Data Protection in India

Security in India

Under the DPDP Act, Data Fiduciaries are required to protect the personal data under their control, with respect to any processing undertaken by them or on their behalf by a Data Processor, by taking reasonable security safeguards to prevent any kind of personal data breach. Notably, the highest quantum of financial penalty prescribed under the DPDP Act, being INR 250 Crores, is for failure on the part of a Data Fiduciary to take reasonable security safeguards to prevent personal data breach.

The Draft Rules prescribe the minimum standards that the Data Fiduciary is required to adhere to:

  • appropriate data security measures, including securing of such personal data through its encryption, obfuscation or masking or the use of virtual tokens mapped to that personal data;
  • appropriate measures to control access to the computer resources used by such Data Fiduciary or the relevant Data Processor;
  • visibility on the accessing of such personal data, through appropriate logs, monitoring and review, for enabling detection of unauthorised access, its investigation and remediation to prevent recurrence;
  • reasonable measures for continued processing in the event of confidentiality, integrity or availability of such personal data being compromised as a result of destruction or loss of access to personal data or otherwise, including by way of data- backups;
  • for enabling the detection of unauthorised access, its investigation, remediation to prevent recurrence and continued processing in the event of such a compromise, retain such logs and personal data for a period of one year, unless compliance with any law for the time being in force requires otherwise;
  • appropriate provision in the contract entered into between such Data Fiduciary and such a Data Processor for taking reasonable security safeguards; and
  • appropriate technical and organisational measures to ensure effective observance of security safeguards.

Data Protection Impact Assessment

Under the DPDP Act, Significant Data Fiduciaries are required to appoint an independent data auditor who will undertake periodic Data Protection Impact Assessments, which has been described as a process comprising a description of the rights of Data Principals and the purpose of processing their personal data. It also includes an assessment and management of the risks to the rights of Data Principals.

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