Denemek ALTIN - Özgür

Taking control of data

Business Standard

|

June 03, 2025

In a geopolitically charged tech landscape, digital sovereignty is crucial for India to safeguard its future — and that of its citizens

- AJAI CHOWDHRY

Taking control of data

With 108 unicorns and a booming tech sector, digital adoption in India is accelerating fast, despite its vast and unique demographics, marked by stark contrasts.

The transformative ability of the blockbuster ABCD technologies — or artificial intelligence (AI), blockchain, Cloud adoption, and data analytics — is undisputed, and they are increasingly seeping into our daily lives.

We can no longer be complacent about AI's impact on us, whether in retail and hospitals, agriculture or our defence systems.

Yet one of the pressing challenges remains largely unresolved — data sovereignty.

As technology continues to reshape the global economic order, India must realign its thinking and begin with the end in mind: Ensuring that its digital future is not dictated by external entities but built on a foundation of secure, sovereign, and self-reliant data governance.

In the wake of the new trade tariffs and tightened security in sensitive regions like Pahalgam, data security has become more than just a regulatory challenge — it is now a national security imperative.

Cyberattacks targeting Indian infrastructure have surged.

Between 2019 and 2023, cybersecurity incidents reported to the Indian Computer Emergency Response team (CERT-In) surged more than fourfold, with cases involving government organisations alone more than doubling during the same period.

As India digitises governance, banking, and healthcare, even small breaches can trigger large-scale disruption.

The government's plan to make India a semiconductor hub is timely, but without parallel investment in end-to-end data protection — across public, private, and cross-border touchpoints — we risk becoming a data-rich but security-poor economy in an increasingly volatile world.

Business Standard'den DAHA FAZLA HİKAYE

Business Standard

Tariff cuts in FTAs likely to cost India ₹1 trillion in FY27

India’s customs duty forgone on account of preferential tariff reductions under free-trade agreements (FTAs) signed so far may cross ₹1 trillion in 2026-27 (FY27), according to the Budget documents.

time to read

2 mins

February 16, 2026

Business Standard

India will transit from global back office to strategic AI partner: Vaishnaw

Indian consumers are one of the largest users of AI.

time to read

2 mins

February 16, 2026

Business Standard

Business Standard

Addressing nutrition along with hunger

Are modern high-yielding varieties of grains less nutri- tive than traditional desi crops? This is a common per- ception that seems largely, albeit not wholly, well founded.

time to read

3 mins

February 16, 2026

Business Standard

BPCL unfazed by geopolitics, to buy crude on techno-commercial merit

State-run Bharat Petroleum Corporation (BPCL) will source crude oil purely on ‘techno-commercial’ considerations amid evolving geopolitical dynamics, Chairman and Managing Director Sanjay Khanna told Shubhangi Mathur in an in-person interaction.

time to read

2 mins

February 16, 2026

Business Standard

'Don't see major impact of proposed mis-selling norms'

Following Axis Max Life Insurance’s Q3FY26 earnings, Sumit Madan, managing director (MD) and chief executive officer (CEO) of the company, spoke to Aathira Varier and Subrata Panda in a video interview about the Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI's) proposed guidelines on mis-selling and their likely impact on the company and the sector, the firm’s business plans going forward, and the status of its reverse merger with Max Financial Services, among other issues. Edited excerpts:

time to read

3 mins

February 16, 2026

Business Standard

How Vietnam shaped the civil rights movement

‘The New York Times war correspondent David Halberstam caught the pulse of his era when he observed, in 1964, that there were parallels between America’s misbegotten adventure in Vietnam and the struggle for civil rights in the murderous, Klan-infested state of Mississippi.

time to read

3 mins

February 16, 2026

Business Standard

OMCs, banks drove India Inc's steepest profit rise in 8 qtrs

Corporate earnings in October-December 2025 (Q3FY26) were better than expected owing to a surge in the profits of public-sector oil-marketing companies (OMCs), banks, non-bank lenders, and firms in the business of metals and mining.

time to read

3 mins

February 16, 2026

Business Standard

Business Standard

SGB issue: Why tax certainty matters

Imagine a cricket Test match where the host prepares two pitches — a green top for fast bowlers and a dry track for spinners.

time to read

3 mins

February 16, 2026

Business Standard

MFs double down on private banks

Mutual funds (MFs) stepped up buying in private-sector bank stocks amid January's market turbulence, deploying significant capital into the segment.

time to read

1 min

February 16, 2026

Business Standard

SC remarks may help strengthen Rera, real estate industry

The Supreme Court’s (SC’s) recent remarks on the Real Estate Regulatory Authority (Rera) are expected to impact the real estate sector by shifting the focus from the strength of the law to the seriousness of its enforcement, experts say.

time to read

2 mins

February 16, 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size