<p>A panel looking into the regulation of anonymised data has suggested that the government may have to cough up a 'fair, reasonable, and non-discriminatory' amount to obtain certain non-personal data from companies, according to an <em><strong><a href="https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/economy/policy/panel-suggests-govt-pay-companies-for-processed-non-personal-data/articleshow/76927217.cms?from=mdr" target="_blank">Economic Times</a> </strong></em>report. On Sunday, the draft was released for public consultation.</p>.<p>The panel is comprised of eminent personalities like Nasscom president Debjani Ghosh, National Informatics Centre director-general Neeta Verma, Avanti Finance chief technology officer Lalitesh Katragadda, Ponnurangam Kumaraguru of IIIT Hyderabad and non-profit organisation IT for Change’s executive director Parminder Jeet Singh.</p>.<p>The panel suggested, "The Committee strongly believes that open-access to metadata and regulated access to the underlying data of Data Businesses will spur innovation and digital economy growth at an unprecedented scale in the country."</p>.<p>It added that a company can choose not to share proprietary knowledge data and algorithms at all and mechanisms to share public, community, and private data need to be established.</p>.<p>The draft also recommended, "With increasing value-add, it may just be required that the concerned data is brought to a well-regulated data market and price be allowed to be determined by market forces, within general frameworks of openness, fairness, etc."</p>.<p>The Non-Personal Data have been divided into three categories. Non-personal data includes community data, anonymised data, artificial intelligence training data, and e-commerce data. The panel believes that metadata sharing by Data Business will spur innovation in the country.</p>.<p>The three sections of Non-Personal data are: a) Public Non-Personal Data b) Community Non-Personal Data and c) Private Non-Personal Data. The formation of a new category of businesses called ‘Data Business’ that collects, processes, stores, or otherwise manages data has also be recommended.</p>.<p>Various stakeholders like the government, citizens, startups, private organisations, and non-profit organisations can request for data, to serve for the following purposes:</p>.<p>Sovereign purposes: For national security, legal purpose, or meeting a sectoral regulation requirement.</p>.<p>Social welfare: This will help the government in better delivery of public services.</p>.<p>Apart from these two, data can be requested for regulatory and economic purposes as well.</p>.<p>It has suggested the government to establish a data-sharing framework, to encourage data sharing among government and businesses, and incentivise such data partnerships. It has also proposed to set up a lawfully aided Non-Personal Data Authority to enable and regulate data sharing. After they reach a certain size data businesses must register with the government.</p>
<p>A panel looking into the regulation of anonymised data has suggested that the government may have to cough up a 'fair, reasonable, and non-discriminatory' amount to obtain certain non-personal data from companies, according to an <em><strong><a href="https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/economy/policy/panel-suggests-govt-pay-companies-for-processed-non-personal-data/articleshow/76927217.cms?from=mdr" target="_blank">Economic Times</a> </strong></em>report. On Sunday, the draft was released for public consultation.</p>.<p>The panel is comprised of eminent personalities like Nasscom president Debjani Ghosh, National Informatics Centre director-general Neeta Verma, Avanti Finance chief technology officer Lalitesh Katragadda, Ponnurangam Kumaraguru of IIIT Hyderabad and non-profit organisation IT for Change’s executive director Parminder Jeet Singh.</p>.<p>The panel suggested, "The Committee strongly believes that open-access to metadata and regulated access to the underlying data of Data Businesses will spur innovation and digital economy growth at an unprecedented scale in the country."</p>.<p>It added that a company can choose not to share proprietary knowledge data and algorithms at all and mechanisms to share public, community, and private data need to be established.</p>.<p>The draft also recommended, "With increasing value-add, it may just be required that the concerned data is brought to a well-regulated data market and price be allowed to be determined by market forces, within general frameworks of openness, fairness, etc."</p>.<p>The Non-Personal Data have been divided into three categories. Non-personal data includes community data, anonymised data, artificial intelligence training data, and e-commerce data. The panel believes that metadata sharing by Data Business will spur innovation in the country.</p>.<p>The three sections of Non-Personal data are: a) Public Non-Personal Data b) Community Non-Personal Data and c) Private Non-Personal Data. The formation of a new category of businesses called ‘Data Business’ that collects, processes, stores, or otherwise manages data has also be recommended.</p>.<p>Various stakeholders like the government, citizens, startups, private organisations, and non-profit organisations can request for data, to serve for the following purposes:</p>.<p>Sovereign purposes: For national security, legal purpose, or meeting a sectoral regulation requirement.</p>.<p>Social welfare: This will help the government in better delivery of public services.</p>.<p>Apart from these two, data can be requested for regulatory and economic purposes as well.</p>.<p>It has suggested the government to establish a data-sharing framework, to encourage data sharing among government and businesses, and incentivise such data partnerships. It has also proposed to set up a lawfully aided Non-Personal Data Authority to enable and regulate data sharing. After they reach a certain size data businesses must register with the government.</p>