
A draft of the Digital Personal Data Protection Rules was released on 3 January 2025, under the Digital Personal Data Protection Act (DPDPA) 2023. The rules mark a crucial step in India’s journey towards establishing a strong data privacy framework. They aim to balance safeguarding individuals’ rights for the protection of their personal data with organizational compliance obligations.
Through this centralization, the rules facilitate regulatory compliance, business efficiency, and user control.
With the release of the draft, organizations have been striving to comply. A crucial aspect of this compliance is the role of the consent manager – an external or internal entity that will act as an intermediary between data fiduciaries and data principals. This role aligns with international data privacy frameworks such as the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).
In this article, Silverse’s experts explore the responsibilities and significance of the consent manager under the DPDPA.
A consent manager is a company that helps data principals and organizations with the obtainment, management, and withdrawal of consent before personal data is processed. The consent manager achieves this by providing an interoperable, transparent platform for data principals to manage their consent.
Notably, while other regulations such as the EU’s GDPR or California’s California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) primarily rely on organizations to manage their own consent mechanisms, India’s Rules introduce a regulated, centralized model.
Through this centralization, the rules facilitate regulatory compliance, business efficiency, and user control. However, its success relies on robust enforcement, security safeguards, industry-wide adoption, and interoperability.
Key duties of the consent manager include, as per Part B of the First Schedule of the DPDP draft Rules published on 3 January 2025:
Maintain on its platform a record of the following:
For companies to act as consent managers, they must meet several criteria, including but not limited to:
Many businesses will feel the pressure of implementing consent managers while minimizing costs for the same.
The Digital Personal Data Protection Rules impose strict controls on the operations of consent managers. Some critical controls include:
Consent managers shall implement audit mechanisms to monitor, evaluate, review and report the audit outcome to the Data Protection Board (“the Board”), with respect to:
Note that, if a consent manager is found to be violating the DPDPA, the Board might issue directives to address non-compliance. In more serious cases, the Board might suspend or cancel the consent manager’s registration to protect the interests of data principals. The Board may also request any relevant information from consent managers as necessary.
While the consent manager system offers structure to consent management, its implementation comes with several challenges for data fiduciaries, data principals, data processors, and regulators. Below are the most prominent ones.
Compliance Costs for Organizations
Many businesses will feel the pressure of implementing consent managers while minimizing costs for the same. Investments for companies may include, but are not limited to:
Such costs could add financial strain to businesses, especially SMEs.
Integration and Interoperability
While the DPDPA mandates that consent managers develop interoperable platforms, each sector (finance, healthcare, e-commerce, telecom, etc.) uses different data formats, technical protocols, and consent collection methods, making seamless integration difficult. The lack of uniform interoperable protocols and standards only adds to this complexity.
Furthermore, consent managers may need to integrate with a large number of data fiduciaries, requiring significant investment in technology and resources.
Cybersecurity and Data Security
Consent managers will be responsible for managing large volumes of personal data. This will make them attractive targets for cybercriminals, further creating challenges for both consent managers and data fiduciaries in protecting personal data and complying with the DPDPA.
India’s consent manager system offers a regulated, centralized approach that enhances data privacy, interoperability, user control, and organizational compliance. While challenges remain in the implementation and enforcement of the consent manager framework, organizational collaboration and robust regulatory oversight can help position India as a global leader in digital data protection and privacy.
As of 18 March 2025, the draft DPDP Rules are currently under review. Once they are finalized, all organizations (whether based in India or internationally) that process digital personal data related to providing goods or services to data principals in India will be expected to revise their data privacy and protection strategies – including consent manager integration – as per the DPDPA.
Implementation, however, may be complex for many entities, especially those based outside India. That is where Silverse steps in. We craft comprehensive cybersecurity journeys, anchored by our industry expertise, extensive experience, and ecosystem of trusted partners.
Our three branches of offerings – Advisory, Implementation, and Managed Operations – will help ensure your compliance with the DPDPA, whether you are a data fiduciary, consent manager, or data processor. Contact us now to get started.
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