Tribune News Service
New Delhi, March 30
The Supreme Court has issued notice to the Centre on a PIL by a group of academics seeking directions for laying down of guidelines for probe agencies with regard to seizure, examination and preservation of personal digital and electronic devices and the contents contained therein.
A Bench headed by Justice SK Kaul last week asked the Centre to respond to the PIL after senior advocate Nitya Ramakrishnan highlighted the problems faced by the academic community.
Asking the petitioners to serve a copy of the PIL to the office of Solicitor General Tushar Mehta, the top court directed the Centre to spell out its stand in four weeks.
“The academic community does and stores its research and writing in the electronic or digital medium, and the threat of damage, distortion, loss or premature exposure of academic or literary work in the event of seizure of electronic devices is considerable,” the PIL contended.
Assailing the “entirely unguided power” exercised by probe agencies to take control of devices that contain much, if not all, of a citizen’s personal and professional life, the petitioners said such power was required to be civilised by the top court.
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