World Down Syndrome Day and Digital Accessibility: Inclusive Privacy
I've been thinking about who gets left out when we design privacy tools and consent systems. On World Down Syndrome Day, that question feels more pressing than usual.
Know your digital rights, RTI for data, and internet freedom in India.
9 articles
I've been thinking about who gets left out when we design privacy tools and consent systems. On World Down Syndrome Day, that question feels more pressing than usual.
India shut down the internet over 80 times in 2025. The economic damage crossed Rs 4,000 crore. And the government keeps calling these measures 'proportionate.' A skeptical look at where things stand in early 2026.
Something you did ten years ago still shows up on Google when someone searches your name. Should you have the right to make it disappear? India's answer is complicated, evolving, and worth understanding.
Your boss might be watching your screen right now. No, really. Since the work-from-home boom, Indian companies have quietly installed keystroke loggers, screenshot tools, and GPS trackers on employee devices. The law on whether any of this is legal? It's a mess.
People keep saying the DPDPA will let you ask what data the government holds on you. I disagree. The RTI Act has been doing that since 2005, for ten rupees, and most people haven't thought to try it.
The Information Technology Act 2000 is the foundational cyber law in India. Learn about its key provisions, amendments, and how they impact your digital privacy.
You've got more digital rights than you probably think. From the Puttaswamy privacy ruling to the DPDP Act to net neutrality protections, here's what the Constitution and Indian law actually guarantee you online — and how to use those rights when it matters.
India's streets are filling up with CCTV cameras faster than anyone can count them, yet there's barely a rulebook for who watches, who stores the footage, or how long they keep it. Here's what that means for your privacy.
A friend's bank leaked her Aadhaar details to a marketing firm. She didn't know where to complain. Turns out, India actually gives you real options -- from Grievance Officers to the Data Protection Board to consumer courts. Here's what I learned helping her fight back.