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Government working on new snooping policy

The Communications and Information Technology Ministry is consulting the Home Ministry to sort out the issues related to interception by security agencies, he said.

A National Telecom Security Policy in this regard has been in the making for many <g data-gr-id="25">years,</g> while a draft was proposed by the previous UPA government also.

Amid differences between the Home and Telecom ministries over interception powers of the security agencies, a final policy could not see light of the day during the previous government, while it had also faced opposition from telecom operators and other quarters on privacy and other issues.

"...it is an ongoing process. We are in consultation with them (Home Ministry)...you may have seen that security <g data-gr-id="31">centres</g> have already been approved by the Cabinet. We are on the job and we have the highest level of coordination for that," Telecom Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad told a news agency.

The Minister said that the security and privacy issues will be taken care of in the new policy.

Meanwhile, the Department of Telecom feels there is a need for a separate security policy, as telecommunication infrastructure is not only used for mere voice communication but all the economic activities of the country.

A DoT official said in the present circumstances, confidentiality, integrity and authenticity of communication messages and security of telecom network is the key for the success of <g data-gr-id="28">digital</g> revolution. 

"To provide safe and secure network along with confidence building in users as well as law enforcement agencies, there is a need to have a structured regulatory policy framework," the official said. The policy, which is technology agnostic, envisages network protection through built-in security features in the systems, services, equipment, devices and software rather than being an add-on feature.

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