Privacy is a foundational pillar of a functioning democracy. This paper investigates the collision between state-mandated digital surveillance and individual autonomy under Article 21 of the Indian Constitution. As technology shifts from physical records to digital-first infrastructure, vulnerabilities like automated data mining, Deep Packet Inspection (DPI), and network interception severely test our fundamental liberties. By examining landmark judgments like Puttaswamy and analyzing the loopholes in the DPDP Act of 2023, this research highlights how unchecked surveillance treats citizens as potential suspects, creating a chilling effect on free speech. We expand on the technical realities of state monitoring to demonstrate that legal frameworks are lagging decades behind cyber capabilities. Specifically, the rapid deployment of military-grade spyware and zero-day exploits by state actors has shattered the traditional boundaries of personal liberty, rendering outdated legislative frameworks like the IT Act of 2000 highly ineffective. Furthermore, this paper critically evaluates how current mass surveillance protocols fail the Supreme Court's "proportionality test" by executing untargeted data sweeps rather than utilizing the least restrictive means available. The findings suggest that to secure our digital borders, the state must implement strict judicial oversight and hardcoded checks and balances, rather than relying on blanket executive admin rights.
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Talha M Saad
Syed Abbas Kazim
Syeda Faiza Kounain
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Saad et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a21164cd499ed480b16f445 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20507607