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The Register - Offbeat: Legal

Noyb cries foul on LinkedIn withholding profile visitor data China makes it illegal to fire humans if AI takes their jobs Databricks fails to shake authors' copyright claim Cloudera allegedly overlooked US job candidates: DoJ Australia threatens tech companies with 2.25 percent tax China blocks Meta's acquisition of AI outfit Manus Scotland Yard can keep using live facial recognition on Londoners, say judges UK tribunal sends £2B claim accusing Microsoft of overcharging for licensing to trial Yet another ex-ransomware negotiator admits turning rogue after payoff from crimelords Americans behind Nork IT fraud sentenced to 200 months Indian government investigating TCS after police sting French cops free mother and son after crypto kidnapping EFF: California 3D printer bill threatens digital freedoms IBM pays up under Trump administration's diversity blitz OpenAI CEO Sam Altman home attack suspect charged AI vs the cold hard reality of the legal profession Big Tech has not enforced Australia’s social media ban Big Tech has not enforced Australia’s social media ban China's not thrilled AI experts want to leave the country China's not thrilled AI experts want to leave the country JLR cyber bailout risks dangerous precedent, watchdog warns Patel dodges question about FBI buying location data Patel dodges question about FBI buying location data ChatGPT advised exec on firing Subnautica founders: court Japan to allow ‘proactive cyber-defense’ from October 1st FSF urges AI vendors to liberate LLMs Age verification isn't sage verification when it's inside operating systems India tests whether AI can stop trains hitting elephants Perplexity Comet hurtling toward Amazon ban Lenovo, Nintendo sue US government seeking tariff refunds Google embraces third party app stores and payments OpenA says Pentagon set ‘scary precedent’ binning Anthropic China floats conspiracies about US crypto lawsuits Microsoft 'cooperating' with Japanese antitrust probe Anthropic misanthropic toward China's AI labs Americans sue Homeland Security over 'illegal' surveillance SerpApi asks court to dismiss Google web scraping lawsuit Qualcomm set to triumph in UK smartphone ‘patent tax’ case GPT-5 bests human judges in legal smack down Starlink speeds past terrestrial networks – and regulators Rail workers accused of using ChatGPT for legal help Ghost gun legislation casts shadow over 3D printing UK to probe xAI over its revolting robo-smut generator UK to probe xAI over its revolting robo-smut generator Ex-Google engineer convicted of stealing AI secrets Ex-Google engineer convicted of stealing AI secrets Nudify app proliferation shows naked ambition of Apple and Google Nudify apps get past Google, Apple app moderation European Commission opens new investigation into X's Grok Meta probed over WhatsApp data disclosure Surrender as a service: Microsoft unlocks BitLocker for feds Oracle, Michael Dell, invest in JV to run TikTok USA UK gambling czar says Meta turns blind eye to illegal ads Akamai CEO wants help to defeat piracy, reckons he can handle edge AI alone Akamai CEO wants help to defeat piracy, can do edge AI alone Ofcom keeps X under the microscope despite Grok 'nudify' fix India demands crypto outfits geolocate customers, get a selfie to prove they’re real Tories vow to boot under-16s off social media and ban phones in schools Cloudflare CEO threatens to pull out of Italy Malaysia and Indonesia block X over deepfake smut EU vows to stand firm as US steps up attacks on tech regs X sues to protect Twitter brand Musk has been trying to kill Reddit sues Australia to escape kids social media ban Crypto-crasher Do Kwon jailed for 15 years Cloud group says EU should have blocked VMware-Broadcom Australia bans teens from social media – good luck with that Care leavers face bureaucracy and delays accessing records ICE-tracking app developer sues Trump administration Judge may force Vizio to share source code under GPL EU fines X €120M in first-ever DSA penalty payout IP lawyer's son surprises with vibe-coded IP infringement Campbell’s cans IT VP after ‘3D-printed chicken' rant TSMC lawsuit claims former exec probably leaks to Intel AI nudification site fined £55K for skipping age checks Senators propose to let users sue tech giants for harmful al Dutch turbine engineer tried to turn wind into crypto £5B Bitcoin bandit sent down for 11 years EU’s leaked GDPR, AI reforms slated by privacy activists Feds beat fraudster in $345M destroyed Bitcoin dispute Getty loses UK copyright battle against Stability AI Supermicro launches probe after staff charged with China export violations
Indian police commissioner wants ID cards for AI agents
Simon Sharwood Simon Sharwood · 2026-02-09 · via The Register - Offbeat: Legal

Legal

PLUS: China broadens cryptocurrency crackdown; Australian facial recognition privacy revisited; Singapore debuts electric VTOL; and more!

ASIA IN BRIEF The Commissioner of Police in the Indian city of Hyderabad, population 11 million, has called for AI agents to be issued with identity cards – or at least their digital equivalent.

In a lengthy post on X, commissioner V.C. Sajjanar noted “Autonomous robot agents have entered highly critical sectors such as banks, hospitals, and power grids. However, with these digital agents performing tasks independently without human intervention, there is widespread concern that we are at risk of losing control over them.”

Sajjanar worries that agents can make mistakes and also raised “a threat of cybercriminals hijacking the behavior of these agents and forcing them to commit wrongdoings.”

He therefore suggests every AI agent “must have a precise 'Digital Identity.'”

“Just as a human has an ID card in an organization, these software agents must also have identification. Which agent opened which file? When did it make changes? To whom did it send information? Every such movement must be recorded (Logging). Because of this, if an accident happens by mistake, we can immediately identify which agent caused it and rectify the issue.”

China cracks down on stablecoins, tokenization

The People’s Bank of China last week strengthened its ban on cryptocurrency, and tried to extend its ruling across borders.

The central bank issued a Notice on Further Preventing and Handling Risks Related to Virtual Currencies that re-iterates Beijing does not consider cryptocurrencies a legal means of exchange. The new Notice adds two more rules.

One regulates “tokenization of real-world assets,” the practice of using digital certificates to allow fractional ownership of assets by issuing tokens. That practice is now illegal in most applications, and heavily regulated in the few permitted uses.

The other new rule bans issuance of stablecoins tied to China’s currency. Beijing will have little trouble making that stick at home, but there’s little China’s government can do if foreign entities choose to create a stablecoin tied to the Yuan.

Hardware facial recognition privacy ruling overruled

Australian hardware chain Bunnings has successfully challenged a decision it violated shoppers’ privacy by using facial recognition without permission in its stores.

Readers may remember that the retailer justified use of facial recognition on grounds that it wanted to detect a small number of people known to have acted violently in its stores or to be associated with organized crime. The company claimed it processed images it captured in 0.00417 seconds, and deleted most at the end of that period, so shoppers’ privacy was preserved.

Those arguments prevailed last week in a tribunal decision that found the retailer’s use of facial recognition was reasonable given the risks it faced and the security measures implemented to protect shoppers.

However, the hardware barn was also found to breach some of Australia’s privacy principles and told to stop that.

Huge if true: India/China payments link rumored

Reuters last week reported talks have taken place between Ant Group and Indian authorities about linking their Alipay and UPI payment systems.

If the report is correct and the talks succeed, it will mean two payment schemes with over 1.5 billion combined users become interoperable. Such an arrangement would also represent a substantial thawing of China-India relations.

Electric VTOL hovers into view

Singapore’s Nanyang Technological University last week showed off the island nation’s first locally designed and built full-sized aircraft, an advanced electric vertical take-off and landing (eVTOL) technology demonstrator.

The craft has eight rotors and can take off and land vertically “from any confined space” that can accommodate its eight-meter wingspan.

Professor Lam Khin Yong, NTU’s Vice President for industry, said the demonstrator shows electric aircraft of this sort have “potential to support future intracity and intercity mobility, particularly in Asia’s densely populated cities, where safe and well-designed aircraft will be critical for the movement of people and cargo.”

Singapore datacenter buyout

Investment firm KKR, together with Singtel, last week decided to spend $5.1 billion to acquire the 82 percent of ST Telemedia Global Data Centres they did not already own.

KKR will own 75 percent of the business, leaving the remainder to Singtel.

ST Telemedia Global Data Centres currently operates over 100 datacenters with collective capacity of 2.3 gigawatts across 12 countries. The company has a pipeline of another 1.7 gigawatts under construction. ®