pharma companies, which are soft targets holding highly valuable data assets.

The first reaction when such cyber incidents are reported is to find out how the breach occurred, whether there were any vulnerabilities in the technical architecture or whether there was failure of controls. But the possibility of insider frauds causing such breaches cannot be ruled out since negligence and failure of information security are easily visible to the extent that ignorance alone cannot be the cause of these attacks.

Most of these companies are certified by various agencies under ISO 27001 standards or other quality ratings and the incidents highlight the failure of these systems to protect data. Indian lawmakers have provided undue legal recognition to ISO 27001 as if it is “deemed compliance” under Section 43A (ITA 2000). These incidents highlight the folly of those who wrote these rules. Hopefully, this will be automatically obliterated after the passage of the Personal Data Protection Act in India.

But a closer look at the incidents indicates that we should not see these incidents only as an information security issue and the responsibility of the ministry of electronics and information technology alone. This is the result of the failure of many other ministries such as finance, health and law. All these divisions must collaborate in taking steps to reduce the risk of such cyber attacks in future.

There are many studies of data breach incidents in the world which have indicated that designating a chief information security officer in an organisation has the effect of reducing the cost of data breaches significantly. Similarly, operationalising the Data Protection Law and the Data Protection Authority is expected to have its own effect in reducing such incidents. In fact, it appears as if the hackers are in a hurry to complete their hacks before India passes the Personal Data Protection Bill, (PDPB) 2019. Had the law been in force, companies such as Dr Reddy’s Laboratories, Dr Lal PathLabs or Breach Candy Hospital would have fortified their data protection system and possibly prevented the attack or mitigated its impact.

Incidentally, the finance ministry has two kinds of responsibilities associated with the mitigation of risks in such incidents. These are often completely out of our radar. The first is to ensure that every company holding valuable data should see its value in the financial statements and balance sheets by tweaking the principles of accounting and disclosure.

It is estimated that the black market rate for medical data sets in the dark web is $250. Hence, a loss of one million data sets in a company like Dr Lal PathLabs means that the total value of assets compromised could be around Rs 1,750 crore.

Today, the fact that a company may hold that value of data as its asset is not visible either to it, the shareholders or SEBI. Hence, allocation of resources to secure this invisible asset would suffer. Like in the case of “goodwill” and other intangible assets, or “contingent liabilities” that are brought into balance sheets as “special reserves” or “contra entries”, there is a need to bring the value of data asset of a company into the balance sheet for public disclosure.

If this system is followed, then the company management would be aware of the value of assets they hold, which have to be secured and insured even if it has a cost. If the value is visible, the company would also realise the value of following data protection principles such as restricting the collection of data to the purpose for which it is required and deleting used data after the purpose of its collection is accomplished.

If the data can be segregated into “personal” and “non-personal data” (including anonymised personal data) in the balance sheet, then the company can have an even better visibility of its data assets from the data governance principle and unlocking the value of non-personal data or the value of anonymising the personal data.

The finance ministry should, therefore, work with the Institute of Chartered Accountants to initiate a system of bringing data value into the books of accounts from the next financial year. It should also make data breaches less remunerative for data thieves.

Incidentally, the entire dark web economy is based on the use of cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin. Hence, if financial cyber crimes are to be reduced in the world, there is no option but to demonetise cryptocurrencies and criminalise their use. We need to recognise that Bitcoin is like the menace of narcotic drugs and can compromise bureaucracy, the government and even the judiciary. There is no cyber security without banning of Bitcoins and cryptocurrencies and the ministry of finance needs to realise this and act without further delay. The law ministry should assist the finance ministry and the RBI in bringing the necessary law for banning cryptocurrencies so that even the Supreme Court cannot legitimise this evil.

The health ministry has already introduced Electronic Health Record (EHR) guidelines which are as stringent as Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act regulations in the US followed by hospitals. Though the passage of PDPB 2019 would bring in similar regulations, the ministry can notify all private hospitals and large healthcare agencies to start implementing the suggestions of the EHR guidelines as a sectoral regulation which can be adopted as a ready “Code of Practice” under PDPB 2019.

The responsibility of CERT-IN has already been set under the Information Technology Act as the nodal agency for cyber security in the country. Cyber security cannot be complete without properly responding to data breach incidents in the private sector, for which there are enough directions and powers under Section 70B.

Questions have been raised in the media about why Dr Reddy’s Laboratories chose to shut down production of its facilities in the UK, the US, Brazil and India because of the cyber attack and whether this would be the trend in future. It must be recognised that when a major data breach occurs in a life critical industry like pharma, action should be initiated to contain the damage first, then identify the root cause. Thereafter, action can be taken to eliminate the cause. This may require a temporary shutdown of operations to prevent further damage.

In the case of Dr Reddy’s, the responsibility was higher as the company is exposed not only to Indian laws, but to General Data Protection Regulation and Food and Drug Administration regulations. The management of Dr Reddy’s should be appreciated for taking the bold decision to close down its operations until the risk is identified and eliminated.

It is also necessary to flag one more risk that should be recognised because of the publicity gathered by these three data breaches. We are all aware of fake fire accidents that many unscrupulous organisations resort to to claim fire insurance. Similarly, it is possible for unscrupulous organisations to use “fake data thefts” to sell the personal data of citizens on the dark web. In the past, we have seen “data laundering” carried out through mergers and acquisitions where valuable data assets from Indian companies have been transferred to foreign entities. One example was how the ownership of CIBIL, owned by public sector banks having a huge treasure of sensitive personal data of Indian citizens, was surreptitiously transferred to a US company by the sale of shares by individual banks. Though this was a scam involving transfer of thousands of crores of data assets, the finance ministry never recognised the suspicious nature of this acquisition.

Similarly in the coming days, “fake data breaches” may also be used to siphon off data from Indian owners to a foreign company. It is for this reason that in all such major data breaches, CERT-IN should not remain silent and must conduct a mandatory inquiry to document the findings to rule out frauds by the management. A joint inter-ministerial task force is required to find a solution to prevent such data breaches in future.

Na.Vijayashankar

—The writer is a cyber law and techno-legal information security consultant based in Bengaluru

[Reproduced from India Legallive.com]

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Has Modi given up his fight against Corruption?

Naavi.org has been time and again pointing out that Bitcoins and Crypto Currencies are like the drug menace and have to be eliminated from India if we are serious about rooting out corruption and cyber crimes.

I still believe that Mr Narendra Modi is interested in curbing corruption and cyber crimes. The currency used for these illegal activities including terrorist payments is Bitcoins and other forms of Crypto Currency.

If Crypto currency is eliminated, the Dark Web will be choked of its life blood and it will reduce Cyber Crimes. If this was the only benefit of curbing Crypto currency, perhaps the MOH would have persuaded the MOF to ban Crypto Currency long time back.

But, more importantly, Bitcoin and crypto currency is the life blood of corruption in India and all the politicians, bureaucrats and even some members of the Judiciary could be soft on anything that prevents easy means of corruption and hence are happy to let Bitcoin thrive.

At one point RBI was trying to bring curbs on Bitcoins, But the Bitcoin lobby was able to get a surprising favorable judgement from Supreme Court. It provided what appeared to be a temporary technical relief which has now become a conspiratorial permission to legitimize Bitcoins.

Since then, RBI also has gone silent. The draft bill for regulation of Crypto currency is gathering dust in the MeitY . The message to the public is clear. Corruption wins against even Mr Modi.

I have been trying to bring to the notice of Mr Modi as the last hope to take action in this regard but so far, there is no reply or even an acknowledgement from PMO or the PM.

I suspect that any postings made in the PMO website is filtered and it is not reaching Mr Modi.

Unless Mr Modi takes steps to be able to listen to the public without the coterie deciding what he should see and what he should not, this matter will not get his attention. In the meantime, there are attempts for Banks to get deeper into handling Bitcoins since every body including the Bank Chairmen are happy to support the “Currency of Corruption”.

Waiting for A Miracle

I wish that  there is a miracle and Mr Modi turns his attention on Banning Bitcoin.

Let  God give strength to Mr Modi to take this decision which will surely be a decision harder than launching an attack on China across LAC.

I request any of the viewers of this post including the intelligence agencies who should be monitoring this blog, to bring it to the notice of Mr Modi so that he can once for all clarify whether he has the courage to block Bitcoins and crypto currencies in India or he is too afraid to take this decision.

Once a clarification is received from Mr Modi one way or the other, people like us can  drop our hopes and devote our attention to other things.

Naavi

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Quora Protects Owaisi

It is interesting to note the news report in Republicworld.com which states that Quora has disabled the account of “True Indology” classifying one of its posts as “Hate speech”.

The post has been reproduced here:

After the partition of India, Owaisi’s party MIM praised Jinnah and invited him to their annual conference in 1947. Even Nizam of Hyderabad praised him to skies and publicly declared that Jinnah was the greatest Muslim politician. Following were the words used by the Nizam of Hyderabad for Jinnah .’Dear Jinnah, please come to our annual session Majlis Ittehadul Muslimeen. Hyderabad looks to your support. You are a life-giver to the whole Muslim community. You are an untiring warrior to the cause of Islam,” 

To any independent observer, the post does not seem to have any hate content. Perhaps for Quora, the words “Owaisi”, “Jinnah”, “Islam”  are key words which the AI algorithm uses for classifying hate content.

The incident indicates the inadequacies of AI for content screening and the lack of human oversight.

We may recall that some time back we highlighted that YouTube deleted the account of Mr Praveen  Mohan  who is an independent researcher who has done studies of temple architecture across the globe and points out observations linked to science and mythology. Some times he makes reference to the oldest civilization on earth which unfortunately happens to be the Hindu civilization. He therefore makes references to Ramayana, Mahabharata etc.  This account has since been restored by You tube.

But the two incidents indicate how the Social media groups err in content filtering by making any information on Pakistan from India as “Hate Speech” and any reference to “Temples” as “Inappropriate content”.

I hope Quora will admit its mistake and restore the account of True Indology with an apology.

The report suggests that Quora belongs to the Twitter group. We have indications from the past that Twitter management is controlled by Pakistan sympathizers and probably the moderators of Quora also have tuned the AI algorithm to be Pakistan sympathetic.

If Twitter and Quora chose to take the Pakistani side in launching an information war on India, they may soon find competitors developing in India and just as Chinese apps are being replaced by Indian apps, Twitter may be replaced by Koo or some other Indian app, if not completely, at least for the Indian audience.

Hope Quora will realize its mistake and correct it. I look forward to their press release on republicworld.com.

Naavi

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Will the JPC on PDPB allow itself to be brainwashed by known Manipulators?

In a bid to appear non partisan, the Joint Parliamentary Committee (JPC) on Personal Data Protection Bill 2019, has invited not only the industry associations but also many individual foreign technical giants to depose before itself. If Amazon, Twitter, Google, FaceBook or even VISA etc are invited to depose, it is more likely that the JPC will gather more views on how to dilute the Bill further rather than protect the data sovereignty of the country.

Already the PDPB 2019 is a highly diluted version compared to the PDPA 2018 and the most contentious part of Data Localization has been given up.

When the EU GDPR is moving more and more towards “Data Localization” through an imposition of the Standard Contractual Clauses, it is strange that India is providing free data transfer across the borders.

There were two major demands on the Indian Personal Data Protection law. First was to reduce the power of the Government to use personal data for carrying out its responsibilities in law enforcement and national security. Second was to ease the controls for data transfer out of India without reasonable restrictions.

The PDPB 2019 has already accepted the “Free Data Transfer” principle. Now if the Government keeps consulting all the business entities, the only suggestions they receive would be how to make the bill more friendly to business.

There is already a rumour in the Delhi circles that the business entities are entering into various deals with the Government and it will make changes to the Bill as dictated by these agencies.

We sincerely believe that the JPC will not fall into the trap of listening to the tech giants who are known “Manipulators” of public opinion.

The Current objective of the JPC is to get the law fine tuned to avoid gaffes.  A law like this will need to balance the views of multiple types of stake holders and the JPC cannot therefore satisfy all. In the end every one will have some points of dissatisfaction and it is perfectly natural.

By prolonging the decision and listening more and more to vested interests, there is a possibility that the JPC will be overwhelmed by the business views. At some point of time, some body will say, out of 100 people who deposed before the committee, 90 wanted that data should be freely transferred, 85 wanted Government not to have any rights of surveillance etc and force the Committee to make changes to accommodate the majority view. This will make it difficult to introduce decisions which are good for the country.

I would like to point out here, if the Government runs a referendum on the Indian Constitution, a majority of Indians would opt for a re-definition of the term Secularism to mean non appeasement of specific religions, caste etc. Just as the Government would not like to go by the majority in making laws of such nature, PDPB cannot be left to be decided by the majority of deponents who represent vested interests. It will be like taking a referendum in Kashmir after cleansing the Hindu population.

We therefore urge the JPC to be not too much worried about inviting every business entity to depose before it and restrict its consultation only to neutral experts in the filed.

There is a proverb in Kannada to the effect “Some body tried to create Ganesha in clay and ended up creating his father (Lingam)”. (ಗಣೇಶನ ಮಾಡೋಕ್ಕೆ ಹೋಗಿ, ಗಣೇಶನ ಅಪ್ಪನ್ನ ಮಾಡಿದರು).

Similarly, there is a real danger that the final version of PDPB may turn out to be  completely different from what it was meant to be. I wish the JPC  resists the temptation of inviting all and sundry,  prolong the proceedings and let itself to be brainwashed.

Even if the JPC holds up its commitment for an act that serves more the Indian interests than the business interests, we see the danger of some of the opponents of the Bill creating documentation to help them challenge the Act later stating that a majority of deponents had a different view and it was unfairly ignored by the JPC .

If it happens, it will be a tragedy.

Naavi

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When will my time come?…Are we ready?

Data Breaches are happening every day exposing companies to major data disasters. When the Indian Personal Data Protection Act becomes a law in early 2021, Are we ready to meet the consequences?

FDPPI presents you an opportunity to share your thoughts on how your company is preparing for  PDPA compliance in India.

Please share your thoughts through a survey available here:

FDPPI in association with Cyber Law College is structuring specific programs to address the requirements of different types of organizations to get ready for the PDPA era in India. The survey is intended to be of use in this direction.

Naavi

 

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