privacy law

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Safeguarding the Digital Self: An Inquiry into India’s Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023

Published On: September 04th 2025 Authored By: Shreyas Rastogi ICFAI University Dehradun Abstract Imagine a world where every tap, swipe, and click you make is silently recorded, stored, and analyzed—sometimes without your knowledge, let alone your consent. In an age where data has become more valuable than oil, the digital footprints we leave behind have […]

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Chain-locked book, phone, and laptop symbolizing digital and intellectual security.

RIGHT TO PRIVACY POST- PUTTASWAMY: EVOLVING JURISPRUDENCE IN INDIA

Published on 26th August 2025 Authored By: Kashvi Chawla Maharaja Agrasen Institute of Management Studies, IP University “Right to Privacy is really important. You pull that brick out and another and pretty soon the house falls.”[1] ABSTRACT “Man by nature is a social animal”[2]. Individuals share specific information with others and conceal some information that

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Chain-locked book, phone, and laptop symbolizing digital and intellectual security.

Facial Recognition Technology and Right to  Privacy in India: Legal and Ethical  Concerns

Published on 03rd August 2025 Authored By: Sanskriti Upadhyay Shambhunath Institute of Law, Prayagraj Introduction Facial Recognition Technology (FRT) has develop as one of the most controversial and  rapidly expanding technologies in modern India. This biometric identification system, which  creates digital maps of human faces through complicated algorithms, represents both a  emerging technologies and a

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Chain-locked book, phone, and laptop symbolizing digital and intellectual security.

Facial Recognition and the Right to Privacy  in India

Published on 29th July 2025 Authored By: Shruti Kumari Bharati Vidyapeeth New Law College Pune Introduction The constitutional basis for challenging Facial Recognition Technology (FRT) lies in the  Supreme Court’s landmark decision Justice K.S. Puttaswamy (Retd.) v. Union of India (2017)[1], wherein a nine-judge bench affirmed privacy as a fundamental right under Articles 14, 19, and 

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