

Discover the pivotal rights granted to data principals under India's Digital Personal Data Protection Act (DPDPA) and the essential steps businesses need to take to comply with these provisions. Explore the procedures for exercising these rights, the legal duties for organizations, and guidelines for meeting compliance under the groundbreaking DPDPA legislation.
The Digital Personal Data Protection Act (DPDPA) is a privacy law in India that grants data principals data privacy rights that data fiduciaries must honor. Otherwise, data fiduciaries face penalties.
In this article, we explore the rights and protections offered to data principals under the DPDP Act, a landmark legislation that is reshaping the landscape of data privacy in India. We also delve into how businesses can comply with the requests and meet the legal requirements.
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Data principals, called data subjects in many data protection laws or users in everyday language, are the persons whose personal information is being processed by the data fiduciary, which is the organization that collects and processes data.
The DPDP Act imposes the data principals rights as follows:
These are the rights granted by the new data protection law. But how can users exercise those rights in practice?
There are a few steps involved in exercising a data principal right under the DPDP Act:
The India Digital Personal Data Protection Act (DPDPA) 2023 is the first-ever comprehensive data protection regulation in the country. It relies on the principles of fairness, transparency, and accountability and imposes duties and grants rights that have not been seen in India before this Act.
Every organization processing personal data within India falls under the DPDPA's scope, irrespective of its size or geographical location. Organizations based outside India handling the data of Indian residents are also subject to this law.
Some of the most important duties for business include:
It is necessary to establish an internal procedure for receiving and responding to requests. It doesn't have to be a complex procedure, but it helps a lot if you know in advance who will receive the request and act on it. That person should be trained on data principal rights and the DPDPA in general.
Honoring the requests is not complex work, and it helps you build trust with your customers by being transparent with them. Responding to them is not a choice but a duty. However, this duty brings more good than harm to your organization, so make sure you have your procedures in place and streamline the process.