Data, Data Centres, Data Protection: India, Andaman And Nicobar Islands: Natural calamities

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=Availability of data=
 
==As in 2019==
 
[https://epaper.timesgroup.com/olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2019%2F07%2F05&entity=Ar03204&sk=C270B013&mode=text  July 5, 2019: ''The Times of India'']
 
  
[[File: The types of data that exists about Indian citizens, as in 2019.jpg|The types of data that exists about Indian citizens, as in 2019 <br/> From: [https://epaper.timesgroup.com/olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2019%2F07%2F05&entity=Ar03204&sk=C270B013&mode=text  July 5, 2019: ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
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= Cyclones=
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==2016: "Vardah"==
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[http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/Vardah-hits-AN-islands-tourists-remain-stranded/article16780270.ece ''The Hindu''], December 9, 2016
  
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Sanjib Kumar Roy
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'''Cyclonic storm Vardah brought normal life in a standstill in Andamans'''
  
The government made a strong pitch for using data and analytics for social welfare and citizen empowerment, and also made a case for greater engagement with the private sector in processing non-sensitive information. However, it said a focus on user consent and privacy should be the cornerstone of the effort to make it a safer process.
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''Tourists still stranded as Havelock island remains unreachable''
  
“In the spirit of the Constitution of India, data “of the people, by the people, for the people” must therefore become the mantra for the government,” the survey said. “… economic theory predicts that economy should have, by now, seen a surge in efforts to harness and use data. This has indeed happened, but only partially.”.
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Havelock island remained unreachable for the second day on Thursday as the depression over the Andaman Sea intensified into cyclonic storm ‘Vardah’. Two passenger vessels of the Andaman Shipping Services, MV Rani Lakshmi and MV Kamorta, were sent to Havelock to evacuate nearly 1,100 tourists, but both the vessels had to return to Port Blair because of high waves in the sea.
It said while private companies have harnessed user data as a profitable business model, a lot still needs to be done in many social-welfare areas where the government should step in. “… government intervention is required in other areas where private investment in data remains inadequate. The social sectors of the economy, such as education and healthcare, have lagged the commercial sectors in exploiting data… To ensure that the socially optimum amount of data is harvested and used, the government needs to step in, either by providing the data itself or correcting the incentive structure faced by the private sector, depending on the nature and sensitivity of data.
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Privacy of data, however, needs special focus as efforts towards harvesting information get stronger, the survey said.
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Later, cargo vessel MV Badam was also sent to Havelock with supplies and medicines but had to return because of bad weather conditions. Sources said there were efforts to send Coast Guard vessels to Havelock to evacuate the tourists but bad weather put paid to this as well.
  
The survey also said while there is a fair amount of information that is already collected about citizens, such as birth and death records, tax statements, census data, and health and education information, they are not harmonised and collated together to bring out confirmed trends. “Data collection in India is highly decentralised… if these different pieces could be put together, we would find that the whole is greater than the sum of parts.”
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==Impact==
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'''Locals extend help'''
  
On fears that government may misuse and get unbridled powers through the huge citizen database, it said, “… this is far from the truth. First, large quantities of data already exist in government records, and the objective is only to use this data in a more efficient way.
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Vessels of the Indian Navy, which had been sent to Havelock, were called back considering their safety at sea in the high waves.
  
As existing paper records get digitised, there is a need for a parallel initiative to convert very process of data collection into a digital one, as agsinst collecting on paper first and converting to a digital format later.
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Meanwhile, the local administration directed hotel and restaurant owners to help tourists by extending their bookings and by providing free food, whenever possible. While nearly 1,100 tourists are stranded at Havelock and 400 tourists continue to be stranded at Neil island, tourists stuck in the Port Blair area complained about poor coordination from the Tourism Department and lack of awareness about helpline centres for tourists.
On giving certain kinds of data to private companies, it said this should be done with all necessary security safeguards.
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They also complained of problems in extending bookings in hotels. In a video statement, Lieutenant Governor of Andaman & Nicobar Islands Jagdish Mukhi today claimed, “All tourists are safe. They could not be brought back to Port Blair only [upon] considering their safety.”
  
=General Data Protection Regulation=
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===Landslides===
==Salient features: 2018==
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[https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2018%2F05%2F08&entity=Ar02014&sk=3222A24D&mode=text  Kim Arora, May 8: ''The Times of India'']
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[[File: Indian IT Act and the GDPR.jpg|Indian IT Act and the GDPR <br/> From: [https://epaper.timesgroup.com/Olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2018%2F05%2F08&entity=Ar02014&sk=3222A24D&mode=text  Kim Arora, May 8: ''The Times of India'']|frame|500px]]
 
  
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Cyclone Vardah played havoc in many remote Islands, bringing normal life to a standstill. In the north and middle Andaman region, various islands like Diglipur, Rangat and Billyground witnessed a flood-like situation because of very heavy rainfall.
  
Come May 25, and internet and tech companies that handle user data of any sort will have a new legal provision to comply with. The General Data Protection Regulation or the GDPR is a new law that came into force in the European Union in May 2018.
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The movement of vehicles on the Andaman Trunk Road was disrupted in various places in middle and north Andaman due to flooding in low-lying areas. There were reports of landslides along the Andaman Trunk Road. The cyclone blew away roofs of several dozen houses and damaged crops in north and middle Andaman. Snapping of power cables has left many areas without power for more than two days.
  
'''What does the GDPR do?'''
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The Deputy Commissioner of South Andaman, Udit Prakash Rai, said the administration would compensate those who had suffered loss because of the weather conditions.
  
GDPR enshrines data protection and privacy rights for European users, and holds companies handling their data, wherever they may be, liable for violations. The penalties run into hefty fines — highest being 20 million euros or 4% of annual turnover — whichever is greater. Facebook has sprung into action to redistribute its data-handling operations. Microsoft-owned LinkedIn has done the same. Twitter has updated its privacy policy too. Indian tech, publishing and e-commerce companies will also have to review how they handle, store and erase data.
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The administration has suspended helicopter and shipping services. Some flights landed at Port Blair while many others were cancelled. The airport witnessed frayed tempers when SpiceJet cancelled its flight after passengers had boarded the aircraft.
  
'''What does the law say?'''
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=Earthquakes=
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==After ’04 tsunami==
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[https://epaper.timesgroup.com/olive/ODN/TimesOfIndia/shared/ShowArticle.aspx?doc=TOIDEL%2F2020%2F12%2F29&entity=Ar01403&sk=22FB97C6&mode=text  Chandrima Banerjee, December 29, 2020: ''The Times of India'']
  
The EU law comes into force on May 25, and decrees that consumers or “data subjects” have right to erasure of their data and a right to port their data from one place to another. It also places a premium on the data subjects’ consent to collection and processing of data. Although the law is being introduced in the EU, its ramifications extend the world over. That is because it is not focused on regulatory measures for tech companies, but rather on the protection of EU citizens and their data. Since internet and tech companies the world over handle data from across the globe, the consequences of breaking the law extend to them. The law was introduced in 2016, with data controllers and processors the worldover given two years, until this year’s May deadline to comply.
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An earthquake with 10-minute-long waves is quite unusual. Many like it, in quick succession, even more so. But beneath the Andaman Sea near Nicobar, the 2004 earthquake and tsunami has set off a series of intermittent earthquake swarms that also indicate simmering volcanic activity. Scientists at the CSIR-National Institute of Oceanography in Goa on the research ship RV Sindhu Sankalp conducted a passive ocean bottom seismometer experiment for the first time in Indian waters.
  
'''What is at stake?'''
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They found 141 high-frequency earthquakes and swarms (bursts of quakes with a short period of time, ranging from hours to days) in areas where three faults — the Andaman Nicobar Fault, the West Andaman Fault and strands of the Great Sumatra Fault — meet.
  
In April, a Goldman Sachs report said that Facebook, which got 24% of its global revenue from EU, could suffer a negative impact of up to 7% because of GDPR. That month, Facebook recalibrated its operations in such a way that non-EU users, who earlier fell under Facebook’s Ireland incorporation, were shifted to the US-based counterpart.
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Major swarms had occurred in the off Nicobar region in the Andaman Sea over five different periods — in January 2005, March 2014, October 2014, November 2015 and March 2019 — their study, published in Nature’s Scientific Reports this month, said.
  
'''What's the status of Indian companies when it comes to compliance?'''
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They were really long. “The March 2014 swarm, for instance, had lasted 48 hours,” lead author Aswini KK told TOI. The swarm in January 2005 was the strongest ever recorded globally. Some earthquakes in 2014 had long period signals, like the 600-second signal they got. “This is rare and suggests the origin of the seismic waves is deep seated, located at a depth in the subsurface, about 30km below the seafloor,” corresponding author Kamesh Raju said. “At that depth, we expect magma at work.”
  
Experts and industry watchers say Indian companies are still behind when it comes to GDPR compliance. “We have been speaking with organisations for the last 18-24 months. Most companies have woken up to this only six months ago. Some of the Fortune 500 companies and other MNCs have done good work in data discovery and information flow mapping. Smaller organisations are not well-prepared. They feel it is a distraction from core business,” says Shree Parthasarathy, national leader for cyber risk services, Deloitte.
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So while the December 2004 “tsunamigenic megathrust earthquake” itself was a reason, the active volcanism in the area has also been causing some shifts.
  
Industry bodies in India are attempting to handhold companies through the regulatory maze. Nasscom and the Data Security Council of India held familiarisation workshops in March in Delhi, Mumbai and Bengaluru. “Nasscom has also launched a GDPR Helpdesk for member companies to have their questions resolved,” says Gagan Sabharwal, senior director for global trade development, Nasscom.
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Does it mean an eruption might be in the offing? “The studies over the submarine volcanic chain that extends from Barren Island in the north to the onshore volcanoes of Sumatra would provide insights to answer the above question,” Raju said.
  
'''What does it mean for Indian users of internetbased services or products?'''
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[[Category:India|A ANDAMAN AND NICOBAR ISLANDS: NATURAL CALAMITIES
 
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ANDAMAN AND NICOBAR ISLANDS: NATURAL CALAMITIES]]
You will continue to use online products and services the way you did. The EU law is not designed to protect citizens outside of it. Indian businesses handling EU user data, however, will have to take another look at the way they collect and use data or face massive fines.
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[[Category:Natural Disasters|A ANDAMAN AND NICOBAR ISLANDS: NATURAL CALAMITIES
 
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ANDAMAN AND NICOBAR ISLANDS: NATURAL CALAMITIES]]
[[Category:Economy-Industry-Resources|D
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[[Category:Places|A ANDAMAN AND NICOBAR ISLANDS: NATURAL CALAMITIES
DATA, DATA PROTECTION: INDIA]]
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ANDAMAN AND NICOBAR ISLANDS: NATURAL CALAMITIES]]
[[Category:India|D
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DATA, DATA PROTECTION: INDIA]]
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[[Category:Law,Constitution,Judiciary|D
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DATA, DATA PROTECTION: INDIA]]
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[[Category:S&T|D
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DATA, DATA PROTECTION: INDIA]]
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Revision as of 16:21, 31 December 2020

This is a collection of articles archived for the excellence of their content.



Contents

Cyclones

2016: "Vardah"

The Hindu, December 9, 2016

Sanjib Kumar Roy

Cyclonic storm Vardah brought normal life in a standstill in Andamans

Tourists still stranded as Havelock island remains unreachable

Havelock island remained unreachable for the second day on Thursday as the depression over the Andaman Sea intensified into cyclonic storm ‘Vardah’. Two passenger vessels of the Andaman Shipping Services, MV Rani Lakshmi and MV Kamorta, were sent to Havelock to evacuate nearly 1,100 tourists, but both the vessels had to return to Port Blair because of high waves in the sea.

Later, cargo vessel MV Badam was also sent to Havelock with supplies and medicines but had to return because of bad weather conditions. Sources said there were efforts to send Coast Guard vessels to Havelock to evacuate the tourists but bad weather put paid to this as well.

Impact

Locals extend help

Vessels of the Indian Navy, which had been sent to Havelock, were called back considering their safety at sea in the high waves.

Meanwhile, the local administration directed hotel and restaurant owners to help tourists by extending their bookings and by providing free food, whenever possible. While nearly 1,100 tourists are stranded at Havelock and 400 tourists continue to be stranded at Neil island, tourists stuck in the Port Blair area complained about poor coordination from the Tourism Department and lack of awareness about helpline centres for tourists.

They also complained of problems in extending bookings in hotels. In a video statement, Lieutenant Governor of Andaman & Nicobar Islands Jagdish Mukhi today claimed, “All tourists are safe. They could not be brought back to Port Blair only [upon] considering their safety.”

Landslides

Cyclone Vardah played havoc in many remote Islands, bringing normal life to a standstill. In the north and middle Andaman region, various islands like Diglipur, Rangat and Billyground witnessed a flood-like situation because of very heavy rainfall.

The movement of vehicles on the Andaman Trunk Road was disrupted in various places in middle and north Andaman due to flooding in low-lying areas. There were reports of landslides along the Andaman Trunk Road. The cyclone blew away roofs of several dozen houses and damaged crops in north and middle Andaman. Snapping of power cables has left many areas without power for more than two days.

The Deputy Commissioner of South Andaman, Udit Prakash Rai, said the administration would compensate those who had suffered loss because of the weather conditions.

The administration has suspended helicopter and shipping services. Some flights landed at Port Blair while many others were cancelled. The airport witnessed frayed tempers when SpiceJet cancelled its flight after passengers had boarded the aircraft.

Earthquakes

After ’04 tsunami

Chandrima Banerjee, December 29, 2020: The Times of India

An earthquake with 10-minute-long waves is quite unusual. Many like it, in quick succession, even more so. But beneath the Andaman Sea near Nicobar, the 2004 earthquake and tsunami has set off a series of intermittent earthquake swarms that also indicate simmering volcanic activity. Scientists at the CSIR-National Institute of Oceanography in Goa on the research ship RV Sindhu Sankalp conducted a passive ocean bottom seismometer experiment for the first time in Indian waters.

They found 141 high-frequency earthquakes and swarms (bursts of quakes with a short period of time, ranging from hours to days) in areas where three faults — the Andaman Nicobar Fault, the West Andaman Fault and strands of the Great Sumatra Fault — meet.

Major swarms had occurred in the off Nicobar region in the Andaman Sea over five different periods — in January 2005, March 2014, October 2014, November 2015 and March 2019 — their study, published in Nature’s Scientific Reports this month, said.

They were really long. “The March 2014 swarm, for instance, had lasted 48 hours,” lead author Aswini KK told TOI. The swarm in January 2005 was the strongest ever recorded globally. Some earthquakes in 2014 had long period signals, like the 600-second signal they got. “This is rare and suggests the origin of the seismic waves is deep seated, located at a depth in the subsurface, about 30km below the seafloor,” corresponding author Kamesh Raju said. “At that depth, we expect magma at work.”

So while the December 2004 “tsunamigenic megathrust earthquake” itself was a reason, the active volcanism in the area has also been causing some shifts.

Does it mean an eruption might be in the offing? “The studies over the submarine volcanic chain that extends from Barren Island in the north to the onshore volcanoes of Sumatra would provide insights to answer the above question,” Raju said.

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