Skip to main content
Back to content

Tag: non-personal data

Future of Data Protection

Privacy for sale: India is pushing for more data exploitation, not personal data protection

4 Feb 2021

In India, the black market for people’s personal data is booming, putting privacy at risk. Yet the government is pushing to regulate “non-personal” information instead of advancing a personal data protection regime that would keep Indians safe.

Post
Privacy for sale: India is pushing for more data exploitation, not personal data protection
4 Feb 2021
Privacy for sale: India is pushing for more data exploitation, not personal data protection
Australia’s Privacy Act

Access Now on India’s plan to regulate “non-personal” data: protect personal data first

16 Sep 2020

India should pursue plans to govern “non-personal” data only after a comprehensive personal data protection and privacy law has been enacted, and a truly independent and strong regulator has been put in place.

Post
Access Now on India’s plan to regulate “non-personal” data: protect personal data first
16 Sep 2020
Access Now on India’s plan to regulate “non-personal” data: protect personal data first
Privacy Overview

This website uses strictly necessary cookies for functionality, and asks if you’d like to opt-in to anonymous analytics collection. The anonymous analytic cookies are stored in your browser and perform functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you utilise the most. We use this information to improve our website layout, content, and donations practices.

Strictly Necessary

Strictly necessary cookies should be enabled at all times. These cookies are used only for fraud prevention, session integrity, and to save your cookie preferences.

Analytics

Access Now uses Matomo, an open-source, self-hosted analytics platform, to collect anonymous information such as the number of visitors to the site, what people's journey across our website looks like, and the most popular pages. The data collected is stored on our own, secure servers and never shared with third parties.