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Directions: Kindly read the passage carefully and answer the questions given beside.The Supreme Court (2017) has held that any infringement of the right to privacy should be proportionate to the need for such interference. The exemptions may lead to data collection, processing, and retention beyond what is necessary. This may not be proportionate, & may violate the fundamental right to privacy. The Bill empowers the central government to exempt processing by government agencies from any or all provisions, in the interest of aims such as the security of the state and maintenance of public order. None of the rights of data principals and obligations of data fiduciaries (except data security) will apply in certain cases such as processing for prevention, investigation, and prosecution of offences. The Bill does not require government agencies to delete personal data, after the purpose for processing has been met. Using the above exemptions, on the ground of national security, a government agency may collect data about citizens to create a 360-degree profile for surveillance. It may utilise data retained by various government agencies for this purpose. This raises the question whether these exemptions will meet the proportionality test. For interception of communication on grounds such as national security, in PUCL vs Union of India (1996), the Supreme Court had mandated various safeguards including: (i) establishing necessity, (ii) purpose limitation, and (iii) storage limitation. These are similar to the obligations of data fiduciaries under the Bill, the application of which has been exempted. The Srikrishna Committee (2018) had recommended that in case of processing on grounds such as national security and prevention and prosecution of offences, obligations other than fair and reasonable processing and security safeguards should not apply. It observed that obligations such as storage limitation and purpose specification, if applicable, would be implemented through a separate law. India does not have any such legal framework.Q.Utilizing the provisions of the Personal Data Protection Bill, 2019, the central government has exercised its authority to enable a government agency to gather and handle personal data from citizens, with no requirement to erase the data once the processings purpose has been fulfilled. The agency asserts that this data is indispensable for national security reasons. Does the exemption afforded to government agencies under the Personal Data Protection Bill, 2019 adhere to the proportionality standard established by the right to privacy?a)Indeed, the government retains the authority to gather and handle personal data for national security purposes, without any requirement to erase the data once the objective has been fulfilled.b)No, the exemption conferred upon government agencies might result in data collection, processing, and preservation that surpasses what is necessary, potentially lacking proportionality and infringing upon the fundamental right to privacy.c)Yes, provided that the government agency can substantiate the necessity, adhere to purpose constraints, and observe storage limitations, the exemption granted in accordance with the Personal Data Protection Bill, 2019, aligns with the proportionality evaluation.d)No, government agencies ought to be obliged to delete personal data once the processing purpose has been accomplished, as mandated by the Personal Data Protection Bill, 2019, in order to meet the proportionality standard specified by the right to privacy.Correct answer is option 'B'. Can you explain this answer? for CLAT 2024 is part of CLAT preparation. The Question and answers have been prepared
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the CLAT exam syllabus. Information about Directions: Kindly read the passage carefully and answer the questions given beside.The Supreme Court (2017) has held that any infringement of the right to privacy should be proportionate to the need for such interference. The exemptions may lead to data collection, processing, and retention beyond what is necessary. This may not be proportionate, & may violate the fundamental right to privacy. The Bill empowers the central government to exempt processing by government agencies from any or all provisions, in the interest of aims such as the security of the state and maintenance of public order. None of the rights of data principals and obligations of data fiduciaries (except data security) will apply in certain cases such as processing for prevention, investigation, and prosecution of offences. The Bill does not require government agencies to delete personal data, after the purpose for processing has been met. Using the above exemptions, on the ground of national security, a government agency may collect data about citizens to create a 360-degree profile for surveillance. It may utilise data retained by various government agencies for this purpose. This raises the question whether these exemptions will meet the proportionality test. For interception of communication on grounds such as national security, in PUCL vs Union of India (1996), the Supreme Court had mandated various safeguards including: (i) establishing necessity, (ii) purpose limitation, and (iii) storage limitation. These are similar to the obligations of data fiduciaries under the Bill, the application of which has been exempted. The Srikrishna Committee (2018) had recommended that in case of processing on grounds such as national security and prevention and prosecution of offences, obligations other than fair and reasonable processing and security safeguards should not apply. It observed that obligations such as storage limitation and purpose specification, if applicable, would be implemented through a separate law. India does not have any such legal framework.Q.Utilizing the provisions of the Personal Data Protection Bill, 2019, the central government has exercised its authority to enable a government agency to gather and handle personal data from citizens, with no requirement to erase the data once the processings purpose has been fulfilled. The agency asserts that this data is indispensable for national security reasons. Does the exemption afforded to government agencies under the Personal Data Protection Bill, 2019 adhere to the proportionality standard established by the right to privacy?a)Indeed, the government retains the authority to gather and handle personal data for national security purposes, without any requirement to erase the data once the objective has been fulfilled.b)No, the exemption conferred upon government agencies might result in data collection, processing, and preservation that surpasses what is necessary, potentially lacking proportionality and infringing upon the fundamental right to privacy.c)Yes, provided that the government agency can substantiate the necessity, adhere to purpose constraints, and observe storage limitations, the exemption granted in accordance with the Personal Data Protection Bill, 2019, aligns with the proportionality evaluation.d)No, government agencies ought to be obliged to delete personal data once the processing purpose has been accomplished, as mandated by the Personal Data Protection Bill, 2019, in order to meet the proportionality standard specified by the right to privacy.Correct answer is option 'B'. Can you explain this answer? covers all topics & solutions for CLAT 2024 Exam.
Find important definitions, questions, meanings, examples, exercises and tests below for Directions: Kindly read the passage carefully and answer the questions given beside.The Supreme Court (2017) has held that any infringement of the right to privacy should be proportionate to the need for such interference. The exemptions may lead to data collection, processing, and retention beyond what is necessary. This may not be proportionate, & may violate the fundamental right to privacy. The Bill empowers the central government to exempt processing by government agencies from any or all provisions, in the interest of aims such as the security of the state and maintenance of public order. None of the rights of data principals and obligations of data fiduciaries (except data security) will apply in certain cases such as processing for prevention, investigation, and prosecution of offences. The Bill does not require government agencies to delete personal data, after the purpose for processing has been met. Using the above exemptions, on the ground of national security, a government agency may collect data about citizens to create a 360-degree profile for surveillance. It may utilise data retained by various government agencies for this purpose. This raises the question whether these exemptions will meet the proportionality test. For interception of communication on grounds such as national security, in PUCL vs Union of India (1996), the Supreme Court had mandated various safeguards including: (i) establishing necessity, (ii) purpose limitation, and (iii) storage limitation. These are similar to the obligations of data fiduciaries under the Bill, the application of which has been exempted. The Srikrishna Committee (2018) had recommended that in case of processing on grounds such as national security and prevention and prosecution of offences, obligations other than fair and reasonable processing and security safeguards should not apply. It observed that obligations such as storage limitation and purpose specification, if applicable, would be implemented through a separate law. India does not have any such legal framework.Q.Utilizing the provisions of the Personal Data Protection Bill, 2019, the central government has exercised its authority to enable a government agency to gather and handle personal data from citizens, with no requirement to erase the data once the processings purpose has been fulfilled. The agency asserts that this data is indispensable for national security reasons. Does the exemption afforded to government agencies under the Personal Data Protection Bill, 2019 adhere to the proportionality standard established by the right to privacy?a)Indeed, the government retains the authority to gather and handle personal data for national security purposes, without any requirement to erase the data once the objective has been fulfilled.b)No, the exemption conferred upon government agencies might result in data collection, processing, and preservation that surpasses what is necessary, potentially lacking proportionality and infringing upon the fundamental right to privacy.c)Yes, provided that the government agency can substantiate the necessity, adhere to purpose constraints, and observe storage limitations, the exemption granted in accordance with the Personal Data Protection Bill, 2019, aligns with the proportionality evaluation.d)No, government agencies ought to be obliged to delete personal data once the processing purpose has been accomplished, as mandated by the Personal Data Protection Bill, 2019, in order to meet the proportionality standard specified by the right to privacy.Correct answer is option 'B'. Can you explain this answer?.
Solutions for Directions: Kindly read the passage carefully and answer the questions given beside.The Supreme Court (2017) has held that any infringement of the right to privacy should be proportionate to the need for such interference. The exemptions may lead to data collection, processing, and retention beyond what is necessary. This may not be proportionate, & may violate the fundamental right to privacy. The Bill empowers the central government to exempt processing by government agencies from any or all provisions, in the interest of aims such as the security of the state and maintenance of public order. None of the rights of data principals and obligations of data fiduciaries (except data security) will apply in certain cases such as processing for prevention, investigation, and prosecution of offences. The Bill does not require government agencies to delete personal data, after the purpose for processing has been met. Using the above exemptions, on the ground of national security, a government agency may collect data about citizens to create a 360-degree profile for surveillance. It may utilise data retained by various government agencies for this purpose. This raises the question whether these exemptions will meet the proportionality test. For interception of communication on grounds such as national security, in PUCL vs Union of India (1996), the Supreme Court had mandated various safeguards including: (i) establishing necessity, (ii) purpose limitation, and (iii) storage limitation. These are similar to the obligations of data fiduciaries under the Bill, the application of which has been exempted. The Srikrishna Committee (2018) had recommended that in case of processing on grounds such as national security and prevention and prosecution of offences, obligations other than fair and reasonable processing and security safeguards should not apply. It observed that obligations such as storage limitation and purpose specification, if applicable, would be implemented through a separate law. India does not have any such legal framework.Q.Utilizing the provisions of the Personal Data Protection Bill, 2019, the central government has exercised its authority to enable a government agency to gather and handle personal data from citizens, with no requirement to erase the data once the processings purpose has been fulfilled. The agency asserts that this data is indispensable for national security reasons. Does the exemption afforded to government agencies under the Personal Data Protection Bill, 2019 adhere to the proportionality standard established by the right to privacy?a)Indeed, the government retains the authority to gather and handle personal data for national security purposes, without any requirement to erase the data once the objective has been fulfilled.b)No, the exemption conferred upon government agencies might result in data collection, processing, and preservation that surpasses what is necessary, potentially lacking proportionality and infringing upon the fundamental right to privacy.c)Yes, provided that the government agency can substantiate the necessity, adhere to purpose constraints, and observe storage limitations, the exemption granted in accordance with the Personal Data Protection Bill, 2019, aligns with the proportionality evaluation.d)No, government agencies ought to be obliged to delete personal data once the processing purpose has been accomplished, as mandated by the Personal Data Protection Bill, 2019, in order to meet the proportionality standard specified by the right to privacy.Correct answer is option 'B'. Can you explain this answer? in English & in Hindi are available as part of our courses for CLAT.
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Here you can find the meaning of Directions: Kindly read the passage carefully and answer the questions given beside.The Supreme Court (2017) has held that any infringement of the right to privacy should be proportionate to the need for such interference. The exemptions may lead to data collection, processing, and retention beyond what is necessary. This may not be proportionate, & may violate the fundamental right to privacy. The Bill empowers the central government to exempt processing by government agencies from any or all provisions, in the interest of aims such as the security of the state and maintenance of public order. None of the rights of data principals and obligations of data fiduciaries (except data security) will apply in certain cases such as processing for prevention, investigation, and prosecution of offences. The Bill does not require government agencies to delete personal data, after the purpose for processing has been met. Using the above exemptions, on the ground of national security, a government agency may collect data about citizens to create a 360-degree profile for surveillance. It may utilise data retained by various government agencies for this purpose. This raises the question whether these exemptions will meet the proportionality test. For interception of communication on grounds such as national security, in PUCL vs Union of India (1996), the Supreme Court had mandated various safeguards including: (i) establishing necessity, (ii) purpose limitation, and (iii) storage limitation. These are similar to the obligations of data fiduciaries under the Bill, the application of which has been exempted. The Srikrishna Committee (2018) had recommended that in case of processing on grounds such as national security and prevention and prosecution of offences, obligations other than fair and reasonable processing and security safeguards should not apply. It observed that obligations such as storage limitation and purpose specification, if applicable, would be implemented through a separate law. India does not have any such legal framework.Q.Utilizing the provisions of the Personal Data Protection Bill, 2019, the central government has exercised its authority to enable a government agency to gather and handle personal data from citizens, with no requirement to erase the data once the processings purpose has been fulfilled. The agency asserts that this data is indispensable for national security reasons. Does the exemption afforded to government agencies under the Personal Data Protection Bill, 2019 adhere to the proportionality standard established by the right to privacy?a)Indeed, the government retains the authority to gather and handle personal data for national security purposes, without any requirement to erase the data once the objective has been fulfilled.b)No, the exemption conferred upon government agencies might result in data collection, processing, and preservation that surpasses what is necessary, potentially lacking proportionality and infringing upon the fundamental right to privacy.c)Yes, provided that the government agency can substantiate the necessity, adhere to purpose constraints, and observe storage limitations, the exemption granted in accordance with the Personal Data Protection Bill, 2019, aligns with the proportionality evaluation.d)No, government agencies ought to be obliged to delete personal data once the processing purpose has been accomplished, as mandated by the Personal Data Protection Bill, 2019, in order to meet the proportionality standard specified by the right to privacy.Correct answer is option 'B'. Can you explain this answer? defined & explained in the simplest way possible. Besides giving the explanation of
Directions: Kindly read the passage carefully and answer the questions given beside.The Supreme Court (2017) has held that any infringement of the right to privacy should be proportionate to the need for such interference. The exemptions may lead to data collection, processing, and retention beyond what is necessary. This may not be proportionate, & may violate the fundamental right to privacy. The Bill empowers the central government to exempt processing by government agencies from any or all provisions, in the interest of aims such as the security of the state and maintenance of public order. None of the rights of data principals and obligations of data fiduciaries (except data security) will apply in certain cases such as processing for prevention, investigation, and prosecution of offences. The Bill does not require government agencies to delete personal data, after the purpose for processing has been met. Using the above exemptions, on the ground of national security, a government agency may collect data about citizens to create a 360-degree profile for surveillance. It may utilise data retained by various government agencies for this purpose. This raises the question whether these exemptions will meet the proportionality test. For interception of communication on grounds such as national security, in PUCL vs Union of India (1996), the Supreme Court had mandated various safeguards including: (i) establishing necessity, (ii) purpose limitation, and (iii) storage limitation. These are similar to the obligations of data fiduciaries under the Bill, the application of which has been exempted. The Srikrishna Committee (2018) had recommended that in case of processing on grounds such as national security and prevention and prosecution of offences, obligations other than fair and reasonable processing and security safeguards should not apply. It observed that obligations such as storage limitation and purpose specification, if applicable, would be implemented through a separate law. India does not have any such legal framework.Q.Utilizing the provisions of the Personal Data Protection Bill, 2019, the central government has exercised its authority to enable a government agency to gather and handle personal data from citizens, with no requirement to erase the data once the processings purpose has been fulfilled. The agency asserts that this data is indispensable for national security reasons. Does the exemption afforded to government agencies under the Personal Data Protection Bill, 2019 adhere to the proportionality standard established by the right to privacy?a)Indeed, the government retains the authority to gather and handle personal data for national security purposes, without any requirement to erase the data once the objective has been fulfilled.b)No, the exemption conferred upon government agencies might result in data collection, processing, and preservation that surpasses what is necessary, potentially lacking proportionality and infringing upon the fundamental right to privacy.c)Yes, provided that the government agency can substantiate the necessity, adhere to purpose constraints, and observe storage limitations, the exemption granted in accordance with the Personal Data Protection Bill, 2019, aligns with the proportionality evaluation.d)No, government agencies ought to be obliged to delete personal data once the processing purpose has been accomplished, as mandated by the Personal Data Protection Bill, 2019, in order to meet the proportionality standard specified by the right to privacy.Correct answer is option 'B'. Can you explain this answer?, a detailed solution for Directions: Kindly read the passage carefully and answer the questions given beside.The Supreme Court (2017) has held that any infringement of the right to privacy should be proportionate to the need for such interference. The exemptions may lead to data collection, processing, and retention beyond what is necessary. This may not be proportionate, & may violate the fundamental right to privacy. The Bill empowers the central government to exempt processing by government agencies from any or all provisions, in the interest of aims such as the security of the state and maintenance of public order. None of the rights of data principals and obligations of data fiduciaries (except data security) will apply in certain cases such as processing for prevention, investigation, and prosecution of offences. The Bill does not require government agencies to delete personal data, after the purpose for processing has been met. Using the above exemptions, on the ground of national security, a government agency may collect data about citizens to create a 360-degree profile for surveillance. It may utilise data retained by various government agencies for this purpose. This raises the question whether these exemptions will meet the proportionality test. For interception of communication on grounds such as national security, in PUCL vs Union of India (1996), the Supreme Court had mandated various safeguards including: (i) establishing necessity, (ii) purpose limitation, and (iii) storage limitation. These are similar to the obligations of data fiduciaries under the Bill, the application of which has been exempted. The Srikrishna Committee (2018) had recommended that in case of processing on grounds such as national security and prevention and prosecution of offences, obligations other than fair and reasonable processing and security safeguards should not apply. It observed that obligations such as storage limitation and purpose specification, if applicable, would be implemented through a separate law. India does not have any such legal framework.Q.Utilizing the provisions of the Personal Data Protection Bill, 2019, the central government has exercised its authority to enable a government agency to gather and handle personal data from citizens, with no requirement to erase the data once the processings purpose has been fulfilled. The agency asserts that this data is indispensable for national security reasons. Does the exemption afforded to government agencies under the Personal Data Protection Bill, 2019 adhere to the proportionality standard established by the right to privacy?a)Indeed, the government retains the authority to gather and handle personal data for national security purposes, without any requirement to erase the data once the objective has been fulfilled.b)No, the exemption conferred upon government agencies might result in data collection, processing, and preservation that surpasses what is necessary, potentially lacking proportionality and infringing upon the fundamental right to privacy.c)Yes, provided that the government agency can substantiate the necessity, adhere to purpose constraints, and observe storage limitations, the exemption granted in accordance with the Personal Data Protection Bill, 2019, aligns with the proportionality evaluation.d)No, government agencies ought to be obliged to delete personal data once the processing purpose has been accomplished, as mandated by the Personal Data Protection Bill, 2019, in order to meet the proportionality standard specified by the right to privacy.Correct answer is option 'B'. Can you explain this answer? has been provided alongside types of Directions: Kindly read the passage carefully and answer the questions given beside.The Supreme Court (2017) has held that any infringement of the right to privacy should be proportionate to the need for such interference. The exemptions may lead to data collection, processing, and retention beyond what is necessary. This may not be proportionate, & may violate the fundamental right to privacy. The Bill empowers the central government to exempt processing by government agencies from any or all provisions, in the interest of aims such as the security of the state and maintenance of public order. None of the rights of data principals and obligations of data fiduciaries (except data security) will apply in certain cases such as processing for prevention, investigation, and prosecution of offences. The Bill does not require government agencies to delete personal data, after the purpose for processing has been met. Using the above exemptions, on the ground of national security, a government agency may collect data about citizens to create a 360-degree profile for surveillance. It may utilise data retained by various government agencies for this purpose. This raises the question whether these exemptions will meet the proportionality test. For interception of communication on grounds such as national security, in PUCL vs Union of India (1996), the Supreme Court had mandated various safeguards including: (i) establishing necessity, (ii) purpose limitation, and (iii) storage limitation. These are similar to the obligations of data fiduciaries under the Bill, the application of which has been exempted. The Srikrishna Committee (2018) had recommended that in case of processing on grounds such as national security and prevention and prosecution of offences, obligations other than fair and reasonable processing and security safeguards should not apply. It observed that obligations such as storage limitation and purpose specification, if applicable, would be implemented through a separate law. India does not have any such legal framework.Q.Utilizing the provisions of the Personal Data Protection Bill, 2019, the central government has exercised its authority to enable a government agency to gather and handle personal data from citizens, with no requirement to erase the data once the processings purpose has been fulfilled. The agency asserts that this data is indispensable for national security reasons. Does the exemption afforded to government agencies under the Personal Data Protection Bill, 2019 adhere to the proportionality standard established by the right to privacy?a)Indeed, the government retains the authority to gather and handle personal data for national security purposes, without any requirement to erase the data once the objective has been fulfilled.b)No, the exemption conferred upon government agencies might result in data collection, processing, and preservation that surpasses what is necessary, potentially lacking proportionality and infringing upon the fundamental right to privacy.c)Yes, provided that the government agency can substantiate the necessity, adhere to purpose constraints, and observe storage limitations, the exemption granted in accordance with the Personal Data Protection Bill, 2019, aligns with the proportionality evaluation.d)No, government agencies ought to be obliged to delete personal data once the processing purpose has been accomplished, as mandated by the Personal Data Protection Bill, 2019, in order to meet the proportionality standard specified by the right to privacy.Correct answer is option 'B'. 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ample number of questions to practice Directions: Kindly read the passage carefully and answer the questions given beside.The Supreme Court (2017) has held that any infringement of the right to privacy should be proportionate to the need for such interference. The exemptions may lead to data collection, processing, and retention beyond what is necessary. This may not be proportionate, & may violate the fundamental right to privacy. The Bill empowers the central government to exempt processing by government agencies from any or all provisions, in the interest of aims such as the security of the state and maintenance of public order. None of the rights of data principals and obligations of data fiduciaries (except data security) will apply in certain cases such as processing for prevention, investigation, and prosecution of offences. The Bill does not require government agencies to delete personal data, after the purpose for processing has been met. Using the above exemptions, on the ground of national security, a government agency may collect data about citizens to create a 360-degree profile for surveillance. It may utilise data retained by various government agencies for this purpose. This raises the question whether these exemptions will meet the proportionality test. For interception of communication on grounds such as national security, in PUCL vs Union of India (1996), the Supreme Court had mandated various safeguards including: (i) establishing necessity, (ii) purpose limitation, and (iii) storage limitation. These are similar to the obligations of data fiduciaries under the Bill, the application of which has been exempted. The Srikrishna Committee (2018) had recommended that in case of processing on grounds such as national security and prevention and prosecution of offences, obligations other than fair and reasonable processing and security safeguards should not apply. It observed that obligations such as storage limitation and purpose specification, if applicable, would be implemented through a separate law. India does not have any such legal framework.Q.Utilizing the provisions of the Personal Data Protection Bill, 2019, the central government has exercised its authority to enable a government agency to gather and handle personal data from citizens, with no requirement to erase the data once the processings purpose has been fulfilled. The agency asserts that this data is indispensable for national security reasons. Does the exemption afforded to government agencies under the Personal Data Protection Bill, 2019 adhere to the proportionality standard established by the right to privacy?a)Indeed, the government retains the authority to gather and handle personal data for national security purposes, without any requirement to erase the data once the objective has been fulfilled.b)No, the exemption conferred upon government agencies might result in data collection, processing, and preservation that surpasses what is necessary, potentially lacking proportionality and infringing upon the fundamental right to privacy.c)Yes, provided that the government agency can substantiate the necessity, adhere to purpose constraints, and observe storage limitations, the exemption granted in accordance with the Personal Data Protection Bill, 2019, aligns with the proportionality evaluation.d)No, government agencies ought to be obliged to delete personal data once the processing purpose has been accomplished, as mandated by the Personal Data Protection Bill, 2019, in order to meet the proportionality standard specified by the right to privacy.Correct answer is option 'B'. Can you explain this answer? tests, examples and also practice CLAT tests.