Posts

How India's Digital Agriculture Works

Image
India's agricultural sector — employing approximately 42% of India's workforce and contributing approximately 18% of GDP — is undergoing a digital transformation designed to address its persistent challenges: fragmented small landholdings (average 1.1 hectares), poor market linkage, information asymmetry, high input costs, climate vulnerability, and weak credit access.  The Digital Agriculture Mission — approved by Cabinet with ₹2,817 crore allocation — is the government's primary framework, built around two components: AgriStack (a digital infrastructure creating unique digital identities for farmers) and the Krishi Decision Support System (Krishi-DSS, an AI-powered advisory platform).  Representational Image: How India's Digital Agriculture Works The mission aims to create digital farmer IDs for 11 crore farmers within 3 years (6 crore by FY2024–25, 3 crore by FY2025–26, 2 crore by FY2026–27); by 2024, 19 states had signed MoUs for AgriStack implementation. India...

How India's Digital Economy Is Regulated by Competition Law

Image
The Competition Commission of India (CCI) has emerged as one of the more active digital market competition regulators in Asia, with ongoing or concluded investigations into Amazon India, Flipkart, Meta (WhatsApp), Google (Android, Google Play), and Apple.  Established under the Competition Act, 2002 and operational since 2009, CCI has jurisdiction over anti-competitive agreements, abuse of dominant position, and merger review.  The Competition (Amendment) Act, 2023 significantly enhanced CCI's digital market powers: it introduced a deal-value threshold for merger notifications (₹2,000 crore deal value even if Indian revenue is below normal thresholds); expanded abuse of dominant position provisions to include "unfair" and "discriminatory" practices (not just "unreasonable"); introduced a "standstill" obligation for mergers above threshold; and gave CCI powers to address "killer acquisitions" of nascent competitors. Representational ...

How India Handles Online Privacy and Surveillance

Image
India's privacy landscape is defined by a fundamental tension: the constitutional right to privacy (established as fundamental in Justice K.S. Puttaswamy v. Union of India, 2017), and a state with extensive surveillance capabilities and broad legal authorities to access private data.  The Puttaswamy judgment — a nine-judge Constitution Bench ruling — held that privacy is an intrinsic component of life and liberty under Article 21; it is not absolute and can be restricted by law that is proportionate to a legitimate state aim and procedurally sound.  This constitutional foundation informed the DPDPA 2023; it also provides the framework for evaluating the legality of India's surveillance architecture — telephone interception, internet surveillance, CCTV networks, Pegasus spyware deployment, and the proposed NATGRID (National Intelligence Grid) data aggregation system. Representational Image: How India Handles Online Privacy and Surveillance India's lawful interception frame...

How India's Startup Ecosystem Works

Image
India is the world's third-largest startup ecosystem — behind the US and China — with over 140,000 DPIIT-recognised startups as of 2025, 111 unicorns (companies valued at $1 billion or more), and venture capital investment that has grown from negligible in 2010 to $24+ billion annually at its peak in 2021–22.  The Startup India initiative (launched January 2016) created a formal government framework for startups: DPIIT recognition provides tax exemptions, relaxed compliance requirements, and access to the Fund of Funds for Startups (FFS). The startup ecosystem is geographically concentrated in Bengaluru (India's "Silicon Valley"), Delhi-NCR, Hyderabad, Mumbai, Chennai, and Pune — cities with engineering talent pipelines (IITs, NITs, and other engineering colleges), venture capital offices, and established technology company presence. Representational Image: How India's Startup Ecosystem Works The Indian startup ecosystem matured significantly between 2016 and 2022...

How India Is Exporting Its Digital Model

Image
India's Digital Public Infrastructure — built domestically over the past fifteen years — has become a diplomatic asset as well as a governance achievement. During its G20 presidency in 2023, India elevated DPI as a global development agenda item, producing the G20 DPI Framework that was adopted by all 20 member nations; the framework articulated India's "open, interoperable, secure, and inclusive" DPI principles as a global standard.  NPCI International Payments Limited (NIPL) — established as the international commercial arm of NPCI — has signed agreements with dozens of countries to extend UPI and RuPay internationally or assist countries in building their own UPI-equivalent systems.  Representational Visualisation: How India Is Exporting Its Digital Model The Institut Montaigne analysis documents India's "internationalisation of its DPI know-how" as a deliberate strategic initiative, with NIPL operating in Singapore, UAE, UK, France, Nepal, Bhutan, Sr...

How AI Is Being Used in India's Government

Image
India's government is deploying artificial intelligence across an expanding range of public sector functions — from crop advisory systems that predict pest outbreaks to judicial AI tools that summarise case files, from CERT-In's AI-driven threat detection to Doordarshan Kisan's multilingual AI news anchors.  The IndiaAI Mission's "AI for India" pillar specifically targets four application domains: healthcare (AI diagnostics for cancer, tuberculosis, retinal disease), agriculture (crop advisory, yield prediction, pest and disease early warning), education (personalised learning systems, automated grading), and governance (public service delivery optimisation, fraud detection in welfare schemes).  The government has established AI Centres of Excellence (CoEs) in Healthcare, Agriculture, and Sustainable Cities in New Delhi; Budget 2025–26 announced a fourth CoE for AI in Education with ₹500 crore outlay. Representational Image: How AI Is Being Used in India's...

How India Handles Internet Shutdowns

Image
India is a world leader in documented internet shutdowns — orders by state or central authorities to suspend internet access in specific geographic areas, typically during tensions, protests, security operations, or examination periods. Access Now's internet shutdown tracker and the Software Freedom Law Centre (SFLC.in) consistently document India as the top country globally for shutdown frequency.  India's shutdowns operate under two primary legal authorities: Section 144 of the Code of Criminal Procedure (now Section 163 BNSS), which empowers District Magistrates to prohibit activities posing risk to public order; and the Temporary Suspension of Telecom Services (Public Emergency or Public Safety) Rules, 2017, under the Indian Telegraph Act (now Telecommunications Act, 2023), which empower state Home Secretaries and the Secretary, Ministry of Home Affairs to direct telecom service suspension. Representational Visualisation: How India Handles Internet Shutdowns The Supreme Co...
Loading... Loading IST...
US-Israel Attack Iran
Loading headlines...

Loading Top Trends...

How India Works

Scanning sources...

🔦 Newsroom Feed

    🔗 View Source
    Font Replacer Active