Hi Friends,

Even as I launch this today ( my 80th Birthday ), I realize that there is yet so much to say and do. There is just no time to look back, no time to wonder,"Will anyone read these pages?"

With regards,
Hemen Parekh
27 June 2013

Now as I approach my 90th birthday ( 27 June 2023 ) , I invite you to visit my Digital Avatar ( www.hemenparekh.ai ) – and continue chatting with me , even when I am no more here physically

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Sunday, 15 March 2026

What Counts As Personal Data

What Counts As Personal Data

Why this question matters to me

I’ve been writing about data, consent and digital governance for years, and the Supreme Court’s decision to examine what “personal data” means under India’s Digital Personal Data Protection (DPDP) framework feels like a necessary moment of clarity. This is about more than definitions on a page: it will affect journalism, public accountability, business compliance, and the everyday rights of citizens.

Quick background: the DPDP regime in India

  • The Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 (DPDP Act) is India’s statutory framework that regulates the processing of digital personal data. It creates the categories of data principals (individuals) and data fiduciaries (entities that determine purpose and means of processing) and establishes enforcement mechanisms including a Data Protection Board.DPDP Act (MeitY)
  • The Act limits itself to digital personal data (including digitised offline records) and sets out rights like access, correction, erasure, and grievance redressal.
  • In late 2025 the DPDP Rules were notified to operationalise many parts of the Act, and a set of constitutional challenges followed.SC case summary

I’ve previously talked about systems to give data principals clearer control (for example, my piece proposing a user dashboard for data owners).Dashboard for Data Owners

What the Supreme Court is being asked to decide

The Court has agreed to examine petitions that challenge certain DPDP provisions—notably amendments that interact with the Right to Information (RTI) framework and provisions that allow state access to data. At stake is whether the DPDP Act’s treatment of “personal information” creates a blanket bar that can unduly restrict legitimate public-interest disclosures. The bench has highlighted the need to delineate personal data from public data so privacy protections do not undermine transparency.SC notice and reporting

Why the definition of personal data is consequential

  • For individuals: it determines what information they control, what rights they can exercise, and how (and whether) they can seek redress when data is misused.
  • For journalists and civil society: it affects access to records that expose wrongdoing; a broad shield could impede accountability under RTI-style disclosure regimes.
  • For businesses: legal certainty about what counts as personal data influences compliance costs, data-minimisation practices, breach reporting, and cross-border transfers.
  • For regulators and state agencies: the scope decides how much discretion the State has to access data for governance, enforcement or national-security purposes.

Possible legal tests and interpretations the Court might use

  • Identifiability test: does the data by itself or when combined with other accessible information identify an individual? The DPDP Act’s statutory language already ties personal data to identifiability; courts often work with a reasonable likelihood standard.
  • Contextuality: is the information in context about personal private matters or does it relate to public duties and public-interest functions? Context will matter especially for public officials.
  • Proportionality and balancing: drawing from constitutional privacy jurisprudence, the Court is likely to apply proportionality (legitimate aim, necessity, proportionality of means) when balancing privacy and free speech/transparency.
  • Public-interest override: whether the historical RTI balance (allowing personal data disclosure when larger public interest exists) survives or needs recalibration in the digital era.

These are not hypothetical judicial musings—the Court has signalled that it will have to reconcile privacy precedents with RTI jurisprudence and the new statutory design.Court observations (reporting)

Comparisons: GDPR and US approaches

  • EU GDPR: very broad—personal data = any information relating to an identified or identifiable natural person. The GDPR emphasizes identifiability, purpose limitation, data minimisation, and robust rights for data subjects.
  • United States: fragmented and sectoral. There is no single federal statute; protections depend on sectoral laws (HIPAA, GLBA), state laws (CCPA/CPRA) and privacy torts. The US tends to emphasize consumer protection, notice and opt-out in many contexts.
  • India’s DPDP sits between these approaches: it borrows concepts (identifiability, rights) from GDPR but limits scope to digital data and preserves significant State exemptions—hence the current constitutional challenge.

One short scenario

Imagine an RTI request seeks contract details of a procurement officer implicated in an alleged kickback. If the procurement officer’s mobile number or email appears in procurement documents, is that personal and therefore exempt? Or is it public, given the connection to an official act? The answer will turn on identifiability, context and whether public interest overrides privacy—exactly the issues before the Court.

Practical takeaways

  • Individuals: maintain basic hygiene—know what you share digitally, use privacy settings, and exercise statutory rights (access, correction) when needed.
  • Businesses: review data inventories, adopt minimisation and strong anonymisation practices, and plan for a range of judicial outcomes that may change disclosure and compliance obligations.
  • Regulators and policymakers: clarity of statutory definitions matters more than ever—labels like “personal” and “public” need concrete, operational tests.

Closing reflection

I welcome the Court’s engagement. Clear judicial guidance on what personal data means will reduce uncertainty, protect privacy without strangling transparency, and give citizens and institutions a firmer basis to build trust in digital systems. This is the kind of moment where law, technology and civic accountability must be carefully rebalanced.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh


Any questions / doubts / clarifications regarding this blog? Just ask (by typing or talking) my Virtual Avatar on the website embedded below. Then "Share" that to your friend on WhatsApp.

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Curtain on a 40‑Year PIL

Curtain on a 40‑Year PIL

Curtain on a 40‑Year PIL

I write this as someone who watches law, policy and public life intersect — and sometimes collide — in ways that shape a city's air and a nation's legal imagination. The Supreme Court's recent decision to formally dispose of the 1985 public interest litigation that drove Delhi's pollution jurisprudence marks the end of one procedural chapter and the start of a new, urgent test of institutional capacity.[^1][^2]

The background: one PIL that became many

In 1985 an environmental petition was filed in the Supreme Court to confront choking pollution in Delhi‑NCR. Over time that original writ petition expanded into a sprawling repository of environmental grievances, directions and follow‑ups covering vehicular emissions, industrial discharges, waste management, and even broader regulatory reforms. The file became synonymous with sustained judicial oversight of Delhi's environment and produced some of India's most consequential regulatory interventions — from fuel reforms and CNG conversions to restrictions around the Taj Mahal and the progressive development of the “polluter pays” ethos.[^3]

The petitioner and his significance

The petitioner who first woke the judiciary and the public to Delhi's toxic air (and whose name is attached to the litigation stream) is widely acknowledged as one of India’s most influential environmental litigators. Over four decades his cases reshaped environmental law in India, expanding constitutional protections and asking courts to hold governments and polluters to account. His litigation helped introduce legal principles and practical reforms that still animate policy debates today.[^3]

The long legal journey

This was not a single continuous hearing but an evolving judicial experiment. What began as targeted relief turned into decades of interlocutory applications, monitoring orders and continuing mandamus — a form of sustained judicial supervision. The case generated multiple landmark orders: acceptance of expert committee recommendations, fuel and vehicle regulations, institutional responses like specialised authorities, and regular reports and monitoring cycles.

But years of piecemeal additions, tagging of fresh grievances onto the original file, and repetitive interlocutory pleadings created an unwieldy docket. The Supreme Court — after flagging the problem for months — decided that the better way forward was to reorganise: formally dispose of the 1985 petition and re‑frame the subject under fresh suo motu proceedings titled around NCR air pollution, while converting pending interlocutory applications into separate petitions for focused adjudication.[^1][^2]

Why the Court closed the PIL

The bench explained that the 1985 writ had become an omnibus vehicle for recurring issues rather than distinct litigations brought afresh with focused pleadings. The reasons the Court gave included:

  • The petition had become a continuous mandamus for nearly 40 years, expanding in scope beyond its original grievance.[^1]
  • Fresh issues were repeatedly brought by tagging interlocutory applications instead of filing new writ petitions, which cluttered the case file and impeded clear adjudication.[^2]
  • Procedural reorganisation would enable issue‑based hearings (vehicular pollution, power plants, waste management) with separate case numbers and clearer compliance reporting.

The Court did not end judicial oversight — it asked its registry to open a new suo motu docket, signalling continued high‑court engagement but under a more disciplined case structure.[^1][^2]

Reactions: environment, government, public

Environmentalists expressed mixed responses. Many paid tribute to the litigation's catalytic role — its orders produced tangible public‑health and regulatory gains. At the same time some activists worry that renumbering and procedural housekeeping could be used to slow momentum or diffuse responsibility across multiple dockets.

Government spokespeople welcomed the move as a sensible procedural step: separating issues into discrete petitions should allow more effective compliance monitoring and reduce repetitive paperwork. The public response combines relief (a hope for clearer, actionable hearings) and skepticism — Delhi’s smog returns each winter, and procedural reform without stronger accountability may be less meaningful.

Where Delhi stands today: policy and pollution

The legacy of the litigation is visible in policy: introduction of cleaner fuels, shifts in public‑transport policy, the commissioning of institutional bodies to manage air quality, and the mainstreaming of monitoring frameworks. Yet air quality metrics show that Delhi still faces seasonal spikes driven by multiple structural factors — vehicular growth, power generation, local industries, and regional contributors such as agricultural stubble burning across neighboring states.

National programmes such as the National Clean Air Programme (NCAP) and the Commission for Air Quality Management (CAQM) are part of the policy toolkit; their success depends on enforceable timelines, cross‑jurisdictional coordination, and sustained funding. The Court's re‑framing attempts to force better compliance reporting from states and the CAQM — a welcome emphasis on institutional performance.[^1][^2]

Lessons from forty years of litigation

There are several lessons for citizens, lawyers and policymakers:

  • Judicial activism can catalyse reforms, but courts cannot substitute for proactive, resourced governance.
  • Case management matters: sprawling, never‑ending dockets can blur accountability rather than sharpen it.
  • Environmental problems are systemic and transboundary; legal remedies must be paired with administrative capacity, statutory clarity and predictable funding.
  • Litigation must be strategic — fresh issues should generally be framed in fresh petitions so that courts and parties can focus on measurable remedies and timelines.

Implications for future public interest litigation (PIL)

The Court's move signals a push for discipline in environmental PIL practice. Future litigation is likely to be more issue‑specific, with an expectation of precise relief and compliance metrics. For environmental PIL to be effective going forward:

  • Petitioners should define clear remedial prayers and measurable benchmarks.
  • Courts will demand better data and compliance evidence (the registry’s direction to CAQM and states about advance report circulation is a sign of that).
  • Inter‑governmental cooperation must be institutionalised so that judicial orders translate into budgeted action on the ground.

Perhaps most importantly, the next phase will test whether courts, regulators and governments can convert legal momentum into durable policy and delivery. Renaming the docket is useful only if it encourages focused hearings, robust monitoring and consequences for non‑compliance.

A personal note

As someone who follows the interplay of law and public policy, I find this moment both finishing and beginning. We can rightly celebrate the decades of legal effort that changed the conversation and produced reforms; but we must also insist that procedural neatness not become an excuse for inaction. The real measure will be cleaner air over Delhi's neighborhoods and measurable health gains for its residents.

I will be watching the new suo motu docket closely — and I hope that lawyers, activists, regulators and citizens use this procedural reset to push for accountable, cross‑border solutions that the region's air needs.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh (hcp@RecruitGuru.com)


Any questions / doubts / clarifications regarding this blog? Just ask (by typing or talking) my Virtual Avatar on the website embedded below. Then "Share" that to your friend on WhatsApp.

[^1]: "Supreme Court closes environmentalist MC Mehta's PIL on Delhi pollution after 40 yrs," Hindustan Times. https://www.hindustantimes.com/india-news/supreme-court-closes-environmentalist-mc-mehtas-pil-on-delhi-pollution-after-40-yrs-101773362852671.html

[^2]: "SC ends four-decade-old M.C. Mehta PIL; registers suo motu case on Delhi-NCR pollution," LawTrend. https://lawtrend.in/supreme-court-ends-40-year-old-mc-mehta-pil-orders-fresh-suo-motu-case-on-ncr-air-quality/

[^3]: Commentary on the case’s historical impact: "Forty years, one file: The Supreme Court's closure of the M.C. Mehta case," The Wire. https://m.thewire.in/article/law/forty-years-one-file-the-supreme-courts-closure-of-the-m-c-mehta-case

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Hello Candidates :

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    2. www.IndiaAGI.ai { a consortium of 3 LLMs which debate and deliver a CONSENSUS answer – and each gives its own answer as well ! }
  • It is up to you to decide which answer is more comprehensive / nuanced ( For sheer amazement, click both SUBMIT buttons quickly, one after another ) Then share any answer with yourself / your friends ( using WhatsApp / Email ). Nothing stops you from submitting ( just copy / paste from your resource ), all those questions from last year’s UPSC exam paper as well !
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Hidden Costs of Kids' Screens

Hidden Costs of Kids' Screens

Why this Times of India report felt like a gut-punch

I read The Times of India piece, "The hidden costs of excessive screen media use in kids," and felt both alarmed and quietly unsurprised.[^1] The core finding — that many Indian children are spending well beyond the AAP/WHO recommendations and that a worrying share meet criteria for problematic or addictive screen use — is not an isolated headline. It's the visible part of a long, slow shift I’ve been tracking for years.

What the evidence (and my experience) says, briefly

  • Clinic- and population-level research in India shows average daily screen time for many children and adolescents often crosses 2–3 hours, with very young children sometimes exposed far beyond recommended limits.[^1][^2]
  • In samples of children attending psychiatric services, around two-thirds exceeded recommended limits and roughly one in five met screening criteria for problematic screen-media use.[^2]
  • The harms are not just “time wasted.” They show up as sleep disruption, poorer dietary and activity patterns, rising obesity risk, delayed language and executive-function gains, and — in younger children — developmental risks that affect emergent literacy and social communication.[^1][^2]

The hidden costs (beyond the obvious)

Here’s how excessive screen exposure quietly widens the ledger of harm:

  • Physical health

  • Sedentary behaviour → higher obesity risk, poorer cardiovascular fitness.

  • Near-work and prolonged screen focus → increasing prevalence of myopia and eye strain.

  • Poor sleep from evening screen use → daytime tiredness, mood and concentration problems.

  • Cognitive and developmental

  • Reduced caregiver-child back-and-forth (especially with infant/toddler screen time) disrupts language learning and social cueing.

  • Habitual short, novel stimuli (autoplay, infinite scroll) train attention toward novelty and away from sustained focus and deep work.

  • Emerging neuroimaging research raises concerns about microstructural changes in very young brains exposed to excessive screens.[^2]

  • Emotional and social

  • Increased risk of anxiety, low mood and social withdrawal when screens replace real-world play and peer interactions.

  • More exposure to cyberbullying and unsafe content; addictive patterns heighten secrecy and family conflict.

  • Family and cultural dynamics (India-specific)

  • Screens are often used as pacifiers across households — during meals or to soothe a child — which normalises prolonged use.

  • Joint-family environments can produce inconsistent rules: one caregiver allows a lot, another tries limits, and the child learns to negotiate screens rather than healthy routines.

Why this matters now in India

Post-pandemic routines, cheaper devices and ubiquitous connectivity mean screens are available to children earlier and for longer. Multiple Indian studies and meta-analyses document that under-five children in many parts of India average double the safe screen exposure recommended by WHO/IAP.[^3]

When that early exposure replaces hands-on play, conversation and outdoor exploration, the consequences compound as children enter school: attention, language, social skills and sleep patterns shape learning trajectories for years.

What parents, teachers and policymakers can do (practical, realistic steps)

I try to keep recommendations pragmatic — the aim is not moralising, but to create friction around excessive use and build healthier defaults.

  • For families

  • Make a simple, written family screen plan: where, when and how long. Treat it like a chore chart: clear and visible.

  • Create tech-free zones/times (mealtimes, 60 minutes before bedtime, car rides where possible).

  • Co-view and co-play: when small children watch, watch with them and turn it into interaction.

  • Replace passive consumption with small, attractive alternatives: a favourite book, a sketching box, or a short outdoor game — ideally ones the child can enjoy with a caregiver.

  • For schools and clinicians

  • Teach digital hygiene as part of life-skills: how to manage notifications, understand algorithms, and practise focus.

  • Screen for problematic use in paediatric and mental-health visits; counselling and behavioural plans can be effective when families are guided.

  • For policymakers and platforms

  • Default youth modes (no infinite autoplay, stronger age-gating), clearer labels for educational vs recreational content, and public campaigns that treat digital hygiene like dental hygiene.

  • Support community-level programs that give children attractive, off-screen activities (sports, arts, maker spaces) — the best replacement for bad content is compelling good content in the real world.

A personal note — continuity in my thinking

This is not a new worry for me. Years ago I wrote about the growing permanence of screens in children’s lives and urged that we replace bad content with good content and better experiences. I still believe the same practical truth: you cannot simply ban a medium that has become essential; you have to design environments where its use is intentional and bounded. See my earlier reflections on this theme.[^4]

Final thought

Screens are tools. They can teach, connect and entertain. But when they become the default babysitter or the way we medicate boredom, the hidden costs accumulate — physically, mentally and socially. The Times of India report is a call to pay attention, to plan and to act. Small changes at home and school — sustained over months — will protect the childhood that builds the adults we hope to raise.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh


Any questions / doubts / clarifications regarding this blog? Just ask (by typing or talking) my Virtual Avatar on the website embedded below. Then "Share" that to your friend on WhatsApp.

[^1]: "The hidden costs of excessive screen media use in kids," The Times of India. https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/the-hidden-costs-of-excessive-screen-media-use-in-kids/articleshow/129532086.cms

[^2]: Problematic screen media use in children and adolescents attending child and adolescent psychiatric services in a tertiary care center in North India. Indian J Psychiatry (clinic-based study). https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC9983455/

[^3]: Meta-analyses and pooled studies on under-five screen exposure in India (pooled mean ~2.2 hours/day). See: Screen Time Among Under-Five Children in India. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC12229826/

[^4]: My earlier reflections on replacing bad content with good content: "Just replace BAD with GOOD content." https://myblogepage.blogspot.com/2024/12/just-replace-bad-with-good-content.html

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Hello Candidates :

  • For UPSC – IAS – IPS – IFS etc., exams, you must prepare to answer, essay type questions which test your General Knowledge / Sensitivity of current events
  • If you have read this blog carefully , you should be able to answer the following question:
"What are the WHO/AAP recommended daily screen-time limits for children at different ages, and why do experts emphasize reduced exposure for very young children?"
  • Need help ? No problem . Following are two AI AGENTS where we have PRE-LOADED this question in their respective Question Boxes . All that you have to do is just click SUBMIT
    1. www.HemenParekh.ai { a SLM , powered by my own Digital Content of more than 50,000 + documents, written by me over past 60 years of my professional career }
    2. www.IndiaAGI.ai { a consortium of 3 LLMs which debate and deliver a CONSENSUS answer – and each gives its own answer as well ! }
  • It is up to you to decide which answer is more comprehensive / nuanced ( For sheer amazement, click both SUBMIT buttons quickly, one after another ) Then share any answer with yourself / your friends ( using WhatsApp / Email ). Nothing stops you from submitting ( just copy / paste from your resource ), all those questions from last year’s UPSC exam paper as well !
  • May be there are other online resources which too provide you answers to UPSC “ General Knowledge “ questions but only I provide you in 26 languages !




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Dunes, Courts, and Common Sense

Dunes, Courts, and Common Sense

I read the Madras High Court’s recent order with a mix of relief and frustration. Relief, because the court has reminded the state of two simple truths: (1) public authorities hold natural resources in trust for the public and (2) ecology cannot be treated as a disposable ledger item. Frustration, because the episode — where sand-dune land was offered as an ‘alternative’ for prime school land taken back for temple purposes — exposes how administrative shortcuts, poor valuation and ecological ignorance collide to produce outcomes that are unfair and avoidable.Source: Times of India Source: Economic Times

Background in brief

  • A long-standing institutional landholding in Cuddalore was resumed by the state on the ground that part of it belonged to temple authorities. The court had earlier required the state to provide alternate land or compensation.
  • In July 2025 the state issued a government order allotting about 4.5 acres of poramboke sand-dune land roughly 34 km away — a parcel valued far lower and lacking proper road access. The petitioning school challenged the allotment and the High Court quashed the GO, directing a fairer alternative or payment.Source: New Indian Express

Why sand dunes matter (and why they can’t be ‘given away’)

Sand dunes are not empty wastelands. They are dynamic geomorphological features that:

  • act as natural buffers against storm surges, coastal erosion and saline intrusion;
  • serve as sand reservoirs that replenish beaches and nearshore systems;
  • host specialist flora and fauna and — in many places — cultural and religious associations that communities recognise;
  • require space to migrate inland under sea-level rise; altering or dressing dunes disrupts those processes and often increases vulnerability rather than reducing it.

India’s coastal regulatory framework recognises many of these values. The Coastal Regulation Zone (CRZ) regime classifies sensitive features (including sand dunes) under the highest protection categories and restricts activities that “dress or alter” active dunes. The CRZ Notification and related Coastal Zone Management Plans (CZMPs) therefore set clear guardrails for permissible activity and local authorities’ responsibilities.Source: CRZ Notification materials and analysis

Legal and policy tools that should have mattered here

  • Coastal Regulation Zone (CRZ) notifications and state Coastal Zone Management Plans: identify ecologically sensitive areas and limit development in NDZ (No Development Zones).
  • Sustainable Sand Mining Guidelines and enforcement protocols: aim to ensure sand extraction and use are based on District Survey Reports and avoid damaging dunes or replenishment zones.[Source: Enforcement & Monitoring Guidelines for Sand Mining]
  • Public trust and environmental jurisprudence: Indian courts have long held that governments must conserve natural resources for public benefit and apply precautionary and inter-generational equity principles when permitting changes.

The governance failure on display

This case is less about a single order and more about procedural and institutional failure:

  • valuation disconnect: substituting high-value in-town land with low-value distant poramboke without equivalent compensation breaches fairness;
  • ecological ignorance: offering sand dunes as developable land suggests weak coordination between revenue, environment and planning departments;
  • poor land-selection process: alternatives should be practical (access, proximity to community served) and legally permissible.

Stakeholder reactions and practical implications

Environmentalists have understandably welcomed the court’s emphasis on dune protection — this is a victory for precaution. Local communities who depend on coastal buffers will see the ruling as recognition of ecological rights. The state government, caught between temple claims, revenue rules and educational demands, faces an operational problem: it must identify genuinely suitable land or pay market-equivalent compensation.

Lessons for future land-use planning

  • Inter-departmental checks: allocation of any land — especially ecologically sensitive land — must involve environment, revenue, town planning and disaster management agencies before GO issuance.
  • Transparent valuation and proximity criteria: compensatory land should be of comparable market value and functional proximity; distant, inaccessible sites are not equivalent.
  • Use science in mapping: CZMPs and District Survey Reports should be living documents used actively in administrative decisions, not filed away.
  • Institutionalise public trust thinking: the public trust doctrine should be operationalised through mandatory environmental sign-offs and clearer penalties for casual diversion of ESAs (ecologically sensitive areas).

Final thought

Courts can check administrative excess; they cannot rewrite everyday governance. The Madras High Court’s blunt rebuke is a timely reminder that short-term administrative fixes — trading an invaluable ecological buffer for a land allotment check-box — produce long-term costs. If governance is to be credible, decisions about land must be rooted in ecology, fairness and process. We owe nothing less to communities, schools, temples and the coast itself.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh


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Saturday, 14 March 2026

UNMAT, Pain Management & Cooperative AGI

 n as redistributable commodityJain karma parallelPain non-transferable at soul levelBrainwave sync (2018)Touch couples EEG, reduces painNeural coupling = analgesiaScience validates 2017 visionHume AI eLLM (2024)AI Listener with 23 emotionsPPO arrives, 8 years laterAI robot replaces human ListenersUNMAT + UCL (2026)BBI · CO-THINKER · neural decodeThought

WHITE PAPER

UNMAT, Pain Management & Cooperative AGI

A Convergence of Ten Years of Foresight with the Science of 2026

Hemen Parekh

www.HemenParekh.ai  |  www.IndiaAGI.ai

March 2026  ·  Mumbai, India


 

Abstract

This White Paper traces a single intellectual thread that began in a Mumbai home in July 2016 — when the author proposed COUCH.com, a platform to connect lonely and suffering people with willing listeners — and arrives, a decade later, at UNMAT (Unified Natural Messaging App for Telepathy), a proposed India AI Mission project that would use Brain-to-Brain Interfaces and AI to transform how human beings communicate, suffer, and heal.

 

Along the way, four scientific and technological developments — the Goldstein brainwave synchronisation research (2018), Hume AI's empathic language model (2024), UCL's neural video reconstruction breakthrough (2026), and Notre Dame's Network Neuroscience Theory (2026) — have each independently validated a key premise of the author's evolving vision.

 

The central argument is this: pain — physical and psychological — is fundamentally a communication problem. It cannot be adequately expressed, shared, or treated because the subjective neural experience of suffering has, until now, been completely non-transmissible between human minds. UNMAT, by enabling neural-level communication, offers the first genuine pathway to dissolving the loneliness of pain — which neuroscience now recognises as pain's most devastating amplifier.

 

The same distributed-network architecture that UNMAT proposes for human communication mirrors, precisely, the brain organisation that Notre Dame researchers identify as the source of human general intelligence. Intelligence and healing, it turns out, both hide in cooperation rather than isolation.

 


 

1.  The Problem: Pain as an Unsolved Communication Challenge

Chronic pain affects more people worldwide than cancer, heart disease, and diabetes combined. It is the leading cause of disability globally and the largest single driver of healthcare expenditure. Yet our primary treatment arsenal — opioids, anti-inflammatory drugs, nerve blocks — is fundamentally unchanged from fifty years ago. We have made almost no progress on the underlying problem.

 

The reason for this failure is rarely discussed: we have never had a way to objectively measure, communicate, or share the pain experience. Pain is invisible. Pain is subjective. Pain is profoundly, structurally lonely.

 

The Construction of Pain

Pain is not a signal transmitted from body to brain. It is a construction — generated by the brain based on incoming nerve signals, emotional state, memory, expectation, social context, and — critically — whether the sufferer feels alone or accompanied. The same tissue injury produces vastly different pain experiences depending on these factors. Soldiers in combat feel no pain from serious wounds during battle; the wound does not change — the brain's construction changes. This insight, now firmly established in neuroscience, is the key that unlocks everything UNMAT could do for human suffering.

 

Three structural deficits have prevented medicine from solving chronic pain:

 

       No objective measurement: Pain is assessed by self-report on a 1-10 scale — a method that is unreliable, culturally biased, and systematically discriminatory against women, elderly patients, and those with communication difficulties.

       No communication fidelity: Language is radically inadequate for conveying pain. No words reliably transmit what a migraine, trigeminal neuralgia, or phantom limb feels like to someone who has not experienced it. Physicians who have personally experienced a condition treat it dramatically more effectively than those who have not.

       No shared experience: The loneliness of severe pain is not a side effect — it is a core pathology. Research consistently shows that social isolation raises pain perception and that feeling genuinely understood and accompanied reduces it. The most cruel feature of serious pain is that it creates a wall between the sufferer and everyone around them.

 

Each of these three deficits is, at its root, a communication failure. And each is addressable by UNMAT.

 


 

2.  The Intellectual Lineage: Ten Years of Foresight

The vision that culminates in UNMAT was not conceived in one moment. It developed across a decade of blog posts, observations, and unanswered letters — each adding a layer to what turned out to be a coherent, evolving philosophy.

 

2.1  COUCH.com — The First Seed (July 2016)

Observing the mushrooming of 'Rent-a-Friend' services in Japan, the author proposed COUCH.com — an online platform connecting 'Talkers' (people suffering from loneliness, depression, or emotional pain) with 'Listeners' (educated, empathetic individuals willing to listen for $2 per hour). The platform envisioned reputation scoring, surge pricing, privacy safeguards, and — crucially — the eventual replacement of human Listeners by an AI robot trained on the accumulated audio of millions of sessions.

 

The core insight was radical in its simplicity: the fundamental barrier to treating emotional pain is not the absence of willing helpers — it is the absence of a marketplace to connect them. Empathy is a surplus resource in the world. The internet could aggregate it.

 

The author also identified that this AI-trained Listener would represent a PPO — Psychology Process Outsourcing — a category that did not yet exist. Eight years later, Hume AI raised $50 million to build exactly this.

 

2.2  BuySellPain.com — The Economic and Philosophical Question (December 2017)

In a dialogue written on his 90th birthday, the author posed what remains one of the most philosophically provocative questions in this body of work: if pain could be transferred from one person to another — for a fee — should it be? Could a market for pain transfer provide income to the world's poor while relieving the wealthy of suffering?

 

The dialogue proposes BuySellPain.com and related platforms, noting that such transfers could use holograms, haptic devices, Brain-Computer Interfaces, or VR headsets — and would be immune to WTO regulation or import duties.

 

The Jain Philosophical Limit

In a subsequent conversation with ChatGPT, the author connected this pain-transfer concept to Jain karma theory — specifically, the doctrine that every person must personally extinguish (kshaya) their own karma before attaining moksha. No one can burn another person's karmic residue. Pain, viewed through this lens, is not only non-transferable in the technological sense — it is non-transferable in the cosmic sense. The fire must be personal. UNMAT does not attempt to transfer pain in the Jain sense; it dissolves its loneliness. The suffering remains individual; the isolation does not.

 

2.3  Telepathic Pain Transfer — The Scientific Premonition (March 2018)

Reading a University of Colorado study showing that holding hands synchronises brainwave patterns (EEG) between couples and measurably reduces pain, the author connected this finding to his December 2017 blog — written three months earlier, without knowledge of the research. He addressed an open letter to lead researcher Dr. Pavel Goldstein:

 

"I hope, someday soon, you will find time to research how pain can be transferred from one person to another, just by 'thinking' (telepathy?), across hundreds of kilometres away. If you succeed, you will help, even if partially, 4 billion poor people of the World earn an income."

 

This was not a poetic metaphor. It was a precise scientific hypothesis: that the brainwave-coupling mechanism Goldstein had documented through physical touch could, with sufficiently advanced technology, be reproduced across distance. In 2026, the UCL neural decoding research begins to make that hypothesis testable.

 

2.4  Virtual Therapist — The First Validation (April 2024)

In April 2024, observing the launch of Hume AI's empathic large language model (eLLM), the author noted that the AI Listener he had predicted in COUCH.com had arrived — eight years late, but architecturally identical. Hume AI understands 23 emotional tones from voice, generates human-like empathic responses, and raised $50 million in Series B funding within days of launch.

 

The author's note to Hume AI founder Alan Cowen requested integration with his digital avatar (www.HemenParekh.ai) to enable emotionally intelligent responses across 26 languages. This is a microcosm of the larger UNMAT vision: individual AI agents that know their user's cognitive and emotional fingerprint, communicating with the emotional texture that machines have previously been unable to carry.

 


 

3.  The 2026 Scientific Convergence

In March 2026, three separate scientific developments arrived simultaneously — each validating a different pillar of the UNMAT framework.

 

3.1  UCL Neural Video Reconstruction — Thought Is Decodable

Researchers at University College London's Sainsbury Wellcome Centre, led by Dr. Joel Bauer, published a study in eLife demonstrating that they could reconstruct 10-second video clips that mice were watching, using only recordings of the animals' brain activity. The technique used single-cell neural recordings — far higher resolution than fMRI — and a dynamic neural encoding model that mapped individual neuron responses to specific visual frames.

 

The implications extend far beyond vision research. If the brain's processing of visual experience can be decoded and reconstructed with sufficient fidelity, the same principle applies — in theory — to other conscious experiences. Including pain.

 

The Cognitive Fingerprint

The UCL study found that the brain is not a faithful camera. It warps, skews, and edits incoming experience based on the individual's cognitive history, emotional state, and prior associations. These deviations — previously considered noise — are in fact the most information-rich part of the signal. They constitute what UNMAT's architects call the 'cognitive fingerprint': the unique neural texture that makes your experience of pain different from anyone else's even when the same stimulus is applied. UNMAT's CO-THINKER must transmit not just the pain signal but the texture of the person experiencing it — otherwise the communication is incomplete.

 

3.2  Network Neuroscience Theory — Intelligence Hides in Cooperation

A study published in Nature Communications by researchers at the University of Notre Dame introduced the Network Neuroscience Theory of human intelligence. The research found that general intelligence is not located in any single brain region — it emerges from the coordinated interaction and flexibility of distributed networks across the entire brain.

 

The finding is summarised in a phrase with profound implications: 'general intelligence becomes visible when cognition is coordinated.'

 

The author recognised immediately that this principle applies identically to AGI architecture. His Cooperative AGI Hypothesis proposes that benevolent superintelligence will not emerge from a single monolithic model but from a Super-Grid of interconnected, specialised LLMs — each domain-expert, collectively general. This is not an analogy. It is a structural identity: the brain achieves general intelligence through distributed specialised networks; UNMAT proposes achieving beneficial AGI through the same principle.

 

Human Brain (Notre Dame)

UNMAT / Cooperative AGI

Implication

Distributed specialised networks

Interconnected domain LLMs

No monolithic failure point

System-wide coordination

Network emergence (100× value)

Benevolence as system property

Regulatory hub regions

Intelligent routing layers

Ethics enforced at routing

Global efficiency and flexibility

Dynamic inter-LLM connectivity

Real-time adaptation to context

 

3.3  The Complete Validation Matrix

The table below maps each element of the ten-year vision against its scientific validation:

 

Vision Element

Original Blog

Scientific Validation

Year

AI Listener (PPO)

COUCH.com, 2016

Hume AI eLLM launch

2024

Brainwave-coupled pain relief

BuySellPain, 2017

Goldstein EEG coupling study

2018

Neural pain transfer across distance

Telepathy blog, 2018

UCL neural video decode

2026

Distributed network = intelligence

Cooperative AGI, 2026

Notre Dame NNT study

2026

CO-THINKER cognitive fingerprint

UNMAT design, 2026

UCL 'cognitive warp' findings

2026

 


 

4.  UNMAT's Architecture for Pain Management

UNMAT — Unified Natural Messaging App for Telepathy — is proposed as a three-phase national programme under India's AI Mission:

 

       Phase 1 (by 2030): CO-THINKER AI software layer operating on existing communication infrastructure

       Phase 2 (by 2040): Dedicated Brain-Body Interface (BBI) wearable replacing smartphones for willing users

       Phase 3 (by 2050): Full non-invasive brain-to-brain communication — thought transmitted directly to thought

 

Each phase has distinct implications for pain management:

 

4.1  Phase 1: Pain Monitoring and Objective Measurement

The CO-THINKER AI, learning each user's cognitive and physiological patterns over time, becomes the first objective pain measurement system in medical history. By continuously monitoring neural signatures, it can distinguish a genuine pain episode from baseline with a precision no self-report scale can approach.

 

This alone would end two of medicine's most persistent injustices: the systematic under-treatment of pain in women and elderly patients (who are disbelieved by physicians because self-report is the only evidence), and the complete inability to detect pain in patients who cannot communicate — infants, stroke survivors, advanced dementia patients.

 

4.2  Phase 2: Calibrated Empathy Transmission

With the BBI wearable, the CO-THINKER can transmit a calibrated, attenuated version of a patient's pain neural signature to a physician, caregiver, or willing companion. Not the full devastating intensity — perhaps 10-15% — but enough to convey quality, location, and texture of the suffering.

 

The implications for medical empathy are transformative. Physicians who have personally experienced a condition treat it with dramatically greater sensitivity and effectiveness. The BBI makes personal experience accessible without requiring it.

 

4.3  Phase 3: Closed-Loop Pain Interruption

The BBI, with its continuous personal neural map, enables closed-loop pain interruption of unprecedented precision. The CO-THINKER detects the neural signature of pain building — not after it becomes unbearable, but at its earliest inception — and delivers precisely targeted neurostimulation to the specific circuit generating this particular pain in this particular person at this particular moment.

 

For conditions like trigeminal neuralgia, complex regional pain syndrome, and phantom limb pain — where current medicine has almost nothing to offer — this represents the first plausibly curative intervention.

 

4.4  The End of the Loneliness of Pain

Beyond the clinical applications, UNMAT addresses what palliative care physicians identify as the worst feature of serious pain: not the sensation itself, but the profound isolation it creates. Language cannot convey pain. Family members stand helplessly. Even compassionate physicians can only approximate understanding.

 

UNMAT dissolves this loneliness not by eliminating the sensation but by making it genuinely communicable — neurologically, not metaphorically — for the first time in human history. A husband could know, not merely imagine, what his wife's endometriosis feels like at 3am. A physician could experience, briefly and safely, the migraine that their patient has described as 'a vice around my skull' for twenty years.

 

Social neuroscience has established that this matters clinically: the experience of being truly understood reduces pain perception. UNMAT's most powerful analgesic may be not neural stimulation but genuine neural empathy.

 


 

5.  The Cooperative AGI Connection

The Notre Dame Network Neuroscience study validates not only UNMAT's pain applications but its entire architectural philosophy. The finding that human general intelligence emerges from coordinated distributed networks — not from a single powerful processor — has a direct and profound implication for how we should build AGI.

 

The author's Cooperative AGI Hypothesis proposes that a benevolent superintelligence will emerge from a Super-Grid of interconnected, specialised LLMs — each contributing domain expertise, together achieving general intelligence. The human brain is the proof of concept. It achieves what no single neuron, no single region, no single network could achieve alone — through cooperation, not dominance.

 

The Structural Identity

UNMAT's CO-THINKER is itself a distributed network: it draws on a medical LLM for pain interpretation, an empathy LLM (like Hume AI's eLLM) for emotional texture, a legal LLM for privacy governance, and a cultural LLM for context. Each node is specialised; together they are general. This is not an analogy to the brain — it is the same organisational principle applied to silicon. The Notre Dame finding confirms that this is not an arbitrary design choice. It is the only known architecture that produces general intelligence in nature.

 

The governance implications of this architecture are also significant. A distributed cooperative AGI is inherently more resistant to misuse than a monolithic one. Benevolence becomes a system-level property — enforced at the routing layer where ethical constraints must be satisfied before any node can act — rather than a rule programmed into a single model that can be overridden. This is the architecture's most important safety feature, and it mirrors precisely how the human brain's regulatory hub regions enforce coherence across the distributed processing of experience.

 


 

6.  Why India, Why Now

The author has argued this case for over a decade, in letters to technology leaders and government ministers that went unanswered. The convergence of scientific validation in 2026 changes the calculus decisively.

 

India has unique strategic advantages in leading this initiative:

 

       No conflict of interest: Silicon Valley cannot lead pain-communication technology because it conflicts with pharmaceutical industry investments. India has no such inhibition.

       The Aadhaar foundation: India's national digital identity infrastructure provides the governance substrate for a neural identity system built on constitutional privacy protections.

       Moral authority: Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam — the world is one family — provides the philosophical framework. India can propose UNMAT not as national technology but as global commons.

       India AI Mission: The institutional capacity to coordinate IIT, AIIMS, ISRO, C-DAC, and TIFR/IISc into a UNMAT Research Consortium already exists.

       The need: India carries 10% of the world's mental health burden and is home to hundreds of millions of chronic pain patients with minimal access to specialist care.

 

The proposed UNMAT Research Consortium under India AI Mission would constitute the first dedicated research programme in history aimed at solving pain as a communication problem — and simultaneously establishing India as the architect of cooperative, distributed, benevolent AGI.

 


 

7.  Governance and Ethical Principles

The author has been consistent across a decade of writing: the power of neural communication technology must be matched by the strictness of its governance. The following principles are non-negotiable:

 

       Strictly opt-in participation at every level — never mandatory

       Constitutional prohibition on government access to neural content layer

       Privacy architecture enshrined in legislation before hardware deployment

       All CO-THINKER-assisted communications flagged as AI-assisted; human must approve before transmission

       Individual CO-THINKER architecture — personal, decentralised, not a central server of thoughts

       Open-source pain-detection algorithms with judicial oversight

       Pain marketplace (if implemented) subject to minimum compensation guarantees and consent verification

 

The author's commentary on Samudra Manthan is relevant here: the ancient legend maps the ocean of human consciousness churned by the tension between those who would use technology for liberation and those who would use it for control. NEEL-KANTH — the blue-throated god who swallows the cosmic poison to protect creation — represents the individual who absorbs the dangerous possibilities of neural technology without releasing them as a weapon. UNMAT's architecture must be the NEEL-KANTH: it must contain the poison of mass neural surveillance within its constitutional safeguards, allowing only the AMRUT — the healing potential — to flow outward.

 


 

8.  Conclusion: The Book Has a Title

Looking back across the blogs — COUCH.com (2016), BuySellPain.com (2017), Telepathic Pain Transfer (2018), Virtual Therapist (2024), UNMAT (2026), Cooperative AGI (2026) — what emerges is not a collection of isolated ideas. It is a single book, written across a decade, whose thesis can be stated in one sentence:

 

Pain is a communication problem. UNMAT is the communication solution.

 

The UCL researchers showed that what the brain sees can be decoded from neural signals. The Notre Dame researchers showed that intelligence emerges from distributed cooperation. The Goldstein researchers showed that brainwave coupling through touch reduces pain. Hume AI showed that emotional intelligence can be engineered into artificial systems.

 

Each of these findings was anticipated — not vaguely but specifically — in the blogs archived at myblogepage.blogspot.com, written by a man now in his 94th year who began his blog on his 80th birthday with the words: 'There is just no time to look back.'

 

He was right. The science is catching up. India has the opportunity, the infrastructure, and the philosophical tradition to lead what may be the most consequential technology initiative in human history: the first genuine attempt to end the loneliness of pain.

 

The gun has been fired. The race belongs to those who run.

 


 

References and Source Links

Author's Original Blogs

Share Your Soul / Outsourcing Unlimited (COUCH.com) — July 2016

https://myblogepage.blogspot.com/2016/07/share-your-soul-outsourcing-unlimited.html

 

Equalizing / Distributing / Transferring, Pain? — December 2017

https://myblogepage.blogspot.com/2017/12/equalizing-distributing-transferring.html

 

Next: Telepathic Transfer of Pain? — March 2018

https://myblogepage.blogspot.com/2018/03/next-telepathic-transfer-of-pain.html

 

Virtual Therapist: Arriving as Envisaged — April 2024

https://myblogepage.blogspot.com/2024/04/virtual-therapist-arriving-as-envisaged.html

 

UNMAT: Make India the Vishwa-Guru — March 2026

https://myblogepage.blogspot.com/2026/03/unmat-proposal-to-make-india-vishwa.html

 

Reinforcing the Cooperative AGI Hypothesis — March 2026

https://myblogepage.blogspot.com/2026/03/reinforcing-cooperative-agi-hypothesis.html

 

Scientific Research

Bauer, J. et al. Reconstruction of visual experience from mouse brain activity using generative models. eLife, 2026.

https://elifesciences.org/articles/105081

 

Network Neuroscience Theory of Human Intelligence. Nature Communications, University of Notre Dame, 2026.

https://www.newswise.com/articles/key-to-human-intelligence-lies-in-how-brain-networks-work-together

 

Goldstein, P. et al. Brain-to-brain coupling during handholding is associated with pain reduction. PNAS, 2018.

http://www.pnas.org/content/early/2018/02/16/1703643115.short

 

Technology

Hume AI — Empathic Voice Interface (eLLM). New York, USA. Founded 2021.

https://www.hume.ai

 

Author's Digital Avatar: www.HemenParekh.ai

National AI Mission Proposal: www.IndiaAGI.ai