At loggerheads now, govt once used Facebook, Google for digital push
Business
Standard
By Karan Choudhury, New Delhi, March 26 2018
Prime Minister Modi launched
'Digital India’ in 2014 after which Facebook and Google started meeting with
the Prime Minister’s Office
The Indian government may
have ‘unfriended’ Facebook last week after it warned the social media giant
from interfering and influencing next year’s elections. However, not so long
ago, it used Mark Zuckerberg’s firm as well as Google for its magnum opus
Digital India initiative.
Since the launch of the programme in
2014, these two US technology giants have played an integral role in almost
every aspect of the initiative. From educating people about the internet,
connecting far-flung areas with a high-speed net, promoting entrepreneurship,
building start-up incubators, women empowerment, to even running a voter
registration campaign, cybersecurity and counter-terrorism, Facebook and Google
have done it all for the government.
How it all began?
It all started after Prime Minister
Narendra Modi launched the 'Digital India’ campaign in 2014 after which
companies such as Facebook and Google started having meetings with the Prime
Minister’s Office (PMO), Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology
(MEITY) and Niti Aayog.
Around the time of the announcement of
the Digital India initiative, Google came out with its biggest programme ‘Next
Billion User’ to catch hold of the next generation of users. Facebook also
started floating the idea of the internet for all ‘Internet.org’.
In 2015 when the PM went to the US for
the first time, he visited all the major tech firms in the valley including
Facebook, Google and Microsoft, where he spoke at length about the Digital
India. Facebook went a step ahead and equated the programme and Internet.org, a
faux pas it apologised for later.
Apart from those hiccups, Zuckerberg,
Google CEO Sundar Pichai, and Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella had numerous meetings
with the PM whenever they visited India on official tours. The talks were all
centered around the Digital India initiative.
How deeply involved are Facebook
and Google in Digital India?
According to Google, in alignment with
its global efforts of getting the next billion people online — many of whom are
in India — it has outlined its focus and commitment to bring the internet alive
everyone in India.
“We are very focused on solving the
needs of the next billion users who’re not online. This mission aligns very
well, with Indian government's vision of Digital India. A connected India with
access to the whole web will help businesses grow, power education for the next
generation and create growth for the Indian economy. We aim to create access to
the internet with initiatives, products, features and services that are unique
and relevant to India,” the company said in reply to a questionnaire.
From bringing fast, high-quality
internet access, building products that perform even when there is low
connectivity, making the web more accessible and useful for Indian language
speakers, increasing the internet usage amongst women in rural India and skill
development for developers and small and medium businesses (SMBs) to enable a
safe and secure digital payments experience are some of the key initiatives
Google has been working on.
On the other hand Facebook, after the
failure of its Internet.org campaign in India, launched Express Wi-Fi, which is
now commercially available through hotspots across the four Indian states of
Uttarakhand, Gujarat, Rajasthan and Meghalaya.
In partnership with Bharti Airtel, Facebook
will launch an additional 20,000 hotspots as announced in May 2017— allowing
Express Wi-Fi to reach more Indians who need super-fast and affordable
connectivity.
While the Indian government is now
worried about Indian users data being used by Facebook to influence elections,
some time back, Facebook collaborated with the Election Commission of India
(ECI) and launched a nationwide voter registration campaign.
In 2017-18, Facebook also collaborated
with the Chief Electoral Officer of Himachal Pradesh, Gujarat, Meghalaya,
Tripura and Nagaland to increase engagement and participation in the state
elections. As a part of this collaboration, Facebook promoted a reminder in
people’s News Feed on the polling days to help educate people on the state
elections and encourage them to take part.
Google has been working with Indian
Railways and RailTel on providing high speed Wi-Fi at 400 train stations. The
company has already deployed it at over 300 stations, with monthly users of
around 7.7 million.
Its other programme ‘Internet Saathi’
launched in partnership with Tata Trusts is operational in 13 states. “Around
13.5 million women have already benefitted from the programme and it is now
active across 140,000 villages,” Google said.
There are hundreds of other initiatives
on which two firms have been working closely with the government under the
Digital India programme.
Why did the government tie-up
with these players?
According to industry experts, it was
the easiest thing for the government to do — to use the resources, reach and
data that these companies possess — to kickstart its own programme.
“It is very safe to use a Google or
Facebook. Why would they tie-up with small company? They have a lot of data
which is updated,” said Asoke K Laha President and CEO, Interra Information
Technologies, also the former National President of the Indo-American Chamber
of Commerce (IACC).
Facebook and Google keep their India
investment figures under wraps and it runs into billions of dollars, which
includes the infrastructure and manpower they have setup in India.
Did government factor in the
risk?
Experts believe that in the rush to
create a Digital India, the government did not anticipate the risk that the
data intermediaries pose to a nation.
“We have to understand these are all
data intermediaries. It is but natural that they will use data in every manner.
The government did not anticipate this, but the incident shows that India is
very much at risk. The digital India programme was primarily aimed to transform
India into a digital society. That is why the government in the thought process
tried to rely on these intermediaries. With these kinds of incidents, it
clearly shows that we are not prepared to deal with them. The IT Act is silent
and India does not have a privacy law and a data protection law. We need
to revisit intermediary liability and put them in far more rigorous
compliances,” said Pavan Duggal, cyber law expert and Supreme Court advocate.
Comments
Post a Comment