GH (1) Courtesy: Gateway House
24 September 2025

India’s new laws hold platforms accountable

The colonial penal code never imagined a world where software, not a human, amplifies hatred. Section 197 of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita now penalises ‘acts prejudicial to national integration’ carried out through electronic communication.

War Cemetery 'Death Railwai'_ Kanchanburi, Thailand (1) Courtesy: Gateway House
7 August 2025

Lessons from the ChatGPT Confession Files

The fallout of the ChatGPT Confession Files, where a leak resulted in large tracts of sensitive private and proprietary data becoming public, has been a hard lesson to learn: that even cutting-edge technology is only as safe as its most misunderstood feature. For India’s global technology sector, where clients rely on ironclad privacy and stewardship, the stakes are uniquely high.

Data securityTechGig.com Courtesy: TechGig.com
20 July 2022

India’s Data Security Challenges

India’s technology industry grew 15.5% during the pandemic, and so have the cyber-attacks on critical infrastructure and stealing of intellectual property (IP). While an exhaustive data protection bill introduced by MeitY is under consideration, India must study and can benefit from Japan’s existing data protection law to protect consumer privacy and implement cybersecurity measures.

Mainimage(2) Courtesy: Gateway House
4 July 2019

Decoding data localisation

Data localisation, or the practice of physically storing data on servers located within a country, has become a subject of robust debate after India introduced data localisation provisions in its domestic laws. India’s position is not unique; China and Russia too have similar laws. It has pitted countries against each other. This Gateway House primer explains the complexities of data localisation and its elements