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A Privacy Panic Flares Up in India After Police Pull Payment Data from Razorpay

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Prasanto K. Roy, a public policy consultant from New Delhi, is worried. In 2017 he began sending regular donations to the Indian fact-checking organization Alt News to support its work countering online misinformation. But on July 5 the nonprofit said that Indian payments gateway Razorpay, which it used to receive donations, had shared its donors’ data with New Delhi police following the arrest of Alt News cofounder Mohammed Zubair last month.

Roy is now hesitant to use Razorpay, saying he is concerned about tech companies handing over data—including his own—to law enforcement without consent. “When a payment gateway gives out donor databases on a police demand that is excessive, that information can be misused by the police or others it could reach,” he said. “India doesn’t even have privacy laws in place yet.”

The full extent of the data that Razorpay shared with police remains unclear, but Alt News said that the data it collects from donors includes phone numbers, email addresses, and tax IDs. A police official told the Hindustan Times that the force is gathering data from banks to cross-reference with the Alt News data.

The investigation appears to be part of an ongoing probe to check whether Alt News received donations from outside of India, after police claimed that the organization’s parent received funds from several other countries, including Pakistan and Syria. Zubair, the cofounder of Alt News, was arrested on June 27 for a 2018 tweet that allegedly hurt religious sentiments, but is also being investigated for other charges, including receiving foreign funds under India’s Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Act, which restricts foreign donations to nonprofits.

While the arrest has spurred many Indians to fear that police are quashing internet freedom, it has also highlighted the limited legal protections on privacy in the world’s largest democracy, which lacks a comprehensive data protection law. The stakes are growing higher as more people in India use the internet for leisure, communications, and commerce. The country’s digital payments market—already at $3 trillion in value—is expected to skyrocket to $10 trillion by 2026, according to Boston Consulting Group.

Razorpay has faced social media backlash and threats of a boycott for sharing donor data without first informing Alt News. “Many donors and fundraisers said they wouldn’t use Razorpay again, and that was my initial reaction too,” said Roy, while adding that perhaps other companies would also have caved under the same pressure from police.

In a public statement on Twitter, Razorpay did not mention Alt News and said that the data shared was “restricted to what was within the scope of investigation.” Razorpay CEO Harshil Mathur tweeted that police were attempting to “determine whether there were any foreign donations or not” and claimed that donors’ tax IDs and addresses were not shared. Razorpay did not respond to a request for comment; Alt News cofounder Pratik Sinha declined to comment.





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