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    Home»Tech»India Moves to Register Every Smartphone With Government System
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    India Moves to Register Every Smartphone With Government System

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    India Moves to Register Every Smartphone With Government System
    India Moves to Register Every Smartphone With Government System
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    India’s telecom ministry has expanded the scope of its cyber-security initiative by requiring all smartphones — new, used, and resold — to be verified and registered through a central government database. Under the new policy, manufacturers must preinstall the government app “Sanchar Saathi” on all new devices and push it to existing phones via update, while secondhand or refurbished phones must be registered by buyers or trade-in platforms using the device’s IMEI. The stated goal is to curb phone theft, combat fraud, and prevent misuse of cloned or spoofed devices. Critics warn this could lead to expansive government surveillance and erosion of personal privacy.

    Sources: Reuters, Al Jazeera

    Key Takeaways

    – The regulation expands beyond new device sales: every smartphone in circulation—including trade-ins and secondhand phones—must be registered.

    – The government claims the approach is meant to fight theft, fraud, and identity misuse; early statistics suggest some success in blocking or recovering devices.

    – Privacy advocates and rights groups argue that mandatory registration and a state-installed app could grant governments sweeping surveillance power over ordinary citizens.

    In-Depth

    The government of India recently unveiled a sweeping measure to expand the scope of its cyber-security campaign. Now, it isn’t just new smartphones that are subject to regulation: the mandate covers every smartphone in circulation, including used and resold devices. Under the directive, manufacturers are instructed to preinstall a government-managed app called Sanchar Saathi on all new phones — and existing devices must also receive it via software updates. On top of that, secondhand and trade-in phones must be logged through a central registry by buyers or resale platforms using the device’s IMEI number.

    The official justification centers on rising concerns over phone theft, cloned or spoofed devices, and rampant telecom fraud that exploit duplicates or illegally modified phones. Ministry officials say that tracking every device will help authorities detect suspicious activity, block stolen or fraud-linked phones, and verify the legitimacy of mobile connections. Early data, according to government sources, show the system has disabled millions of dubious devices or connections.

    Yet the move isn’t without controversy. Civil liberties groups, privacy advocates, and many ordinary citizens argue the plan amounts to a vast surveillance net over hundreds of millions of users. By tying devices to individual identities and mandating a state-owned app preinstalled and “non-removable” at first, the government may effectively monitor usage, collect metadata, or even intercept communications — depending on how the backend is managed. Critics warn that the required permissions could give the state access to call logs, message data, and personal files.

    Moreover, the scale is massive. India’s smartphone population — including new and used devices — numbers in the hundreds of millions, and much of the secondhand market is informal. While the policy targets only formal recommerce platforms for now, it could expand. Observers point out that once a centralized registry exists, it becomes tempting for authorities to broaden its use: law enforcement access, mass data collection, or even political targeting could follow. That, they say, undermines citizen privacy and digital freedom.

    Supporters maintain the measure is practical: for a country that ranks among the largest smartphone markets globally, with high levels of device theft and fraud, some form of authentication and regulation was overdue. A unified registry might help deter phone-theft rings and curb fraudsters using cloned IMEIs. But the question remains whether the trade-offs in personal privacy and autonomy are justified — especially absent transparent oversight, clear limitations on government access, and robust legal safeguards.

    As India rolls out this initiative, the world watches closely. Other nations may follow suit — especially those grappling with fraud, theft, or cybercrime — but the most important test here will be whether such programs can resist mission creep and avoid becoming tools for mass surveillance under the guise of security.

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