
India wants to control RIM, Google and Skype

Recently, the Indian government has announced that RIM smartphones will be banned in that country, and the ban will last until the company ships smartphones without an encryption module. In general, this situation has been discussed for a long time in the media, so I will not retell it all again. But the other day, the Indian government went even further, and stated that it wants companies such as RIM, Google and Skype to establish their own servers in India itself so that the government can gain access to the electronic messages of its citizens.
A government spokesman, GK Pillai, told reporters that notifications had been sent to the above companies asking the government to provide “legal access” to data for organizations and agencies related to national security. The government sees this as an opportunity to gain a reliable way to control terrorists who use the communication tools provided by RIM, Google, and Skype.
“People who manage information services in India should install their own servers in India, providing access to them for government organizations. This should be clear to RIM with its BlackBerry and other organizations, ”said Pillai.
A press release published by the Ministry of Internal Affairs of India on its website states that “any type of communication carried out through computer networks and other telecommunications should be available to law enforcement organizations, and all telecom providers, including third parties, must comply with this requirement ".
In general, India is clearly following in the footsteps of China, which is always trying to track the communication of its own citizens, in spite of any problems, both technical and political in nature. One has only to recall the “Green Dam”, or the desire of China to force Google to censor the issuance of its own search engine, and it becomes clear what the Indian government wants to achieve.
Well, the fight against terrorists has always been an excellent pretext for all countries, it remains only to be surprised how the Indians did not bother with the issue of illegal possession of child pornography - after all, even quite democratic countries hide behind this problem to exercise control over telecom providers. And it really works ...
Source .