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Monday, 25 July 2022

Government orders its employees not to use Google Drive, Dropbox, VPN.

Government Orders workers Not to Use Google Drive, Dropbox, VPNs 

A new government order circumscribe workers from using third- party,non-government pall platforms including Google Drive and Dropbox as well as virtual private network( VPN) services including NordVPN and ExpressVPN. The order passed by the National Informatics Centre( NIC) has been circulated to all ministries and departments and all government workers are needed to misbehave with the directive, widgets 360 has learnt. The new move by the government comes just weeks after directing VPN service providers and data centre companies to store their stoner data for over to five times. 

Citing an increased number of cyberattacks and trouble perception to the government, the 10- runner document seen by widgets 360 ordered workers to" not upload or save any internal, defined, nonpublic government data or lines on anynon-government pall service( ex Google Drive, Dropbox,etc.)." The document is named" Cyber Security Guidelines for Government workers." 

In addition to confining workers from using the popular pall services, the government instructed workers through its directive to not use any third- party anonymisation services and VPNs, including NordVPN, ExpressVPN, Tor, and delegates. also, it directed the pool to refrain from using" unauthorised remote administration tools" similar as TeamViewer, AnyDesk, and Ammyy Admin, among others. 

Government workers are also directed to not use any" external dispatch services for sanctioned communication" and conduct" sensitive internal meetings and conversations" using" unauthorised third- party videotape conferencing or collaboration tools." 

The government also ordered workers to not" use any external websites or pall- grounded services for converting/ compressing a government document". It also directed the pool to not use" any external mobile app- grounded scanner services" including CamScanner for" surveying internal government documents. 

Specially, the government banned CamScanner in 2020 as a part of its original move to circumscribe China- grounded apps in the country. Some government officers were, still, still being seen using the app for surveying physical clones of their sanctioned documents. 

Alongside confining the operation of certain apps, the government's order also directed workers to not' jailbreak' or' root' their mobile phones. 

The directive also ordered workers to take measures including the use of complex watchwords as well as streamlining watchwords formerly in 45 days and streamlining operating system and memoirs firmware with the rearmost updates and security patches. 

"All government workers, including temporary, contractual/ outsourced coffers are needed to rigorously cleave to the guidelines mentioned in this document," the order said." Anynon-compliance may be acted upon by the separate CISOs department heads." 

The order was released on June 10 after a couple of variations in the original draft made by the NIC. It included inputs from India's Computer Emergency Response Team( CERT- In) and was approved by the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology( MeitY) clerk. 

widgets 360 has reached out to Google, Dropbox, and other realities to get their commentary on the government's directive. This composition will be streamlined when the companies in question respond. 

In late April, the CERT- In issued a directive to make its obligatory for VPN service providers, data centres, virtual private garçon( VPS) providers, and pall service providers to keep stoner data for five times or indeed longer. The order will come into force from June 28. 

As a result of that order, VPN service providers including NordVPN, ExpressVPN, and Surfshark have decided to remove their physical waiters in the country as they follow no- log programs and aren't technically able of storing logs. The major VPN realities as well as some digital rights groups have also raised sequestration enterprises for druggies in storing their data. 


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