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ASCI, PSA Legal, & Tsaaro Consulting release white paper on cookie strategy for businesses

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MUMBAI: On Data Privacy Day, the Advertising Standards Council of India (ASCI) Academy, in collaboration with PSA Legal and Tsaaro Consulting, released a white paper titled Navigating Cookies: Recalibrating Your Cookie Strategy in Light of the DPDPA.

The report offers actionable insights for businesses preparing to comply with India’s Digital Personal Data Protection Act (DPDPA) and aims to promote transparency and user trust.

Building on ASCI’s 2023 paper Privacy and Progress: Pillars of Digital Bharat, this latest publication delves into best practices for cookie consent, data privacy compliance, and stakeholder engagement.

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A dipstick analysis conducted by Tsaaro Consulting found that only six per cent  of India’s top 50 websites, accounting for 30 billion visits in December 2024, were ready for specific consent as mandated by the DPDPA and draft DPDP rules issued on 3 January 2025.

Key Highlights of the White Paper:

* Compliance Gaps: Only six per cent  of major websites meet cookie consent requirements, underscoring the need for readiness efforts.

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* Granular Consent Requirements: The DPDPA calls for explicit, informed, and revocable consent for cookie use.

* Global Lessons: Insights drawn from GDPR and international standards emphasise the importance of transparency and user control.

* Industry Impact: The paper examines cookie practices across sectors such as e-commerce, social media, and healthcare.

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* Opportunities for Advertisers: Compliance is positioned as a competitive advantage, fostering consumer trust.

ASCI CEO & secretary-general Manisha Kapoor noted: “On this Data Privacy Day, we are pleased to present this collaborative white paper with PSA Legal and Tsaaro Consulting. The paper aims to help advertisers understand and prepare for cookie consent practices that are both compliant with the new DPDPA as well as build consumer trust and transparency. The paper provides practical knowledge and insights to create effective cookie practices in a privacy-conscious world.”

PSA Legal  partner Dhruv Suri remarked: “With the final DPDPA Rules on the horizon, advertisers are at a crossroads where privacy, technology, and the law converge. Once the law is better understood, the technology, i.e., cookies, will no longer be mere marketing tools but will serve as a means to strengthen customer loyalty. Global precedents can serve as the perfect roadmap to tailor strategies and navigate cookie consent management in a country that is just beginning its data privacy journey.”

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Tsaaro Consulting  CEO Akarsh Singh added: “Cookie consent is no longer a checkbox exercise; it’s a strategic element of modern advertising. The first step to creating a privacy-centric ecosystem that values the customer’s data rights when deploying cookies is to acknowledge that a gap exists between existing marketing tactics and the privacy laws and then to actively work towards bridging the gap between practicality and compliance.”

The white paper is available for download on the ASCI website. click here

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OpenAI’s Stargate lead Peter Hoeschele exits with two senior leaders

Trio behind compute push set to join new startup amid leadership reshuffle

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SAN FRANCISCO: Peter Hoeschele, a key figure behind OpenAI’s early Stargate data centre initiative, has exited the company, according to a report by The Information.

The departure is part of a broader leadership shift, with two other senior executives, Shamez Hemani and Anuj Saharan, also set to leave in the coming days. All three are expected to join the same new startup, although details about the venture remain under wraps.

The trio played a central role in OpenAI’s Stargate effort, an initiative aimed at building large-scale data centre capacity in-house to reduce reliance on external infrastructure providers. Their exits mark a notable moment for the company’s compute strategy as it continues to scale rapidly.

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OpenAI spokesperson said in a statement to The Information, “We’re grateful for the contributions Peter, Shamez, and Anuj have made to OpenAI and wish them the very best in what comes next.” The company also pointed to the recent appointment of Sachin Katti to lead its industrial compute organisation, signalling continuity in its infrastructure roadmap.

OpenAI has indicated that it does not plan to directly replace Hoeschele’s role, suggesting a possible restructuring of responsibilities within the team.

As competition intensifies in the race to build next-generation AI systems, leadership changes in core infrastructure teams are likely to draw close attention. For now, the spotlight shifts to what this departing trio builds next, and how OpenAI adapts as it scales its ambitions.

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