India's latest app regulation order has ignited a political firestorm. Opposition voices in parliament are calling it a privacy nightmare, demanding the government pull back immediately. The controversy centers on surveillance capabilities embedded in the policy framework. What started as a regulatory move has turned into a full-blown debate about digital rights and state overreach. Sources close to the matter suggest officials are now reconsidering their stance amid mounting pressure. The situation highlights how quickly tech policy can become a lightning rod for broader concerns about government transparency and user data protection.
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DegenMcsleepless
· 54m ago
India's move this time is really something else—they've directly embedded surveillance packages into their policies and still want to sneak it through? Wake up, everyone.
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PumpingCroissant
· 1h ago
Here comes another round of heavy surveillance. India is really playing with fire this time... How can anyone tolerate this?
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JustHereForAirdrops
· 1h ago
India's actions this time are really outrageous. They’ve directly embedded monitoring clauses into the policy framework? Isn’t this basically saying they want to openly inspect our packages?
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AirdropChaser
· 1h ago
Same old story—government regulation uses "privacy" as an excuse to shift the blame. They really think users are fools.
India's latest app regulation order has ignited a political firestorm. Opposition voices in parliament are calling it a privacy nightmare, demanding the government pull back immediately. The controversy centers on surveillance capabilities embedded in the policy framework. What started as a regulatory move has turned into a full-blown debate about digital rights and state overreach. Sources close to the matter suggest officials are now reconsidering their stance amid mounting pressure. The situation highlights how quickly tech policy can become a lightning rod for broader concerns about government transparency and user data protection.