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Supreme Court Expands Scope of Right to Privacy in Digital Surveillance Cases

Reinforcing Constitutional Safeguards in the Digital Age

Deeksha Upadhyay 11 February 2026 13:49

Supreme Court Expands Scope of Right to Privacy in Digital Surveillance Cases

The Supreme Court has expanded the scope of the Right to Privacy in cases involving digital surveillance by state agencies, reiterating that any surveillance measure must satisfy the tests of legality, necessity, and proportionality as laid down in the landmark K.S. Puttaswamy v. Union of India (2017) judgment.

The Court held that digital surveillance—whether through interception of communications, metadata collection, or deployment of spyware—constitutes a serious intrusion into individual privacy and must therefore be backed by a valid law. The “legality” requirement mandates a clear statutory framework defining scope, safeguards, and accountability mechanisms.

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Under the necessity test, the State must demonstrate a legitimate aim such as national security or public order. However, mere assertion of security concerns is insufficient; authorities must show that surveillance is essential to achieve the intended objective.

The proportionality test requires that surveillance measures be narrowly tailored and the least restrictive means available. Blanket or indiscriminate monitoring, without specific justification, would violate constitutional protections. The Court emphasized that digital technologies amplify the scale and depth of intrusion, thereby demanding stricter scrutiny.

Importantly, the judgment stressed the need for independent oversight mechanisms, such as judicial or parliamentary review, and mandated time-bound authorizations to prevent prolonged or arbitrary surveillance. Periodic review and transparency safeguards were highlighted to maintain public trust.

The ruling reinforces that privacy is intrinsic to Article 21 (Right to Life and Personal Liberty) and closely linked with dignity, autonomy, and freedom of expression.

Significance

The judgment strengthens constitutional protections in the digital era by ensuring that surveillance powers are exercised within strict legal limits. By balancing national security concerns with civil liberties, it upholds the rule of law and reinforces democratic accountability in governance.

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