印度取消了在智能手机上预装国营网络安全应用程序的命令。
India scraps order to pre-install state-run cyber safety app on smartphones

原始链接: https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/clydg2re4d1o

印度已经撤销了此前要求智能手机制造商在所有新设备上预装政府运营的“Sanchar Saathi”网络安全应用程序的命令。最初的指令要求该应用程序不可卸载,引发了网络安全专家对隐私和监控的担忧,并遭到了苹果和三星等主要公司的抵制。 政府将此举解释为验证手机真伪和打击欺诈的一种手段——该应用程序的下载量和欺诈报告近期激增——但批评人士认为这侵犯了用户隐私。尽管通讯部长声称该应用程序不构成监控风险,但由此引发的强烈反对最终导致该命令被撤销。 政府以该应用程序的“日益普及”为撤销原因,但数字倡导团体仍持谨慎乐观态度,正在等待该决定的完整法律细节。

印度已取消了一项要求在智能手机上预装政府运营的网络安全应用程序的命令,此前引发了公众强烈抗议,主要是在推特上。虽然该应用程序旨在解决网络安全问题——可能类似于现有的GSMA注册表——但人们对其真实目的表示担忧。 Hacker News上的评论员认为,该举措源于官僚机构对技术的误解,并受到数据挖掘利益的影响。担忧集中在可能滥用收集的数据进行政治操纵(选举趋势、针对对手)、社会工程学,甚至对特定人口群体进行歧视性做法。 普遍预计,类似的强制安装应用程序的尝试将会再次出现,可能会效仿英国、欧盟和澳大利亚等地区正在实施的法规。目前的逆转被视为一次暂时的胜利。
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原文

India has scrapped an order making it mandatory for smartphone makers to preload a state-run cyber safety app on new phones after a public furore.

The order gave smartphone makers 90 days to pre-load new phones with its new Sanchar Saathi app which could not be "disabled or restricted", sparking privacy and surveillance concerns.

The government argued the move was necessary to verify the authenticity of handsets, but cybersecurity experts said it impinged on citizens' right to privacy.

Withdrawing the order on Wednesday, the government cited the app's "increasing acceptance". It came after Apple and Samsung had reportedly resisted the directive to pre-install it on their devices.

So far 14 million users have downloaded the app, reporting 2,000 frauds daily, and on Tuesday alone 600,000 new users registered - a tenfold spike, according to India's telecom ministry.

But the order - passed last week but made public on Monday - to make the registration mandatory had led to a major backlash from several cybersecurity experts.

Smartphone giants like Apple and Samsung also resisted the directive to pre-install the app on their phones.

Sources told the BBC the companies were concerned the directive was issued without prior consultation and challenged user privacy norms.

While the order has now been withdrawn, India's Minister of Communications Jyotiraditya Scindia dismissed concerns that the app could be used to increase surveillance.

"Snooping is neither possible nor will it happen with the Sanchar Saathi safety app," Scindia said.

The government's decision to reverse the order was welcomed by digital advocacy groups.

"This is a welcome development, but we are still awaiting the full text of the legal order that should accompany this announcement, including any revised directions under the Cyber Security Rules, 2024," the Internet Freedom Foundation said on X.

"For now, we should treat this as cautious optimism, not closure, until the formal legal direction is published and independently confirmed."

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