The Imperative of Digital Constitutionalism in India

Syllabus: Indian Constitution — historical underpinnings, evolution, features, amendments, significant provisions and basic structure.

Context

  • The Centre withdrew its directive requiring smartphone manufacturers to pre-install the ‘Sanchar Saathi’ app from 2026.
  • The rollback followed public concerns over ambiguous data practices, lack of consent mechanisms, surveillance risks, and indefinite data storage.

Meaning of Digital Constitutionalism

  • Refers to applying constitutional values — liberty, dignity, equality, accountability and rule of law — to digital governance systems.
  • Increasing use of biometric systems, AI-driven tools, and algorithmic governance has created spaces where constitutional protections are weak or absent.

Growing Concerns in the Digital Space

  • Automated systems increasingly mediate KYC, welfare delivery, employment, health data, and political communication without user awareness.
  • Power is concentrated with technology developers, enforcement bodies and private corporations, reducing citizens to passive data units.
  • Surveillance is now silent and continuous through metadata, location tracking, biometrics, predictive modelling and behavioural analytics.
  • This environment fosters self-censorship and restricts dissent, undermining democratic participation.

Legal and Institutional Gaps

  • The Puttaswamy judgment (2017) recognised privacy as a fundamental right, but the Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 provides wide exemptions for the State and weak individual safeguards.
  • India lacks comprehensive surveillance legislation, independent oversight, or transparent auditing mechanisms for high-risk algorithms.
  • Existing laws (e.g., IT Act, 2000) focus on platform regulation rather than protection of citizen rights.

Key Areas of Harm

  • Facial recognition risks discrimination and misidentification, as seen globally.
  • Algorithmic opacity leads to welfare exclusion, unfair profiling, and arbitrary content removal.
  • Citizens often lack remedies due to slow judicial processes and low digital literacy.

Need for a Digital Rights Framework

  • Creation of an independent Digital Rights Commission for oversight and accountability.
  • Strict limitations on surveillance based on necessity and proportionality.
  • Mandatory algorithm audits, bias testing and rights to explanation and appeal.
  • Stronger data protection through purpose limitation, minimal collection and strict penalties for misuse.
  • Digital literacy as an essential element of democratic empowerment.

Conclusion

  • As governance becomes data-driven, constitutional values must anchor technological deployment.
  • Digital constitutionalism is essential to ensure that technology remains accountable to citizens, not an unchecked instrument of control.

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