India’s digital transformation over the past two decades has been remarkable in scale and speed. From fewer than fifty million internet users at the turn of the millennium, the country today hosts over nine hundred million — driven by affordable smartphones, cheap mobile data, and government programmes such as Digital India, Aadhaar-linked service delivery, and Jan Dhan Yojana. These initiatives have fundamentally altered how citizens access financial services and interact with government. Yet each new internet user simultaneously became a potential target in a rapidly evolving cybercrime landscape. The Supreme Court’s landmark 2017 ruling in Justice K.S. Puttaswamy (Retd.) v. Union of India settled conclusively that the right to privacy is a fundamental right under Article 21. This paper examines the nature and scale of cybercrime in India, the adequacy of the Information Technology Act 2000 as a protector of digital rights, the legal treatment of online financial fraud, and how India’s constitutional order manages the relationship between cybersecurity imperatives and civil liberties. The central finding is that India’s legal foundations are genuine but insufficient for contemporary challenges. The threats of the current digital landscape will not be manageable with instruments designed a quarter of a century ago. Responding adequately requires serious legislative reform, substantially stronger institutions, wider public awareness, and sustained commitment to international cooperation
N et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
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