The Election Commission dropped plans on Thursday to partner Google Inc
on a project to ease voter access to information, after a backlash
against the move from campaigners who claimed Google and the U.S.
government could use the data for spying.
Google, which works with
governments in other countries including Mexico and the Philippines on
similar programmes, said it has not talked with the government about any
project that would have involved data not already publicly available.
India,
the world's largest democracy, will go to the polls in a general
election due by May. Google, the world's No.1 search engine, had pitched
a project to the Election Commission to help create a simpler and
faster tool for voters to check whether they were registered correctly
or not.
(Also see: Google makes presentation to Election Commission for Lok Sabha election tie-up)
But the plan was opposed by the Indian Infosec Consortium,
a government and private sector-backed alliance of cyber security
experts. The group said in a statement last week it feared Google would
collaborate with "American agencies" for espionage purposes.
Google
would have shared the software tools required with India and offered
the help of its engineers in a non-commercial agreement, Gaurav Bhaskar,
a spokesman for Google's Indian unit, said. But the election panel was
free to decide on hiring another company's services for hosting the
data, he said.
The Election Commission did not give a reason for
dropping the plan. But an official, who did not want to be named, told
Reuters that Google's proposal was not a major improvement on its
existing website, and that Google's involvement had drawn criticism in
India.
(Also see: Google distances itself from Election Commission's project after controversy)
U.S. electronic surveillance practices have been in the
spotlight after damaging disclosures from former spy contractor Edward
Snowden. India-U.S. relations have also been damaged by a spat over the
arrest and strip search of an Indian diplomat in New York last month.
"Google
is committed to help make public information on the web easily
accessible to internet users across the country," Google said in a
statement.
"It is unfortunate that our discussion with the
Election Commission of India to change the way users access their
electoral information, that is publicly available, through an online
voter look up tool, were not fruitful," it added.
A member of the
ruling Congress Party said the plan was a "sensitive issue" and that
political parties had not been consulted. A spokeswoman for the main
opposition Bharatiya Janata Party said that the Election Commission
needed to protect voter data.
"After due consideration, the
Commission has decided not to pursue the proposal any further," the
regulator said in a brief statement on its website on Thursday.
This
is not the first time Google has faced political heat in India. The
country's federal mapping agency had last year filed a police complaint
that Google had violated rules by asking users to add information about
their local area for its online map services.
In 2011, police in
Bangalore ordered Google to suspend a Street View service over security
concerns, three weeks after the company started collecting images from
the city.
© Thomson Reuters 2014