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Digital Addressing Reform: DHRUVA and DIGIPIN

Why is this in news?

  • The Department of Posts released a draft amendment to the Post Office Act, 2023 proposing a new digital addressing system called DHRUVA (Digital Hub for Reference and Unique Virtual Address).
  • The system aims to replace textual addresses with UPI-like labels (e.g., name@entity) and standardise digital addresses across services.
  • The proposal includes a DIGIPIN, rolled out earlier in March 2025, as the foundational layer for precise geolocation-based addressing.

Relevance

GS-2 (Governance)

  • Digital public infrastructure (DPI).
  • Consent-based data architecture, privacy frameworks.
  • Citizen service delivery modernisation.

GS-3 (Economy & Technology)

  • Logistics efficiency, e-commerce, gig-economy enablement.
  • Standardising geolocation systems; technological innovation.

GS-3 (Disaster Management)

  • Last-mile identification for emergency services.
  • Improving reliability of address databases for crisis response.

 

Basic understanding

  • DHRUVA is a proposed interoperable, user-centric digital addressing system.
  • Users would receive address labels (similar to UPI IDs), which act as proxies for their physical locations.
  • Firms and platforms can access the actual address via a consent-based architecture managed by address information agents (AIAs).
  • Intended to reduce repetitive manual entry of addresses across e-commerce, delivery, gig platforms, and government services.

Key features of DHRUVA

Address as a digital label

  • Users can choose labels like name@entity, comparable to UPI handles.
  • Labels can be shared instead of full addresses.

Consent-driven sharing

  • The user authorises an entity for a specified duration.
  • After expiry, re-authorisation is required to access the address again.

Governance structure

  • Section 8 not-for-profit entity will implement the system under government oversight.
  • Modeled on institutions like the National Payments Corporation of India which oversees UPI.

Role for private companies

  • E-commerce, logistics, gig platforms, and hyperlocal delivery apps are expected to be early adopters.

DIGIPIN: the underlying technology

Nature of DIGIPIN

  • 10-character alphanumeric code derived mathematically from latitude and longitude.
  • Encodes an area of roughly 14 sq. metres.
  • Designed for locations where textual addresses are ambiguous or absent, especially in rural regions.

Scale

  • Potential for around 228 billion unique DIGIPINs across Indian territory.

Open-source origin

  • Developed and open-sourced by the postal department to encourage adoption and interoperability.

Why this system matters ?

Current limitations in Indias addressing

  • Non-standard, inconsistent, and often missing addresses.
  • Delays and errors in delivery services.
  • Inefficiencies in logistics, disaster response, last-mile governance.

DHRUVAs intended benefits

  • Standardisation of addresses across sectors.
  • Streamlined onboarding for e-commerce and delivery firms.
  • Reduced friction for users: no repeated address entry.
  • Potential integration with digital public infrastructure frameworks.

Consent and privacy architecture

  • Users control who sees their address, and for how long.
  • AIAs mediate access between the label and actual geographical coordinates.
  • Designed to prevent centralised misuse of location data.

Challenges and open questions

  • Adoption by private firms is voluntary; success depends on network effects similar to UPI.
  • Data security and risks of geolocation misuse need rigorous safeguards.
  • Public trust must be built around the consent mechanism.
  • Integration with state/local addressing databases may be complex.

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