How has cybersecurity technology evolved, and are legal frameworks keeping pace with the evolution? Dr. PavanDuggal, an advocate at the Supreme Court of India, shares his journey and talks about his passions.
The upcoming International Conference on Cyber Law, Cyber Crime & Cybersecurity 2015 in New Delhi will see thought-leaders examine some of the vital aspects regarding evolving jurisprudence concerning cyber eco-space.
In an in-depth interview, PavanDuggal, advocate, Supreme Court, spells out the specific steps he believes the government needs to take now that the Supreme Court has declared privacy as a fundamental right.
An Indian joint parliamentary committee has reintroduced set penalties for data violations after yielding to opposition demands. Some cyber law experts still believe it is unlikely organizations will be heavily penalized owing to deficiencies in the country's legal procedures.
The Indian government has set up the Citizen Financial Cyber Fraud Reporting and Management System to report, track - and ultimately freeze - the proceeds of cyberattack-induced financial theft.
About 3000 Indian customers' credentials were exposed in the OnePlus data breach, where hackers accessed customer data. CERT-In has issued an advisory on the breach while cautioning users about the influx of spam and phishing email owing to the incident.
India's Supreme Court has agreed to consider social media giant Facebook's request that the apex court review cases now pending before several state high courts regarding linking social media profiles to Aadhaar numbers in an effort to help curb the spread of fake news.
As the Lok Sabha elections continue across all regions in India, security experts are sizing up what steps the nation can take to make future elections more secure.
Some security experts in Asia are raising concerns about legislation the European Union might soon consider that, if enacted, would force technology and social media companies to hand over customer data held outside the EU so it can be used in criminal investigations.
Police are investigating an anonymous email threat against Indian IT company Wipro as a potential "act of terror." On May 5, the company received an anonymous email threatening a massive attack with the poison Ricin on all its offices in Bangalore if it didn't pay a bitcoin ransom.
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