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Under Public Pressure, India Withdraws Draft Encryption Policy

An anonymous reader writes: The government of India withdrew its draft policy on encryption owing to public responses just a day after releasing the document. The Communications and Information Technology minister Ravi Shankar Prasad said — "I read the draft. I understand that the manner in which it is written can lead to misconceptions. I have asked for the draft policy to be withdrawn and reworded." While it is encouraging that the government recognized it mistake and withdrew, many fear that this is part of a larger problem when it comes to this government taking technology policy decisions. Recently, the government was in the dock for its lack of clarity on Net Neutrality.

2 of 35 comments (clear)

  1. Translation by sjbe · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "I read the draft. I understand that the manner in which it is written can lead to misconceptions. I have asked for the draft policy to be withdrawn and reworded." .

    Translation: "This was a blatant power grab and we got caught. I have asked for it to be reworded so that people won't notice the problem next time."

  2. Nope by sexconker · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It wasn't public pressure.
    It was the realization that all the American companies that offshore tech work to India would have to offshore to somewhere else instead.