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The Hindu Editorial

23 June 2026

The Challenge of India’s Digital Sovereignty

(Source – The Hindu, Editorial Page no. – 8)

Topic: GS-3: Cyber Security | Science & Technology | Internal Security , GS-2: Governance | Strategic Affairs

Context

  • Recent cyber incidents involving Indian entities have exposed vulnerabilities arising from dependence on foreign digital infrastructure.
  • The editorial argues that digital sovereignty is becoming as important as energy, defence and economic sovereignty.
  • India must reduce strategic dependence on foreign-controlled digital platforms and technologies.

What is Digital Sovereignty?

  • Ability of a nation to control:
    • Data
    • Digital infrastructure
    • Critical technologies
    • Cybersecurity systems
    • Communication networks
  • Ensures strategic autonomy in the digital age.

Why Is It a Concern for India?

Dependence on Foreign Platforms

Critical sectors rely on:

  • Foreign cloud services
  • Email systems
  • Software platforms
  • Authentication systems
  • Defence technologies

Recent Risks

  • CCTV network vulnerabilities linked to foreign software.
  • Nayara Energy faced disruptions due to foreign sanctions.
  • External governments can influence access to critical digital services.

Strategic Implications

  • Threat to national security.
  • Disruption of government services.
  • Impact on trade and commerce.
  • Vulnerability of defence systems.

Digital Dependence = National Security Risk

Potential consequences:

  • Suspension of critical services.
  • Data access by foreign jurisdictions.
  • Supply-chain disruptions.
  • Reduced strategic autonomy.
  • Cyber espionage and surveillance risks.

Example

  • During the Kargil War (1999), India faced restrictions on GPS access.
  • This highlighted dependence on foreign-controlled technologies.

Global Trend Towards Digital Sovereignty

Countries are increasingly reducing dependence on foreign tech ecosystems.

Europe

  • France exploring sovereign digital platforms.
  • EU promoting independent cloud infrastructure.
  • Germany, Denmark and Netherlands seeking alternatives to dominant foreign software ecosystems.

Strategic Objective

  • Greater control over data and critical digital infrastructure.

India’s Strengths

Successful Indigenous Models

  • UPI
  • RuPay
  • Aadhaar
  • India Stack

These demonstrate that large-scale digital public infrastructure can be built domestically.

Semiconductor Push

  • Assembly, Testing and Packaging facilities being developed.
  • Focus on trusted supply chains.

Trusted Technology Partnerships

  • Participation in international initiatives like Pax Silica.
  • Strategic technology cooperation with like-minded countries.

Key Challenges

Semiconductor Dependence

  • Heavy reliance on imported chips and advanced manufacturing technologies.

Cloud Infrastructure Dependence

  • Significant use of foreign-owned cloud ecosystems.

Defence Technology Gaps

  • Dependence in areas such as:
    • Advanced electronics
    • Sensors
    • Aerospace technologies
    • Critical software systems

Low R&D Spending

  • India’s R&D expenditure around 0.7% of GDP.
  • Significantly below many advanced economies.

UPSC Value Addition

Pillars of Digital Sovereignty

  • Indigenous technology development
  • Data localisation
  • Trusted supply chains
  • Cyber resilience
  • Strategic technology partnerships
  • Domestic innovation ecosystem

Key Indian Initiatives

  • India Stack
  • UPI
  • RuPay
  • Semiconductor Mission
  • Digital India
  • National Cyber Security Framework

Way Forward

  • Increase R&D spending significantly.
  • Build sovereign cloud infrastructure.
  • Strengthen domestic semiconductor ecosystem.
  • Promote indigenous cybersecurity solutions.
  • Encourage private-sector innovation in strategic technologies.
  • Expand trusted international technology partnerships.
  • Reduce dependence on single-country technology supply chains.

Conclusion

  • Digital sovereignty is no longer a technological issue alone; it is a strategic imperative. As economic activity, governance and national security become increasingly digital, India must build resilient domestic capabilities while maintaining trusted global partnerships.

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