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| Illustration by Copilot Designer |
India has officially decided to keep an eagle eye on
its citizens. Modi government has asked all smartphone manufacturers to
preinstall a government app, Sanchar Saathi, on every phone in such a
way that no citizen can ever uninstall it. The firms have been
also ordered to install the app on existing phones too using software-update technology.
The stated objective is to strengthen
cybersecurity and protect users from fraud. The question is why any government
should go out of its way to impose “security” on its citizens.
For over a month now, I have been
receiving a message every single day from the Government of India’s Telecom
Department to install the app on my phone. I wanted to block the sender, but
there is no such option. Even that message is an imposition. I don’t trust any
government that imposes benefits on me. “Beneficent beasts of prey,”
Robert Frost would call such governments.
When Modi government imposes security
on me, I have reasons to be wary. Reasons to worry, if not be alarmed.
Modi government has never been benevolent
to anyone who questions it. Hundreds of people have been arrested, many have
been killed, and a few have just vanished into thin air, for raising
inconvenient questions. When such a government asks us to install its app mandatorily
on our phones, there must be reasons far beyond our personal security.
Even if my government was not as malevolent as it is, making a state app
undeletable and mandatory on everyone’s phone would feel like overreach. Where
do we go from such an imposed app which has access to all the messages and
calls on your phone?
Many phone manufacturers including
Apple have voiced concerns, according to today’s newspapers. Modi government is
notorious enough for its espionage on citizens. In 2021, we were told that the
Israeli surveillance software called Pegasus was employed by Modi government
for spying on phones of certain journalists, activists, politicians, business
people and others.
The danger is not merely that some particular
people (whom the government is displeased with) may be watched. The danger
is structural. State use of spyware on its citizens can erode civil
liberties, deter free speech, compromise democracy, and violate personal
dignity. Modi is already a quasi-dictator. Imagine what a spyware planted in
every phone in the country can do for a dictator.

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