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Inviting suggestions on India Digital Ecosystem Architecture 2.0

Inviting suggestions on India Digital Ecosystem Architecture 2.0
Start Date :
Jan 29, 2022
Last Date :
Feb 27, 2022
23:45 PM IST (GMT +5.30 Hrs)
Submission Closed

India Enterprise Architecture (IndEA) Framework along with its Adoption Guide were developed and released in December, 2018. The vision of IndEA is “to establish best-in-class ...

India Enterprise Architecture (IndEA) Framework along with its Adoption Guide were developed and released in December, 2018. The vision of IndEA is “to establish best-in-class architectural governance, processes and practices with optimal utilization of ICT infrastructure and applications to offer ONE Government experience to the citizens and businesses”.

During implementation of IndEA as well as in the light of advancement of technology, a need was felt to revise the IndEA document and accordingly, after multiple rounds of meetings and detailed deliberations, draft InDEA 2.0 document has been formulated (report given below). India Digital Ecosystem Architecture (InDEA) 2.0 harmonizes and builds upon the architectural frameworks developed during the last few years. While codifying their principles, it provides a pragmatic approach to realize the concept of open digital ecosystems in an integrated and collaborative manner. It recommends a value-driven approach, a focus on capability building and above all, a preference to ‘enabling’ rather than ‘building’. It is an evolving and dynamic framework with continuous improvement as its mantra. The InDEA 2.0 framework enables establishing such a right balance in all the ongoing architectural initiatives and accelerates the realization of the vision of Digital India.

In the light of the above facts, it is requested to kindly review the document and provide your valuable comments/feedback on the draft InDEA 2.0 document latest by February 27, 2022

Click here to read the draft InDEA 2.0 document (pdf-3.7mb)

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Showing 479 Submission(s)
Ajinkya Rajendra Kolkar
Ajinkya Rajendra Kolkar 4 years 5 months ago
If you are an individual or run a small business and are applying for a collateral-free loan, the lender might ask you to submit reams of documents to establish your credit worthiness. You have to download these from different sources (bank statements, insurance policies, mutual fund holdings, etc.) or give the lender access to the same. Now, upon your approval, AAs will do that. The data in their hands will be encrypted and can only be decrypted by FIUs. These are typically financial institutions.
Ajinkya Rajendra Kolkar
Ajinkya Rajendra Kolkar 4 years 5 months ago
Then, on 3 September, the country announced the launch of its Account Aggregator platform. Eight banks said that they would be rolling it out. Account Aggregators (AAs) are ‘data access fiduciaries’ who act as the front end of its Data Empowerment and Protection Architecture (DEPA). Okay, let me explain this in English. All of us leave various trails of data when we use smartphones and public WiFi. We don’t think about it. But, financial data is different. It needs to be secure and should be accessed only with the consent of the user (data owner) and for purposes the user had consented to. That is what DEPA assures every Indian. It empowers you and I, the folks who generate data when we do any transaction using digital means. AAs are trustees of our data. They do not get to peer into its details. Nor can they use this data. With our consent, however, they can pass on data from financial information providers (FIPs) to financial information users (FIU).
Ajinkya Rajendra Kolkar
Ajinkya Rajendra Kolkar 4 years 5 months ago
Even as India’s asset monetization initiative—the National Monetisation Pipeline—justifiably garnered attention, two recent initiatives which are far more substantive did not get their fair share of it. One was the Factoring Bill amendments passed on 29 July. Moving the Bill in the Lok Sabha, the finance minister promised that thousands of non-banking financial companies (NBFCs) would now be able to buy receivables from Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSMEs). She was not exaggerating. Earlier, the law stipulated that for an NBFC to engage in the factoring business, its: (i) financial assets in the factoring business and (ii) income from the factoring business should both be more than 50% (of gross assets/net income), or more than a threshold as notified by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI). The Bill removed this threshold for NBFCs to engage in this business
abhinav sharma_58
abhinav sharma_58 4 years 5 months ago
हम डिजिटलाइजेशन 2.0 की बात कर रहे है लेकिन अभी भी हमारे देश में काफी जगह ऐसी हैं जहां पर नेटवर्क ही नही है और कुछ ऐसी जगह है जन नेटवर्क तो है लेकिन गति नहीं है तो डिजिटल प्लेटफार्म पर काम करने में समस्याएं आती है सबसे पहले सरकारी योजनाओं को डिजिटलाइज करने की जरूरत है अभी भी कुछ योजनाएं जनता तक पहुंच ही नहीं पाती है और सरकारी कागजों से प्रारंभ होकर सरकारी कागजों में ही समाप्त हो जाती हैं
Venkata Subba Naidu D
Venkata Subba Naidu D 4 years 5 months ago
A look at strategies and pathways to make indian agriculture resilient ina changing climate and helpful the country fulfil commitment ...
Malay Sarkar
Malay Sarkar 4 years 5 months ago
we want fully digitised judiciary, with audio video recording and Aadhaar linked. Govt first priority to to give citizens a compatible judiciary which can deliver justice within 6 months, now it seems justice is for sale not our rights, govt deliberately suppress the ordinary people and benifits the culprits by paralysing the justice system. the most need of the hour is demolition of reservations and caste based benifits, recognise the marits and stop vote bank politics.
Saloni yadav
Saloni yadav 4 years 5 months ago
India Enterprise Architecture National eGovernance Division has been entrusted with the mandate to form a division called India Enterprise Architecture (IndEA) to drive the initiative across Government Ministries, States and other Agencies. Under the overarching vision of Digital India Programme, Government of India aims to make all Government services digitally accessible in an integrated manner to citizens through multiple channels like web, mobile and common service delivery outlets. Also, users have become tech-savvy and now demand faster delivery of services which match with those of private sector and other eGovernance delivering Nations across the world. The United Nations eGovernance survey emphasized on a whole-of-government approach, policy integration and use of Big Data Analytics to provide better governance to citizens. These trends require breaking of sectoral barriers and silos & re-architecting the Government as a
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