Why in News?
- May 2025: Department of Posts proposed DHRUVA (Digital Hub for Reference and Unique Virtual Address).
- Government released:
- Draft amendment to the Post Office Act, 2023 to legally enable DHRUVA.
- Follows the launch of DIGIPIN (geo-coded location pin system).
- Policy concerns raised by:
- Dvara Research on privacy, consent, and urban governance limitations.
Relevance
GS 2 – Governance
- E-governance, Digital Public Infrastructure
- Consent-based data sharing and privacy
- Urban governance and service delivery
- Legal gaps in data regulation
GS 3 – Infrastructure & Digital Economy
- Logistics efficiency
- Platform economy
- Last-mile service delivery
- Smart cities and geospatial governance
What is DHRUVA?
- DHRUVA = a proposed Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI) for standardised digital addresses.
- It converts physical addresses into virtual “labels”, similar to:
- Email IDs
- UPI IDs
- Example:
- Instead of writing a long address → user shares something like amit@dhruva.
Core Objective of DHRUVA
- Standardisation of addresses across platforms
- Consent-based sharing of address data
- Service discovery:
- Identifying what doorstep services are available at a user’s location
- Improve:
- Governance
- Logistics
- E-commerce delivery
- Emergency services
What is DIGIPIN?
- Developed in-house by India Post.
- 10-digit alphanumeric, geo-coded digital pin
- Coverage:
- Every 12 square metre block in India
- Use-case:
- Rural areas with weak descriptive addressing
- Precise fallback for:
- Postal delivery
- Emergency response
How Will DHRUVA Work?
DHRUVA ecosystem includes:
- Address Service Providers (ASPs)
- Generate proxy address labels
- Address Validation Agencies (AVAs)
- Authenticate address authenticity
- Address Information Agents (AIAs)
- Handle user consent management
- Central Governance Entity
- On the lines of National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI)
How Will DHRUVA Be Used?
(A) Consent-Based Address Sharing
- Users tokenise addresses, like:
- UPI tokenises bank accounts
- User controls:
- Who can access
- For how long
- For what purpose
(B) Seamless Address Updating
- When a person shifts residence:
- All linked platforms automatically update delivery location.
(C) Logistics & Platform Integration
- Supported platforms:
- Amazon
- Uber
- India Post
- Gig economy & food delivery platforms
Why is DHRUVA Being Framed as DPI?
DHRUVA is aligned with India’s DPI model like:
- Aadhaar → Identity
- UPI → Payments
- DigiLocker → Documents
- DHRUVA → Addresses
Features:
- Public ownership
- Interoperable
- Platform-neutral
- Consent-based data flows
Will It Help Urban Governance?
(A) Key Concern Highlighted by Dvara Research
- Addresses in DHRUVA are linked to people, not independently mapped physical structures.
- Implication:
- Urban planning requires structure-based data, not merely person-based data.
(B) Consent Paradox
- Since personal data is collected:
- User consent becomes mandatory.
- If citizens refuse consent:
- Datasets become incomplete
- Result:
- Weak urban planning
- Faulty population projections
- Inaccurate infrastructure mapping
(C) Global Best Practice Contrast
- In most advanced economies:
- Digital addresses are linked to surveyed buildings
- Not tied to personal identity
- This:
- Eliminates consent dependency
- Enables richer governance datasets
Governance & Legal Challenges
- No standalone law yet authorising large-scale address data collection
- Dvara recommendation:
- Dedicated draft legislation required
- Key risks:
- Surveillance through address linkage
- Profiling via location-based service history
- Function creep across welfare, policing, taxation
Benefits of DHRUVA (If Designed Safely)
- Faster emergency response
- Seamless service discovery
- Reduced address fraud
- Lower logistics costs
- Inclusion of rural habitations without formal addresses
Key Risks
- Privacy erosion
- State surveillance potential
- Market monopolisation by large platforms
- Weak anonymisation of geospatial data
- Exclusion if digital consent infrastructure fails
Strategic Bottom Line
- DHRUVA represents:
- Next frontier of India’s DPI stack
- Digital control layer for geography + service delivery
- However:
- Without clear legal backing, anonymised structure-mapping, and privacy-by-design:
- It risks becoming a surveillance-grade address infrastructure
- Without clear legal backing, anonymised structure-mapping, and privacy-by-design:
- Success hinges on:
- Independent structure mapping
- Firewalls between identity and location
- Strong statutory oversight


