| October 20, 1997 | ||
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| EDITORIALS Ringing Alarm Bells The Tata 'taparazzi' scandal exposes India's casual treatment of privacy laws.
The perpetrators of this incident have shown a special interest in listening to their targets' conversation relating to the ULFA extremists in Assam, where a part of the Tatas' tea empire is located. While some of the group's executives are already under investigation for their alleged links with extremists, it cannot be an excuse for an unauthorised -- and probably private -- snooping. Rapid strides in telecom technology have no doubt made the definition of privacy somewhat uncertain; but it is the duty of civil society to regulate application of technology in a manner that guarantees freedom of speech and expression, including their confidentiality. A failure on that front will make India all the more uninviting as a destination for global businesses that take pains to protect information. Besides, the lack of privacy of telephone lines will make people shun the main information artery, in the same way that lawless roads are avoided by commuters. Telephone tapping is a disease that cannot be allowed to be institutionalised. The failure of Insat-2D calls for a better planned space programme.
In the '80s, ISRO failed to capitalise on its world-class expertise in building ground stations, such as the facility in Hassan, Karnataka. Despite its ingenious designs for the Insat series and for remote-sensing satellites, it has not made a single dent in the hardware market. The images from the irs satellites are excellent. Yet, ISRO has blundered in marketing them. The trouble actually lies in the outdated vision for the space programme. In the Nehruvian paradigm, ISRO was an ancillary contributor to social development: communication satellites were meant to fight illiteracy, remote-sensing satellites to forecast the weather. Any larger, market-driven role was frowned upon. Even the natural synergy with defence has been ignored. Take the Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV), which conducted its first mission in September. Agni's first stage weighs nine tonnes and is one metre in diameter. It can hit targets 2,500 km away. In contrast, the PSLV's first stage weighs 128 tonnes and is 2.8 metres wide. A separate military component to the space programme is overdue. In fact, so is a new space policy. |
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