India's Supreme Court rules privacy is a fundamental right - AP 
AP reports: "India’s top court ruled Thursday that privacy is a fundamental right of
 every citizen, in a landmark judgment that could affect the country’s 
mammoth identity card system.
The verdict was in response to many petitions filed in courts 
questioning the validity of assigning a biometric identity card to every
 individual. The government has made the identity card mandatory for all
 citizens to receive welfare benefits, but human rights groups raised 
concerns about the risk of personal data being misused. [...] Rights 
activists hailed the verdict as a win for individual freedom."
Comment:
 This is a win for the people of India but also something of a 
disappointment. As a test-case for mark-tech India was making remarkable
 strides in combining biometric identity verification with a broad range
 of government services. I saw it as a laboratory for seeing what could 
be done in this area with off-the-shelf technology combined with sheer 
government coercion and the outcome was looking rather impressive. The 
currency system of an entire country was being changed almost overnight 
and millions of undocumented people were being brought into an online 
system and given digital identities to secure services and payments. It 
was an impressive accomplishment. All of that is in doubt now. It will 
be interesting to see how this turns out.