India will not risk national security for technology : Sachin Pilot

Concerns have been addressed in other parts of the world

PTI | August 27, 2010



As a solution elude monitoring of data transmitted through Blackberry phone, India today said it would not risk national security, especially when answers to the problem have been found elsewhere in the world.

"These concerns have been addressed in other parts of the world, I see no reason why the Indian government and agencies should take any risk at all as far technology is concerned," Minister of State for Communication and IT Sachin Pilot told reporters here.

The government has asked the Blackberry phone maker RIM to provide access to data such as e-mail sent through the phone by August 31 or face ban on its data services.

However, Pilot made it clear that the government was not in the business of shutting down services. "We are not in the business shutting down services," he said.

Blackberry is a smartphone that allows users to send and receive data like e-mail through servers located overseas.

The Home Ministry had told the Telecom Ministry that if the security concerns were not addressed, the service should be stopped immediately.

In a bid to break the logjam, the smart phone maker had offered to provide information on a deferred basis. But the government had asked RIM to provide a "master key" to gain access to encrypted corporate information on a real time basis.

RIM yesterday had said that company does not have a master key to gain access to encrypted corporate information.

Pilot, however, expressed hope that the matter would be resolved. "The discussions are going on we hopeful we will come up with resolution," he said.

The smart-phone-maker has a subscriber base of one million in India.

Comments

 

Other News

Mofussils: Musings from the Margins

Provincials: Postcards from the Peripheries By Sumana Roy Aleph Book Company, 320 pages, Rs 899 Sumana Roy’s latest work, like its p

How to promote local participation in knowledge sharing

Knowledge is a powerful weapon to help people and improve their lives. Knowledge provides the tools to understand society, solve problems, and empower people to overcome challenges and experience personal growth. Limited sources were available to attain information on the events in and arou

‘The Civil Servant and Super Cop: Modesty, Security and the State in Punjab’

Punjabi Centuries: Tracing Histories of Punjab Edited by Anshu Malhotra Orient BlackSwan, 404 pages, Rs. 2,150

What really happened in ‘The Scam That Shook a Nation’?

The Scam That Shook a Nation By Prakash Patra and Rasheed Kidwai HarperCollins, 276 pages, Rs 399 The 1970s were a

Report of India’s G20 Task Force on Digital Public Infrastructure released

The final ‘Report of India’s G20 Task Force on Digital Public Infrastructure’ by ‘India’s G20 Task Force on Digital Public Infrastructure for Economic Transformation, Financial Inclusion and Development’ was released in New Delhi on Monday. The Task Force was led by the

How the Great War of Mahabharata was actually a world war

Mahabharata: A World War By Gaurang Damani Sanganak Prakashan, 317 pages, Rs 300 Gaurang Damani, a Mumbai-based el

Visionary Talk: Amitabh Gupta, Pune Police Commissioner with Kailashnath Adhikari, MD, Governance Now


Archives

Current Issue

Opinion

Facebook Twitter Google Plus Linkedin Subscribe Newsletter

Twitter