Consent is not a long paragraph with one ‘Accept’ button.
Design consent as an auditable product workflow, not a legal disclaimer.
List consent-dependent purposes.
Consent screen versions.
Pre-ticked boxes.
The final Digital Personal Data Protection Rules, 2025 were notified on 14 November 2025 with phased commencement. As of 25 June 2026, organisations should distinguish provisions already commenced from operational duties scheduled for later dates, while continuing to comply with the IT Act, CERT-In directions and sectoral rules already in force.
The Act requires consent to be free, specific, informed, unconditional and unambiguous, given through clear affirmative action and limited to necessary data.
Withdrawal should be as easy as giving consent. The fiduciary must be able to prove notice and consent when the relevant provisions operate.
| Area | What to establish | Operating rule |
|---|---|---|
| Purpose | One clear processing objective. | Unbundle unrelated uses. |
| Choice | Affirmative and non-coercive action. | Avoid pre-ticked boxes. |
| Proof | User, version, timestamp and purpose. | Retain audit record. |
| Withdrawal | Comparable ease and downstream stop. | Test end to end. |
Privacy governance should connect the personal data, individual, purpose, collection point, system, owner, recipient, access role, retention trigger and incident dependency. A policy that cannot be traced to this chain is difficult to operate.
Create a dated legal matrix rather than one status label. Record the DPDP provision, commencement date, present readiness action, current IT or sectoral obligation and the evidence owner.
Design controls in the product and system. A written rule cannot stop an SDK from firing, a shared folder from exposing payroll, or a vendor from retaining deleted users unless technology and operations enforce it.
Evidence should be generated during normal work: versioned notices, event logs, access approvals, request tickets, deletion reports, vendor registers, incident chronologies and management decisions.
Use proportionate identity and security checks. Excess verification creates more personal data, while weak verification can expose another person’s records or permit account takeover.
Every product release should trigger a privacy change review covering new fields, vendors, permissions, purposes, regions and retention.
Management reporting should show overdue evidence and control failures, not only the existence of policies.
Test the control using a real user journey from collection to deletion. Capture the notice shown, data stored, vendors called, employees with access, retention period and response if the user withdraws or complains.
Run a negative scenario: the vendor is breached, the user is a child, the employee exits, the phone is stolen, the data was inaccurate or the regulator asks for proof. Record which control fails.
Check that system records and public wording agree. Product forms, privacy notice, CRM fields, SDK behaviour, vendor contracts and support scripts should describe the same processing.
Assign a named owner and internal deadline for every gap. A risk register without funded action and closure evidence becomes an archive of known failures.
Retain the rejected alternatives and decision basis. This is especially important where the law is in phased commencement or a proportionate technical method is selected.
Start with the system owner, privacy or security owner and the documented data flow. Preserve records before making changes, and separate current statutory reporting from future DPDP readiness.
For a breach, financial fraud, rights dispute, children’s-data issue or regulated-sector event, involve qualified legal, cyber, forensic and sector specialists and use the applicable official reporting or grievance channel.
Management should record the risk owner, affected data population, financial or operational impact, current legal duty, future DPDP milestone and funded remediation date. A privacy register without accountable closure is only a list of known gaps.
The control should be tested with evidence rather than self-certification. Use screen recordings, exported logs, access reports, deletion output, vendor responses, tabletop minutes or complaint acknowledgements to prove that the workflow operates as designed.
Where several laws apply, maintain one incident or request chronology but separate each legal trigger and deadline. CERT-In, RBI, UIDAI, IRDAI, police, contractual and DPDP processes should not be collapsed into one generic notification decision.