India has taken the drastic step of banning Telegram, the encrypted messaging app, following a spate of exam paper leaks that compromised the integrity of national entrance tests. The move, announced late last night, marks one of the most significant acts of digital sovereignty in recent memory, with the government citing Telegram’s refusal to cooperate with authorities or implement backdoor mechanisms. As London’s tech policy circles digest the news, a clear warning emerges: nations must reclaim control over their digital infrastructure or risk handing their futures to opaque algorithms and overseas data centres.
For the uninitiated, Telegram’s end-to-end encryption has long been a double-edged sword. While it protects dissidents and journalists, it also provides a safe haven for malpractice. In India, leaked question papers for the Joint Entrance Examination (JEE) and other high-stakes tests flooded Telegram channels, undermining years of effort to democratise access to education. The ban, which follows a similar prohibition on TikTok in 2020, sends a stark signal: no app, however beloved, is above the law when it threatens the fabric of society.
But this is not simply a story about leaks. It is a story about the architecture of power in the 21st century. When a nation like India, with its 1.4 billion citizens and growing digital footprint, decides to block a platform used by hundreds of millions, it is a declaration of digital sovereignty. The UK’s technology minister issued a statement cautioning that “unilateral bans risk fragmenting the global internet but failing to act cedes control to unaccountable corporations.” This is the fundamental tension we face: how do we balance security, privacy, and sovereignty when the tools we rely on are built in Silicon Valley, run on global clouds, and governed by US law.
As someone who has spent years in the heart of the tech industry, I see the warning signs. India’s move is a canary in the coal mine for what happens when the user experience of society collides with the business models of platforms. Telegram, for its part, has always positioned itself as a bastion of free speech. But free speech without accountability is anarchy. The leaked exam papers were not just bits of text; they were the keys to thousands of young lives, determining who gets a shot at medical school or engineering. The cost of inaction was simply too high.
So where does this leave us? First, we must acknowledge that encryption is not a monolith. There is a middle ground between backdoors and blind faith. The tech industry has the tools to build systems that can detect mass abuse without breaking encryption, but it has chosen not to deploy them due to ideological purity. That must change. Second, nations must invest in their own digital infrastructure. The UK’s push for a “digital pound” and its scrutiny of cloud providers are steps in the right direction, but we need more. We need open protocols, interoperable systems, and a commitment to data localisation where sensitive contexts demand it.
Critics will argue that bans are blunt instruments. They are. But so are hammers when you need to break a lock. India’s ban on Telegram is not the end of the conversation; it is the beginning. Expect more such actions as governments wake up to the realities of digital dependence. The question is not whether sovereignty will be asserted but how. Will we build a fragmented internet where borders are digital walls? Or will we forge a new compact between platforms, users, and states that respects both security and liberty?
The answer lies in the next generation of technologies: quantum computing that can crack encryption but also build unhackable systems; AI that can spot leaks before they spread but also respect privacy. The future is not predetermined. It is ours to engineer. But we must act now, not when the next crisis hits. India has lit a match. Let’s see if we can build a lantern before the dark spreads.








