Prøve GULL - Gratis
Our data privacy safeguards could also go against us
Mint Mumbai
|May 21, 2025
Keeping our personal data away from innovators may reduce the benefits we derive from AI
The first country to seriously address the issue of protecting digital personal data was the United States of America. In a report titled Records, Computers and the Rights of Citizens issued in 1973, it set out a list of data protection principles called the Fair Information Practice Principles (FIPPs).
FIPPs required organizations to provide notice before collecting personal data and seek consent before processing it. Only as much personal data as was necessary to achieve the specified purpose could be collected, and it could only be used for the purpose specified. Organizations had to keep personal data accurate, complete and up to date, and give individuals the ability to access and amend it as required.
If all this sounds familiar, it is because it is. These principles have been incorporated into all modern data protection laws—from Europe's General Data Protection Regulation to India's Digital Personal Data Protection Act. It is where concepts like notice and consent, purpose specification, use limitation, data minimization and retention restriction come from, and it is remarkable how 50 years after they were first conceptualized, they continue to be used to protect personal privacy.
Or do they? In the 1970s, our ability to process data was limited, constrained by computational power and storage capacity. As a result, very few organizations could afford to process personal information at a scale that would affect our privacy. Since companies had to be selective about what data they collected and used, it made sense to require them to constrain the uses to which they put the data and for how long they retained it.
Denne historien er fra May 21, 2025-utgaven av Mint Mumbai.
Abonner på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av kuraterte premiumhistorier og over 9000 magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
FLERE HISTORIER FRA Mint Mumbai
Mint Mumbai
Parag Parikh’s unlisted shares double on growth, tight supply
Parag Parikh Financial Advisory Services (PPFAS), a boutique asset manager with just six mutual fund schemes, is turning heads—not only among investors in its funds but also among shareholders of its unlisted stock.
2 mins
September 27, 2025

Mint Mumbai
Indian pharma dodges Trump's bullet for now
Mainstay generics not hit by 100% tariff; no clarity on branded copycat versions
3 mins
September 27, 2025

Mint Mumbai
JSW wins Bhushan back in SC review
In a win for JSW Steel Ltd, the Supreme Court has approved the company’s ₹19,700 crore plan to take over bankrupt Bhushan Power and Steel Ltd (BPSL), marking the end of one of India’s longest-running insolvency battles.
2 mins
September 27, 2025

Mint Mumbai
Anahat Singh: The rising star of squash
Singh was one of the fastest movers in the top 100 last season, with 12 titles from 18 PSA events
4 mins
September 27, 2025

Mint Mumbai
How AI is changing the office
The next big thing doesn't always turn out that way. There was a spasmodic moment in the early 2020s when the metaverse was going to be the future.
3 mins
September 27, 2025
Mint Mumbai
BSNL now covers 20 mn+ 4G users
With the formal launch of BSNL's 4G services on India-made technology on Friday, the state-owned telecom operator said its mobile network now serves more than 20 million people in India.
1 min
September 27, 2025

Mint Mumbai
Startup investors misjudge India: Peak XV’s Anandan
‘Every decade brings a 10-fold jump in startup scaling, making it hard to envision outcomes’
3 mins
September 27, 2025

Mint Mumbai
Supreme Court upholds JSW's Bhushan Power buy in review
The Supreme Court in its ruling on Friday said the delays in implementing the resolution plan for Bhushan Power were not attributable to JSW Steel or the CoC, citing legal challenges, property attachments, and other orders.
1 mins
September 27, 2025

Mint Mumbai
Read the signs, make policy that includes people
When my friend was in school in Delhi, his family put him in Russian class rather than Hindi because they thought that it would give him an advantage in a world where the erstwhile USSR was a superpower.
4 mins
September 27, 2025

Mint Mumbai
India's share in H-1B hits a decade's low
US President Donald Trump has accused Indians of abusing the H-IB visa system and announced a onetime $100,000 fee on new visas from next year, a nearly 100-fold jump from the current level. The visa numbers, however, tell another story about recent years.
2 mins
September 27, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size