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						India to review data storage rules that irked U.S. tech 
						firms
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		 [June 18, 2019]  By 
		Aditya Kalra and Manoj Kumar 
 NEW DELHI (Reuters) - India will examine 
		concerns raised by foreign technology companies around stringent rules 
		to store data locally, the government said on Tuesday, an issue that has 
		upset firms such as Mastercard and also irked the U.S. government.
 
 The decision to review the rules comes at a time when trade tensions 
		between India and United States have risen. India imposed higher tariffs 
		on some U.S. goods on Sunday, following Washington's withdrawal of key 
		trade privileges for New Delhi.
 
 On Monday Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal and leaders of technology 
		companies discussed several federal plans in the works to push for more 
		stringent data rules.
 
 The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) last year mandated foreign payment firms 
		must store their payments data only in India to allow supervision.
 
 The central bank representative who attended the meeting "assured the 
		industry representatives that the Reserve Bank of India will look into 
		this", a statement by the commerce ministry said.
 
 A lobbying effort by Mastercard, Visa Inc and American Express Co to 
		dilute or reverse the central bank order has failed previously, Reuters 
		has reported.
 
 Mastercard CEO Ajay Banga joined Monday's meeting via video conference, 
		the government statement said.
 
		
		 
		
 India wants more stringent data storage rules so it can better access 
		data and conduct investigations when the need arises. Technology 
		companies argue the rules would force them to change their business 
		models, hurt planned investments and raise costs.
 
 U.S.-India trade groups as well as top U.S. officials have expressed 
		concerns around such rules in the past.
 
		 
		
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"We'll also push for free flow of data across borders, not just to help American 
companies, but to protect data and secure consumers' privacy," U.S. Secretary of 
State Mike Pompeo said last week ahead of his visit to New Delhi this month.
 E-COMMERCE POLICY
 
 Other than RBI rules, India has also drafted an overarching law on data storage 
which calls for all personal data determined to be critical to be processed 
locally. The government will be the one to determine categories of such data.
 
 
  
Technology companies on Monday requested minister Goyal to ensure the law should 
have more clarity around data classification and he assured them that the IT 
ministry would address those concerns, the government statement said.
 The government will take companies' suggestions "towards building a robust data 
protection framework that will achieve the dual purpose of privacy and 
innovation", it said, signaling the government could possibly go soft on 
implementing the rules.
 
 Concerns were also raised around a separate e-commerce policy that focuses on 
data localization and improved privacy safeguards. They call for housing of more 
data centers and server farms locally, measures bound to raise costs of 
multi-national companies.
 
 "Commerce Minister assured the e-commerce industry representatives that each and 
every concern of the industry will be addressed," the government said.
 
 The discussions around the e-commerce policy come after India implemented new 
foreign investment rules from Feb. 1, forcing companies such as Amazon.com Inc 
and Walmart's Flipkart to rethink their business strategy in the country.
 
 (Reporting by Manoj Kumar and Aditya Kalra; Editing by Sanjeev Miglani and 
Muralikumar Anantharaman)
 
				 
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