India’s Department of Telecommunications (DoT) has mandated smartphone manufacturers to install the government Sanchar Saathi portal app on all new devices to “verify authenticity of IMEIs used in mobile devices.” The DoT insists the move is to safeguard citizens from cyber criminals.
The Sanchar Saathi portal launched in May 2023 to curb telecom-related fraud. Users may block stolen phones on the Central Equipment Identity Register (CEIR) by entering their unique IMEI numbers. Telecom Analytics for Fraud Management and Consumer Protection (TAFCOP) allows citizens to check for unauthorized mobile connections registered in their name through OTP verification. Citizens may report spam calls, phishing attempts, and suspicious messages across all platforms, including WhatsApp.
Are we to believe the government implemented a massive nationwide database to simply deter phone scammers? The government has not released the official budget for this project, but a nationwide platform is not cheap. Is the government so concerned that it must mandate smartphone providers to pre-install its app? Stolen phones are not a matter of national security–Sanchar Saathi is the beginning of India’s centralized data collection.
“DoT’s SIM‑binding directions are essential to plug a concrete security gap that cybercriminals are exploiting to run large‑scale, often cross‑border, digital frauds,” the DoT said in a statement on Monday. “Accounts on instant messaging and calling apps continue to work even after the associated SIM is removed, deactivated or moved abroad, enabling anonymous scams, remote “digital arrest” frauds and government‑impersonation calls using Indian numbers.”
The government insists that users may simply delete or deactivate the app. It claims that users can choose not to register their devices. Communications Minister Jyotiraditya Scindia insists the government will not be “snooping” or monitoring calls–yet. But the government can see where devices move, when they are active, and how they are positioned relative to the telecom networks. Everyone walks around with a tracking device by default.
The telecom fraud excuse is almost laughable. The application is nothing more than a compulsory state-mandated tracking tool. Governments worldwide are eager to use new technology as a real-time monitoring mechanism. It will begin by monitoring movement but can expand in scope as far as the government is willing to go.



















