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DAILY NEWS ANALYSIS

Monthly DNA

27 Jan, 2026

19 Min Read

Kavachi Volcano

GS-I : Physical Geography Current mapping upsc

Scientists recently captured rare footage of sharks living inside the Kavachi volcano, located near the Solomon Islands. This discovery challenges previous assumptions about marine life surviving in extreme volcanic environments.

About Kavachi Volcano

The Kavachi Volcano is a shallow submarine volcano in the South Pacific Ocean, situated south of the remote Vangunu Island in the Solomon Islands.

Geological Significance

  • It is part of the Pacific Ring of Fire, a tectonically active region.

  • Kavachi is one of the world’s few active and visible undersea volcanoes.

Volcanic Activity

  • The volcano has been erupting regularly, though unpredictably, for many years.

  • Eruptions often produce:

    • Steam plumes

    • Ash and lava

    • Water discoloration due to volcanic gas release

  • Occasionally, eruptions create temporary islands, which are coated with solid lava and too small to resist wave erosion.

  • Notable eruptions have been documented repeatedly since 1939.

Significance of the Discovery

  • The footage of sharks living in this extreme volcanic environment shows that marine life can adapt to highly hostile conditions, including:

    • High temperatures

    • Toxic volcanic gases

    • Turbulent underwater activity

  • This discovery could provide new insights into evolutionary adaptation and survival mechanisms in extreme ecosystems.


Source: THE HINDU

Bharat Taxi Initiative

GS-II : Government policies and interventions Government Schemes & Programmes

The Government of India recently launched the Bharat Taxi initiative, a first-of-its-kind cooperative-driven national ride-hailing platform designed to empower drivers and enhance citizen-focused mobility services.

About the Bharat Taxi Initiative

  • The initiative is government-supported and developed under the Union Ministry of Cooperation in collaboration with the National e-Governance Division (NeGD).

  • It is India’s first cooperative taxi network, allowing drivers to become shareholders and co-owners of the platform.

  • The initiative is jointly promoted by leading cooperative and financial institutions, including:

    • NCDC, IFFCO, AMUL, KRIBHCO, NAFED, NABARD, NDDB, and NCEL.

Key Features of the Bharat Taxi Initiative

1. Driver-Owned Fleet

  • Drivers can purchase shares and become cooperative members.

  • This provides decision-making power, transparency, and ownership to the drivers.

2. Zero Commission

  • Unlike private cab aggregators that take a significant commission, Bharat Taxi ensures that the full fare goes to the driver.

3. Transparent, No-Surge Pricing

  • Fares are predictable and fair, with no surge pricing, ensuring trust among passengers.

4. Deep Digital Integration

  • The platform connects with government digital services such as DigiLocker and UMANG for identity verification and seamless service delivery.

5. Platform Integration & Technical Architecture

  • Integration with national digital platforms, including API Setu, ensures smooth interoperability.

6. Security, Compliance & Infrastructure

  • The initiative adheres to Government of India data protection norms and cybersecurity standards.

  • Emphasis is placed on robust technical infrastructure for safe and efficient operations.

Significance of the Initiative

  • Promotes cooperative ownership and inclusive economic participation.

  • Provides a fair and transparent alternative to private ride-hailing platforms.

  • Strengthens digital governance and citizen-centric services.

  • Encourages financial inclusion and empowerment of drivers across India.




Source: THE HINDU

Ponduru Khadi

GS-III : Economic Issues GI Tag

The Geographical Indications Registry has granted the Geographical Indication (GI) tag to Ponduru Khadi, a traditional handspun and handwoven cotton fabric from Andhra Pradesh.

About Ponduru Khadi

  • Origin: Ponduru village, Srikakulam district, Andhra Pradesh.

  • Local Name: Patnulu.

  • Material Used: Hill cotton, punasa cotton, or red cotton, all indigenous to the Srikakulam region.

  • Production Process: Entirely manual, from cleaning the cotton to spinning and weaving, preserving traditional craftsmanship.

Unique Features of Ponduru Khadi

  1. Cleaning Method: Cotton is cleaned using the jawbone of the Valuga fish, a globally unique practice found only in Ponduru Khadi.

  2. Spinning Technique: Ponduru is the only place in India where spinners use single-spindle charkhas with 24 spokes, also called the Gandhi Charkha.

  3. Fineness of Fabric: The fabric has a high yarn count of 100–120, indicating extreme fineness and quality.

Historical Significance

  • During the pre-Independence period, Mahatma Gandhi highlighted Ponduru Khadi in his journal Young India.

  • The fabric became a symbol of self-reliance, swadeshi, and the Indian freedom movement.

Geographical Indication (GI) Tag

  • A GI tag identifies goods originating from a specific location and having distinct qualities, reputation, or characteristics linked to that place.

  • Ponduru Khadi’s GI tag ensures the protection of its traditional identity and prevents unauthorized production elsewhere.


Source: INDIAN EXPRESS

Competition Commission of India (CCI)

GS-II : Governance Institutions

Recently, the Competition Commission of India (CCI) has taken cognizance of information filed against IndiGo Airlines in connection with the recent flight disruptions in the aviation sector. The matter is being examined from the perspective of possible anti-competitive practices and consumer interest.

About the Competition Commission of India

The Competition Commission of India (CCI) is a statutory body established in March 2009 under the Competition Act, 2002.

The primary objective of the CCI is to eliminate practices that have an adverse effect on competition, promote and sustain fair competition, protect consumer interests, and ensure freedom of trade in the Indian markets.

  • Nodal Ministry: Ministry of Corporate Affairs

  • Headquarters: New Delhi

Composition of the Competition Commission of India

The CCI functions as a quasi-judicial body.

  • It consists of one Chairperson and six other Members.

  • All members are appointed by the Central Government.

Eligibility of Members

  • Members must have at least 15 years of professional experience in fields such as law, finance, economics, international trade, or management.

  • Each member serves a term of five years.

Functions of the Competition Commission of India

Promoting Fair Competition and Consumer Protection

The CCI works to prevent anti-competitive practices, such as price-fixing, cartels, and collusion, thereby ensuring fair prices, quality goods, and consumer welfare.

Maintaining Market Freedom

The Commission restricts abuse of dominant position by large market players and reviews mergers and acquisitions to prevent the creation of monopolies or reduction in competition.

Investigation and Penalties

The CCI conducts inquiries into violations of competition law, imposes penalties on offenders, and promotes competition awareness through training and advocacy programmes.

Advisory and Collaborative Role

The Commission provides advisory opinions to government departments on competition-related matters and collaborates with sectoral regulators to ensure consistency with competition laws.

Significance of the CCI

The Competition Commission of India plays a crucial role in:

  • Ensuring a level playing field in the market

  • Protecting consumer interests

  • Encouraging innovation and efficiency

  • Strengthening market-based economic growth


Source: PIB

Copyright Act 1957

GS-III : S&T Issues relating to IPR

The Indian government is undertaking a major reform of the Copyright Act, 1957 to address the challenges posed by Artificial Intelligence (AI) in the creation and use of copyrighted works. This reform is based on a hybrid model, balancing the needs of AI innovation with the rights of creators.

Hybrid Model Overview:

  • Introduces a mandatory blanket license allowing AI developers to use copyrighted works for training AI systems.

  • Grants creators a statutory right to remuneration for the use of their works.

  • Aims to balance innovation and creator rights, positioning India differently from the European Union, which emphasizes transparency, and the United Kingdom, which provides limited recognition to computer-generated works.

Proposed Changes to the Copyright Act, 1957

1. Blanket License for AI Developers

  • AI developers will receive a non-negotiable, universal license to use all lawfully accessed copyrighted works for AI training.

  • Rights holders cannot withhold their works from being used in AI training.

  • Eliminates the need for individual permissions currently required under Section 14, which grants the owner exclusive rights to reproduce, adapt, or communicate their works.

2. Statutory Remuneration Rights

  • Copyright holders will be entitled to royalties even without providing explicit consent.

  • Royalties will be calculated as a fixed percentage of revenue generated from AI systems trained on copyrighted content.

  • AI firms pay royalties only after commercialization, not during data collection or training.

3. Centralized Collection and Distribution Mechanism

  • The government will establish a centralized non-profit entity to collect royalty payments from AI developers.

  • This entity will include Copyright Societies and Collective Management Organizations (CMOs) as members.

4. Protection for Startups and MSMEs

  • The proposed reforms may include concessional provisions or differential royalty structures to support startups and MSMEs, ensuring a level playing field.

Need for Amendments

1. Absence of AI-Specific Definitions

  • The current Copyright Act does not define terms such as Artificial Intelligence, Generative AI, machine learning, or training data.

  • This creates legal uncertainty about how AI systems and text-and-data mining (TDM) activities fit under the existing law.

2. Ambiguity on AI Training as Copyright Use

  • It is unclear whether AI training constitutes reproduction, adaptation, or infringement under Section 14.

  • There is uncertainty about whether AI training qualifies as fair dealing under Section 52.

3. Unauthorized Use of Copyrighted Materials

  • AI systems currently rely on mass-scale scraping of copyrighted content without consent, bypassing the permission-based framework of the Act.

4. Copyrightability of AI-Generated Works

  • Section 2(d)(vi) defines an author as a human, leaving AI-generated content without clear ownership or copyright protection.

  • Section 2(ffc) treats computers as tools, adding further ambiguity over AI-created works.

5. Cross-Border and Jurisdictional Issues

  • Section 40 protects foreign works territorially but does not address AI systems trained abroad on Indian works or cloud-based AI models, creating enforcement challenges.

Key Sections of the Copyright Act, 1957

  • Section 2: Defines types of works covered, e.g., literary works (2(o)) and dramatic works (2(h)).

  • Section 13: Extends copyright protection to literary, musical, dramatic works, films, and sound recordings.

  • Section 14: Grants exclusive rights to reproduce, adapt, publish, translate, or communicate works, which cannot be exercised without the owner’s permission.

Judicial Interpretations

  • Mr. Dattatray Bapu Dighe v. State of Maharashtra (2024): Copyright exists automatically upon creation; registration is not mandatory.

  • Star India Pvt. Ltd v. Magicwin.Games (2024): Digital piracy websites hosting copyrighted content were permanently blocked.

  • India TV v. Yashraj Films (2012): Small usage of songs does not constitute copyright infringement.

  • Oxford v. Rameshwari Photocopy Services (2016): Photocopying book excerpts for educational purposes is fair dealing, promoting public access to knowledge.

Global Approaches to AI-Generated Content

Country

Approach

USA

Requires substantial human creativity; purely AI-generated works are not protected (Thaler v. Perlmutter, 2023).

European Union

AI Act (2024) mandates training data transparency; sui generis rights for AI outputs are under discussion.

China

AI-generated images are protected if human originality contributes.

UK

Section 9(3) of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988 grants copyright to the person arranging computer-generated works; moral rights are excluded.

Conclusion

The proposed amendments to the Copyright Act, 1957 aim to:

  • Introduce a mandatory blanket license for AI training.

  • Ensure statutory royalties for creators.

  • Address gaps in AI-related definitions, training, and authorship.

  • Establish a centralized royalty collection mechanism, ensuring fair compensation while promoting AI innovation in India.


Source: THE HINDU

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