blog:filing-smart-dpdp-era-2026
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| + | ====== Privacy and RTI: Filing Smart in the DPDP Era (2026 Guide) ====== | ||
| + | |||
| + | {{htmlmetatags> | ||
| + | metatag-description=(File RTI after DPDP 2026: 5 proven strategies beating the wave of Section 8(1)(j) rejections. Practitioner notes, winning templates, and real PIO replies from the 2026 bench book.)}} | ||
| + | |||
| + | {{page> | ||
| + | |||
| + | <WRAP center round didyouknow 95%> | ||
| + | **Did you know?** A well-drafted " | ||
| + | </ | ||
| + | |||
| + | <WRAP center round info 95%> | ||
| + | **In one line.** The Digital Personal Data Protection Rules, 2025, notified on 14 November 2025, substituted the text of Section 8(1)(j) of the RTI Act. A steep share of Q1 2026 RTIs have been refused on the strength of that substitution. This guide shows how to draft an application the Public Information Officer cannot refuse by reflex. | ||
| + | |||
| + | **What that means in practice.** | ||
| + | * **Names trigger rejections.** Naming an officer or a citizen in the question is the fastest route to a Section 8(1)(j) refusal. | ||
| + | * **Aggregates and functions win.** Ask about the department' | ||
| + | * **Section 8(2) is intact.** The public-interest override survives the amendment and must be read into every refusal. | ||
| + | </ | ||
| + | |||
| + | //Updated: 20 April 2026. Rejection rates reported above 40 per cent in the first quarter of 2026.// | ||
| + | |||
| + | ===== Why so many RTIs are failing in 2026 ===== | ||
| + | |||
| + | Filed an RTI last week asking for an officer' | ||
| + | |||
| + | Pendency is the other half of the story. The Central Information Commission and the State Information Commissions together carry a backlog reported above 4 lakh second appeals, and the three-year commissioner tenure under the [[: | ||
| + | |||
| + | The good news is that the amendment did not rewrite the whole statute. The [[: | ||
| + | |||
| + | <WRAP center round didyouknow 95%> | ||
| + | **Names equal an instant refusal in 2026.** If your application names a person, the PIO has a shortcut to " | ||
| + | </ | ||
| + | |||
| + | ===== DPDP versus RTI: a quick reference table ===== | ||
| + | |||
| + | Use this table the next time you draft a question. The right-hand column is the version that gets through. | ||
| + | |||
| + | ^ Your question ^ Old framing (pre-2025) ^ Smart framing (2026) ^ Likely outcome ^ | ||
| + | | Who spent what on official travel? | " | ||
| + | | Who called whom? | "Call detail records of officer Y" | "Total outgoing official calls from the Department' | ||
| + | | Whose foreign trips? | " | ||
| + | | Who got a tender? | "Copy of all communications with ABC Pvt Ltd" | " | ||
| + | | Whose leave record? | " | ||
| + | | Which officer did what? | "File noting on officer Q's conduct" | ||
| + | |||
| + | The pattern is consistent. Move the question away from the person and toward the public function. Ask the department what it spent, decided, or recorded as a body. The PIO can still refuse on some other ground, but you have closed the Section 8(1)(j) shortcut. | ||
| + | |||
| + | ===== Five winning RTI strategies for 2026 ===== | ||
| + | |||
| + | ==== 1. Never name a person ==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | The moment you name an officer or a citizen in the question, the PIO can reach for the amended Section 8(1)(j) and refuse. A refusal under this exemption does not even need a public-interest test to get past the threshold any more. What you can do is ask about a **role** or a **grade**, not a person. " | ||
| + | |||
| + | ==== 2. Ask in aggregates ==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | "Total tender value awarded by the Department in FY 2025-26" | ||
| + | |||
| + | ==== 3. Anchor to a public function ==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | Ministers, civil servants, judges, and regulators perform **public functions**. Information held about them **in that capacity** is not personal information in the sense Section 8(1)(j) protects. The Delhi High Court in the 2024 [[: | ||
| + | |||
| + | ==== 4. Cite specific harm and public interest ==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | Section 8(2) is not a decorative clause. It is the **override** that tips the balance when disclosure would prevent corruption, irregularity, | ||
| + | |||
| + | ==== 5. Rely on Section 4 suo-moto disclosure ==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | A great deal of the information RTI applicants chase is already mandatory under **Section 4(1)(b)**. Budgets, organisational charts, duties of officers, tender processes, contract values, scheme beneficiaries, | ||
| + | |||
| + | <WRAP center round didyouknow 95%> | ||
| + | **Aggregate data always works.** "Total expenditure on the Prime Minister' | ||
| + | </ | ||
| + | |||
| + | ===== The real PIO replies you are getting in 2026 ===== | ||
| + | |||
| + | The [[: | ||
| + | |||
| + | < | ||
| + | The information sought pertains to personal information as defined under | ||
| + | the amended Section 8(1)(j) of the Right to Information Act, 2005 read | ||
| + | with Section 44(3) of the Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023. | ||
| + | The disclosure has no nexus to any public activity or interest. Accordingly, | ||
| + | the request is denied. | ||
| + | </ | ||
| + | |||
| + | This is a template. It is short because the PIO is applying a flowchart, not conducting a balancing exercise. Your job in the **first appeal** is to force the flowchart open. Three lines of reply that **must** be written into your appeal: | ||
| + | |||
| + | - "The information sought is not a named individual' | ||
| + | - "Even if the information is held to engage Section 8(1)(j), Section 8(2) of the Act is an independent override. The Public Information Officer has not considered it. The refusal is bad in law." | ||
| + | - "The Supreme Court in the [[: | ||
| + | |||
| + | A [[: | ||
| + | |||
| + | <WRAP center round didyouknow 95%> | ||
| + | **The CIC is upholding a large share of first-appeal reversals** where applicants expressly engage Section 8(2). PIOs who refuse by reflex, without a public-interest analysis, are losing on appeal. | ||
| + | </ | ||
| + | |||
| + | ===== Step-by-step: | ||
| + | |||
| + | ==== 1. Pick the right portal ==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | For Central Government departments, | ||
| + | |||
| + | ==== 2. Write a neutral subject line ==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | " | ||
| + | |||
| + | ==== 3. Frame each sub-question around a function ==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | Break your request into numbered sub-questions, | ||
| + | |||
| + | ==== 4. Add a public-interest statement ==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | One short paragraph, near the top of the application. "This information is sought in the public interest, to verify compliance with the Central Government guidelines on foreign travel by senior officials and to prevent misuse of public funds. Section 8(2) of the Right to Information Act, 2005 is expressly invoked." | ||
| + | |||
| + | ==== 5. Pay the Rs 10 fee ==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | Online filing charges Rs 10 per application on the Central portal. BPL applicants are exempt on furnishing a certificate. Some State portals still accept Indian Postal Orders. See the [[: | ||
| + | |||
| + | ==== 6. File with the right PIO ==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | Filing at the **CPIO' | ||
| + | |||
| + | ==== 7. Appeal if refused ==== | ||
| + | |||
| + | Within 30 days of the refusal, file a **first appeal** to the First Appellate Authority. The [[: | ||
| + | |||
| + | <WRAP center round didyouknow 95%> | ||
| + | **File at the CPIO level, not the department level.** The CPIO's designation is published in the Section 4 disclosure. Filing at the right desk skips the Section 6(3) transfer delay and a share of the rejections that flow from it. | ||
| + | </ | ||
| + | |||
| + | ===== A visual: will your RTI survive DPDP? ===== | ||
| + | |||
| + | {{: | ||
| + | |||
| + | //The question is not whether the Act has changed. The question is whether your draft has.// | ||
| + | |||
| + | ===== The Section 8(2) override: what the bench books are saying ===== | ||
| + | |||
| + | Section 8(2) reads: " | ||
| + | |||
| + | The **notwithstanding** language is decisive. Section 8(2) overrides Section 8(1) including the amended Section 8(1)(j). A PIO who refuses under Section 8(1)(j) without **first** conducting the public-interest balancing is not applying the Act. This is not a practitioner' | ||
| + | |||
| + | The [[: | ||
| + | |||
| + | ===== Frequently asked questions ===== | ||
| + | |||
| + | ^ Question ^ Short answer ^ | ||
| + | | Can I still ask for the personal information of a named officer? | Usually no, unless the information relates to the **public function** the officer performs and the public interest is specifically argued under Section 8(2). | | ||
| + | | What wins a first appeal? | An aggregate re-framing of the question, an explicit Section 8(2) invocation, and a reference to the PIO's failure to conduct a balancing test. | | ||
| + | | Do I need a lawyer for the first appeal? | No. The first appeal is a departmental proceeding. The [[: | ||
| + | | What about the second appeal to the CIC? | File within 90 days of the first-appeal order or 180 days if there is no reply. The [[: | ||
| + | | Has the 30-day reply rule changed? | No. Section 7(1) is intact. A PIO still has 30 days to reply, and 48 hours for life-and-liberty requests. | | ||
| + | | Is Section 8(1)(j) a blanket block on personal information? | ||
| + | | Should I quote the DPDP Act in my application? | ||
| + | | Does the three-year commissioner tenure affect my appeal? | Indirectly. See the [[: | ||
| + | |||
| + | ===== Call to action ===== | ||
| + | |||
| + | <WRAP center round box 90%> | ||
| + | * **Draft smart, file faster.** Use the [[: | ||
| + | * **Share a win.** Tag a well-framed application or a favourable CIC order and we will feature it on the case-law library. | ||
| + | * **Read first, file second.** The [[:faq|site FAQ]] and the [[: | ||
| + | </ | ||
| + | |||
| + | ===== Related pages on this site ===== | ||
| + | |||
| + | * [[:act|The Right to Information Act, 2005 — current text, as amended]]. | ||
| + | * [[: | ||
| + | * [[: | ||
| + | * [[: | ||
| + | * [[: | ||
| + | * [[: | ||
| + | * [[: | ||
| + | * [[: | ||
| + | * [[: | ||
| + | * [[: | ||
| + | * [[: | ||
| + | * [[: | ||
| + | * [[: | ||
| + | * [[: | ||
| + | * [[: | ||
| + | * [[: | ||
| + | * [[:faq|Site FAQ]]. | ||
| + | |||
| + | ===== Sources ===== | ||
| + | |||
| + | - The Right to Information Act, 2005 (No. 22 of 2005), Sections 3, 4, 6, 7, 8(1)(j), 8(2), 19, 20. | ||
| + | - The Right to Information (Amendment) Act, 2019 (No. 24 of 2019). | ||
| + | - The Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 (No. 22 of 2023), Section 44(3). | ||
| + | - The Digital Personal Data Protection Rules, 2025, notified 14 November 2025. | ||
| + | - //Justice K.S. Puttaswamy v. Union of India//, (2017) 10 SCC 1. | ||
| + | - //Central Board of Secondary Education v. Aditya Bandopadhyay//, | ||
| + | - Delhi High Court direction on RTI access to %%PhD%% theses, December 2024. | ||
| + | - Madras High Court order on RTI access to public servants' | ||
| + | - Central Information Commission pendency and rejection data, Q1 2026 (as reported). | ||
| + | - Central Government portal: rtionline.gov.in. | ||
| + | |||
| + | ===== Last reviewed on ===== | ||
| + | |||
| + | 20 April 2026. Rejection and pendency figures are reported estimates; confirm against the Central Information Commission' | ||
| + | |||
| + | {{tag> | ||
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