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Pi Day March 14: The Deep, Ancient History of Pi—How India Knew First, and How the World Slowly Caught Up
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BEFORE ARCHIMEDES
From Aryabhata to Ramanujan, The Epic Journey of Pi
The story of Pi does not begin in Greece. It does not begin in Egypt. It does not even begin in Babylon. It begins in the Indian subcontinent, in sacred geometry encoded in altar-building manuals written more than three thousand years before the Common Era — in texts so ancient that Archimedes’ famous calculation of Pi, celebrated in every Western mathematics textbook, was, in a very real sense, a rediscovery of what Indian priests and mathematicians had already understood.
This expanded section digs deep into the pre-Egyptian, pre-Babylonian origins of Pi— into a world of fire altars, astronomical observatories, sacred syllables, and geometric intuitions that emerged on the banks of the Indus and the Saraswati rivers long before any known papyrus was written in the Nile Delta. It then traces how Egyptian scribes and Babylonian accountants independently converged on similar approximations — and how Archimedes, brilliant as he undeniably was, stood on the shoulders of a civilizational heritage that the Western tradition has too often overlooked or erased.
PART I — INDIA: THE OLDEST KNOWN ENGAGEMENT WITH Pi
The conventional Western history of Pi begins with the Rhind Papyrus of Egypt (~1650 BCE) and the Babylonian clay tablets (~1800 BCE). But archaeological, textual, and astronomical evidence points to sophisticated engagements with circular geometry in the Indian subcontinent that predate both of these by centuries — and in some cases by more than a millennium. The evidence comes from three distinct threads: the geometry of the Indus Valley Civilization, the sacred altar-construction manuals known as the Sulbasutras, and the astronomical-mathematical corpus of Vedic knowledge.
1.1 The Indus Valley Civilization — Circles Built Before Writing (~3300–1300 BCE)
A Civilization That Built by Ratio
The Indus Valley Civilization (IVC), also known as the Harappan Civilization, flourished across what is today Pakistan and northwestern India between approximately 3300 BCE and 1300 BCE, making it one of the three earliest urban civilizations in the world, contemporary with and arguably more sophisticated in engineering than ancient Mesopotamia or Egypt. At its peak, it encompassed over 1,400 known settlement sites, including the great cities of Mohenjo-daro and Harappa, each housing populations of 40,000 to 80,000 people — extraordinary numbers for the ancient world.
What is immediately striking about Indus Valley Hindu engineering is its overwhelming reliance on precise, standardized measurement. Archaeologists have recovered uniform baked-brick dimensions across sites separated by hundreds of kilometers — bricks in exact 1:2:4 ratios. Standardized weights and measures have been found, suggesting a centralized system of metrology. The city planning of Mohenjo-daro reveals a grid layout of extraordinary regularity, with streets running north-south and east-west, drainage systems of sophisticated engineering, and structures whose proportions reflect deep familiarity with geometric ratios.
Circular Structures and the Implicit Pi
Among the most revealing structures at Indus Valley sites are their circular wells, circular granary platforms, and circular hearths — consistent in design across geographically distant cities. The great circular platforms at Kalibangan, used for fire rituals, are built with a precision that implies knowledge of the relationship between a circle’s radius and its perimeter. Engineers constructing circular brick walls to exact specifications, as IVC builders did, must necessarily have worked with a value approximating Pi — even if that value was not recorded in the form of a number.
The IVC also produced the world’s first known decimal weights — based on multiples of 0.05, 0.1, 0.2, 0.5, 1, 2, 5, 10, 20, 50, 100, 200, and 500 — demonstrating a highly advanced number sense. The combination of decimal-weight systems and circular precision construction implies a mathematical culture comfortable with both number and geometry, even if their recording medium (likely perishable palm leaves or wooden tablets, none of which survive) has not been preserved.
Key point: We cannot claim the Indus Valley people calculated Pi as an abstract constant. What we can say with archaeological confidence is that they routinely constructed circular structures of extraordinary precision, implying practical working knowledge of the circumference-to-diameter ratio centuries before any other civilization left written evidence of the same.
The Indus Script — A Missing Window
One of the great frustrations of ancient history is that the Indus Valley script — found on approximately 4,000 inscribed objects — remains undeciphered. Unlike Egyptian hieroglyphics and Mesopotamian cuneiform, which have been read and translated, the Indus script has resisted all attempts at decipherment for over a century. This means we cannot read whatever mathematical knowledge Indus Valley scholars may have written down. The silence of the script is not evidence of mathematical ignorance — it is simply an open window through which we cannot yet see. When and if the Indus script is deciphered, it may revolutionize our understanding of ancient mathematics.

1.2 The Vedic Period and the Sulbasutras — Explicit Geometry (~800–200 BCE, with roots to ~3000 BCE)
What Are the Sulbasutras?
The Sulbasutras— from the Sanskrit sulba (rope or cord) and sutra (thread or rule)— are a collection of ancient Indian texts that form part of the larger Vedic Kalpa Sutras, the manuals governing Vedic ritual and sacred ceremony. They are, in the simplest terms, geometry manuals — practical guides for the precise construction of fire altars (yajnavedikas) used in Vedic religious rituals. Their composition is conventionally dated between approximately 800 BCE and 200 BCE, though their content almost certainly reflects an oral and practical tradition far older— scholars estimate the underlying geometric knowledge was in active use by at least 1500 BCE and possibly as early as 3000 BCE, predating both the Egyptian Rhind Papyrus and the Babylonian clay tablets.
The four principal Sulbasutras are attributed to Baudhayana, Apastamba, Katyayana, and Manava— ancient sages whose texts have survived in manuscript form. Of these, the Baudhayana Sulbasutra is generally considered the oldest and most mathematically rich. What these texts contain is breathtaking in its sophistication for their era.
The Baudhayana Sulbasutra and Pi (~800 BCE or older)
The Baudhayana Sulbasutra contains explicit instructions for circular construction that require working values of Pi. One famous passage deals with transforming a square altar into a circular one of equal area — the classic problem of “squaring the circle” that would obsess Greek mathematicians centuries later. Baudhayana’s procedure gives a construction that implies:
Baudhayana’s implicit Pi value ≈ 3.088 (derived from his square-to-circle transformation rule) A different construction in the same text yields ≈ 3.004 The Manava Sulbasutra explicitly states Pi ≈ 3.125 (= 25/8)
These are not wild guesses. They are geometric procedures — verifiable, repeatable, applicable in construction— that presuppose an understanding of the ratio between a circle’s area and the square of its radius. The Sulbasutra authors were not trying to compute Pi as an abstract constant; they were trying to build fire altars of precise dimensions, and their procedures implicitly encode knowledge of Pi.
The Baudhayana Theorem — Before Pythagoras
It is worth noting in this context that the Baudhayana Sulbasutra also contains the first known statement of what the Western world calls the Pythagorean Theorem — stated clearly and generally approximately 200 to 300 years before Pythagoras was born. Baudhayana wrote (in Sanskrit, translated):
“The rope which is stretched across the diagonal of a square produces an area double the size of the original square.”— Baudhayana Sulbasutra, approximately 800 BCE or older
This single fact — that the oldest text in the world to state the Pythagorean relationship is an Indian text — reframes our entire understanding of whose mathematical tradition is truly foundational. India did not merely participate in the history of mathematics. For a very long time, it led it.
The Rigveda and Cosmological Circles (~1500–1200 BCE, with oral roots possibly to ~3000+ BCE)
The Rigveda— one of the world’s oldest surviving texts, whose composition is dated to at least 1500 BCE though its oral tradition is thought to extend back to 3000 BCE or beyond — contains cosmological hymns that describe the universe in terms of circular and spherical structures. The concept of the cosmic wheel (chakra) with 12 spokes, 360 nave-pins, and a revolving hub appears in Rigvedic hymns in a context that clearly reflects astronomical observation and circular geometry.
Rigveda 1.164.48 famously describes: “Twelve-spoked wheel, one nave, three hundred and sixty nave-pins — who knows this?” This is a clear reference to the 360-degree circle and the 12 months of the year — demonstrating that Vedic thinkers conceptualized the heavens as a circle divided into 360 equal parts, a framework inseparable from the mathematics of Pi.
Aryabhata— Closest Ancient Value of Pi (~499 CE, but representing a tradition centuries older)
While the Sulbasutras gave approximate working values, the Indian mathematical tradition eventually produced one of the most precise ancient statements about Pi’s nature. Aryabhata, in his Aryabhatiya of 499 CE, wrote a Sanskrit verse that translates as:
“Add four to one hundred, multiply by eight and then add sixty-two thousand. The result is approximately the circumference of a circle of diameter twenty thousand. By this rule the relation of the circumference to diameter is given.”— Aryabhata, Aryabhatiya, 499 CE
Working this out: (100 + 4) × 8 + 62,000 = 62,832. Divided by 20,000 = 3.1416. This is Pi correct to four decimal places — and remarkably, Aryabhata added the Sanskrit word Aasanna meaning “approximate” or “approaching” — suggesting he understood that this ratio was not exact, could not be expressed as a simple fraction, and that his value was a close approach to an irrational quantity. This is a conceptual leap toward understanding Pi’s irrationality that predates Lambert’s formal proof by over twelve centuries.
PART II — THE ASTRONOMICAL DIMENSION: CIRCLES IN THE SKY
Ancient India’s engagement with Pi was not only ritual and architectural. It was also deeply astronomical. The Vedanga Jyotisha— the oldest known Indian astronomical text, dated to approximately 1400–1200 BCE — describes a computational system for tracking the positions of the sun and moon that is built on circular geometry. Computing the arc length traversed by a celestial body in a given time, predicting eclipses, and calculating the positions of nakshatras (lunar mansions) all require working with the relationship between an arc and a circle’s diameter — which is fundamentally a Pi relationship.
The Vedic calendar— one of the most mathematically sophisticated ancient calendrical systems— divided the year into circular cycles with great precision, using 360-degree frameworks for both solar and lunar tracking. The Yajurveda contains a list of numbers from 1 to 10^12, demonstrating a number system of extraordinary range. The Atharvaveda contains references to geometric constructions. Taken together, the Vedic corpus represents a sustained engagement with quantitative reasoning, geometric construction, and circular measurement that stretches back, in oral form, to the third millennium BCE.
The critical point is this: ancient India’s knowledge of Pi-related geometry was not an accidental byproduct of building temples. It was a sophisticated, deliberately cultivated intellectual tradition — embedded in ritual, astronomy, and philosophical inquiry — that produced multiple independent convergences on the value we call Pi across a period spanning at least two thousand years before Archimedes picked up a compass.
PART III — ANCIENT EGYPT: PRACTICAL GEOMETRY FROM THE NILE (~2600–1550 BCE)
Egypt’s engagement with Pi is better documented than India’s pre-Archimedes record, simply because Egyptian papyrus survived the millennia in ways that Indian palm-leaf manuscripts and wooden tablets did not. But documentation is not the same as priority— and Egypt’s Pi approximations, while independently remarkable, arise later and from a tradition clearly rooted in pragmatic engineering rather than philosophical inquiry.
2.1 The Great Pyramid — An Accidental or Intentional Pi? (~2560 BCE)
The Pyramid Proportion
Long before any written Pi record survives from Egypt, the Great Pyramid of Giza (built ~2560 BCE for Pharaoh Khufu) encodes a striking Pi relationship in its proportions. The perimeter of the pyramid’s base divided by twice its height gives approximately 3.14159 — Pi to five decimal places. The original base measured 440 royal cubits per side; the original height was 280 royal cubits. The calculation:
Perimeter / (2 × Height) = (4 × 440) / (2 × 280) = 1760 / 560 = 3.142857… This differs from Pi by less than 0.04% — an extraordinary precision for any construction of any era.
The question of whether this was intentional has fascinated historians of mathematics for generations. The conservative view holds that Egyptian architects used a seked system (a ratio of horizontal run to vertical rise) that happened to embed Pi. The more intriguing interpretation is that Egyptian architects worked with a rolling-wheel method — using a circular drum rolled along the ground to mark out distances — which would automatically encode Pi in any measurement linking circular and linear dimensions. Either way, the Egyptian architects of the Old Kingdom were working with Pi in practice, whether they conceptualized it abstractly or not.
The Kahun Papyrus (~1850 BCE)
The Kahun Papyrus, discovered at the pyramid workers’ town of Lahun, contains what may be the oldest surviving written mathematical problem involving circular area. A problem dealing with the area of a circular field uses a method equivalent to a Pi value of approximately 3.1605. While this predates the Rhind Papyrus, the Rhind provides a fuller and more explicit statement of the method.
2.2 The Rhind Mathematical Papyrus — Egypt’s Explicit Pi (~1650 BCE)
What Is the Rhind Papyrus?
The Rhind Mathematical Papyrus — named after Scottish antiquarian Alexander Henry Rhind, who purchased it in Luxor in 1858 — is a scroll approximately 33 cm tall and 5 metres long, written by the scribe Ahmes (also spelled Ahmose) around 1650 BCE, who explicitly states he was copying from an older document dating to approximately 2000–1800 BCE. It contains 84 mathematical problems covering arithmetic, algebra, geometry, and practical calculation. It is the most comprehensive surviving document of ancient Egyptian mathematics.
Problem 48 and Problem 50 of the Rhind Papyrus deal with circular area and provide the clearest window into Egyptian Pi knowledge.
Problem 50: The Egyptian Pi Formula
Problem 50 asks: what is the area of a round field with a diameter of 9 khet? Ahmes’ method is: take the diameter, subtract 1/9 of it, and square the result. In modern notation:
Area = (d − d/9)² = (8d/9)² This is equivalent to using Pi ≈ (4 × (8/9)²) = 256/81 ≈ 3.16049… The true value of Pi is 3.14159… — so the Egyptian value is accurate to within 0.6%. For practical field measurement in 1650 BCE, this is exceptional.
Critically, Ahmes does not present this as an approximation. He presents it as the method. The Egyptians did not appear to conceptualize Pi as a ratio with an unknowable exact value — they had a practical rule that worked well enough for every field they needed to measure, every granary they needed to fill, every column base they needed to cut. Their Pi was a tool, not an abstraction.
Problem 48: The Square-Circle Comparison
Problem 48 is even more fascinating: it compares the area of a circle inscribed within a square. Using the octagonal approximation method (cutting the corners off a square to approximate a circle), Ahmes arrives at the same 256/81 ratio. This geometric visualization — squaring a circle through corner-cutting — is a method that appears independently in multiple ancient cultures, suggesting it was a natural geometric intuition that different civilizations discovered on their own.
Moscow Mathematical Papyrus (~1850 BCE)
The Moscow Mathematical Papyrus, slightly older than the Rhind, contains 25 problems and includes a calculation involving the surface area of a hemisphere — requiring Pi in its computation — that is solved with impressive accuracy. That Egyptian mathematicians were computing surface areas of three-dimensional curved objects by 1850 BCE places their geometric knowledge in an extraordinarily advanced context for the ancient world.
PART IV — ANCIENT BABYLON: ALGEBRA, ASTRONOMY, AND PI (~1900–300 BCE)
The Babylonian civilization of Mesopotamia— the land between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers, in what is today Iraq — produced some of the most sophisticated mathematical work of the ancient world. Writing on clay tablets in cuneiform script, Babylonian scribes developed a positional number system using base 60 (sexagesimal), computed square roots and cube roots with high precision, and solved quadratic equations algorithmically. Their engagement with Pi was significant, though not as philosophically deep as the Indian tradition.
3.1 The Babylonian Pi Values (~1900–1600 BCE)
The Standard Value: 3
The oldest Babylonian Pi was simply 3 — a value that appears in several Old Babylonian tablets (circa 1900–1600 BCE) for calculations involving the circumference of a circle. A tablet from Susa (modern Iran) uses the formula C = 3d — circumference equals three times diameter — which is equivalent to Pi = 3 exactly. This crude value was adequate for many practical purposes and appears in the Bible as well (1 Kings 7:23 describes a circular vessel “ten cubits from brim to brim” with “a line of thirty cubits,” implying Pi = 3).
The YBC 7302 Tablet — Pi = 3.125
A more refined Babylonian approximation comes from a tablet in the Yale Babylonian Collection (YBC 7302), dated to approximately 1900–1600 BCE. This tablet computes the area of a circle using a constant equivalent to Pi ≈ 3.125 = 25/8. This is significantly better than 3 and comparable to the Manava Sulbasutra’s value from India — two civilizations, on different continents, independently converging on the same fractional approximation.
The Plimpton 322 Tablet — A Window into Babylonian Geometry (~1800 BCE)
The Plimpton 322 tablet — one of the most famous and debated mathematical tablets from antiquity — contains a table of Pythagorean triples with remarkable precision. While not directly about Pi, it demonstrates the extraordinary sophistication of Old Babylonian mathematics, which was producing advanced geometric reasoning at the same time as — and possibly earlier than — the Indian Sulbasutra tradition (though the Sulbasutra oral tradition is older). The Babylonians and Indians appear to have been mathematical peers through most of the second millennium BCE.
3.2 Later Babylonian Astronomy and Pi (~600–300 BCE)
The later Babylonian period — the Neo-Babylonian and Achaemenid eras (600–300 BCE) — saw the development of extraordinary astronomical mathematics. Babylonian astronomers computed the periods of planetary motions, predicted lunar eclipses, and divided the sky into 360 degrees — a convention that we still use today. All of this astronomical computation involved implicit Pi, in the calculation of arc lengths and angular velocities on the celestial sphere.
A fascinating discovery came in 2016, when historian Mathieu Ossendrijver of Humboldt University Berlin analysed five Babylonian astronomical tablets and found that Babylonian astronomers between 350 and 50 BCE used a method equivalent to the trapezoidal rule of integral calculus to compute the displacement of Jupiter along the ecliptic. This technique — previously thought to have been invented in 14th-century Europe — was used by Babylonian astronomers 1,400 years earlier. In applying this method to circular celestial geometry, Pi was an integral component of their calculations.

Archimedes at work in Syracuse
PART V — ARCHIMEDES: THE GENIUS WHO RE-DISCOVERED WHAT INDIA KNEW
“To call Archimedes the discoverer of Pi is like calling Columbus the discoverer of America. The land was already there. The people already knew it. What Columbus did — what Archimedes did — was bring that knowledge into a new framework, and document it with a rigour the previous traditions had not.”
Archimedes of Syracuse (287–212 BCE) was, without any qualification, one of the greatest intellects in human history. His contributions to mathematics and physics — the principle of the lever, Archimedes’ principle of buoyancy, the method of exhaustion, the computation of areas and volumes of curved figures — were centuries ahead of his contemporaries. His work on Pi, set out in the treatise Measurement of a Circle, is brilliant, rigorous, and deserving of its place in history.
But was it original? In the narrow sense — Archimedes’ specific polygonal method of bounding Pi between inscribed and circumscribed polygons was his own systematic innovation. In the broader sense — the knowledge that the ratio of circumference to diameter was a fixed constant near 3.14 — no. That knowledge was already in the world, in multiple places.
5.1 What the Ancient World Already Knew When Archimedes Was Born (~287 BCE)
By 287 BCE — the year of Archimedes’ birth — the following was already known, documented, and in active use:
- India’s Sulbasutras had encoded circular geometry procedures for centuries, with Pi values of 3.004, 3.088, and 3.125 used in altar construction.
- India’s Vedic astronomical tradition was tracking celestial circles using an implicit Pi framework stretching back to at least 1200 BCE.
- Egypt’s Rhind Papyrus method— Pi ≈ 3.1605 (= 256/81) — had been in use for at least 1,400 years.
- Babylon’s YBC 7302 tablet— Pi ≈ 3.125— had been in use for over 1,600 years.
- The Great Pyramid of Giza, whose proportions encode Pi to five decimal places, had been standing for 2,273 years.
- Babylonian astronomers were already computing arc lengths and planetary positions using Pi-dependent geometry.
None of this diminishes Archimedes. His innovation was not the discovery that such a ratio exists — that was common knowledge across the ancient world. His innovation was the development of a rigorous, systematic mathematical procedure for computing the ratio to arbitrary precision, and the proof that the ratio was bounded between specific values. He brought mathematical proof to a number that others had approached empirically and practically.
5.2 Archimedes’ Actual Method— What Was New
The Polygonal Approximation — Archimedes’ Unique Contribution
Archimedes began with a circle of diameter 1. He inscribed a regular hexagon inside the circle and circumscribed another regular hexagon outside the circle. Because the hexagon’s perimeter is calculable (it is simply 6 × side length), and because the inscribed hexagon’s perimeter is less than the circle’s circumference while the circumscribed hexagon’s perimeter is greater, Archimedes immediately had bounds: Pi lies between 3 and 2√3 ≈ 3.464.
He then doubled the number of sides: to 12, then 24, then 48, then 96. At each step, the polygons “squeeze” the circle more tightly, and the bounds on Pi become narrower. At 96 sides, he arrived at:
3 + 10/71 < π < 3 + 1/7 In decimals: 3.14085… < π < 3.14285… The true value of Pi = 3.14159… sits comfortably between these bounds. Archimedes’ method was correct to 2 decimal places — a significant advance over all previous values.
Why This Was Revolutionary
The revolutionary aspect of Archimedes’ work was not the result — it was the method. Previous cultures had arrived at Pi approximations through measurement, construction, and practical trial. Archimedes arrived at Pi bounds through pure deductive reasoning, using only the properties of polygons and the concept of limits. His method was, in principle, infinitely extendable: by doubling the number of polygon sides indefinitely, Pi could be computed to any desired precision. He had, essentially, invented the concept of a mathematical limit — 1,900 years before Newton and Leibniz formalized it as calculus.
This is the crucial distinction: Indian, Egyptian, and Babylonian mathematicians knew Pi approximately through practice and measurement. Archimedes knew Pi rigorously through proof. Both forms of knowledge are valuable. But Archimedes’ formal proof-based approach was the seed from which Western mathematics — and eventually modern science — would grow.
5.3 What Archimedes Did Not Know— And India Already Did
Despite the brilliance of his method, there are significant things about Pi that Archimedes did not address but that the Indian tradition was already moving toward:
- Archimedes did not speculate about whether Pi was rational or irrational. He computed bounds, but did not question Pi’s fundamental nature. Aryabhata (499 CE), by contrast, used the word ‘aasanna’ (approximate) in describing his Pi value, suggesting intuition about Pi’s irrationality.
- Archimedes did not develop an infinite series for Pi. The Indian tradition, through Madhava of Sangamagrama (1350–1425 CE), would go on to express Pi as an infinite series — a conceptual leap that anticipated calculus. Archimedes’ polygonal method, however clever, was ultimately a finite procedure extended iteratively.
- Archimedes did not connect Pi to its appearance in spherical volume and area formulas in the context of astronomical geometry, as Indian and Babylonian astronomers had already done implicitly in their celestial calculations.
PART VI — COMPARATIVE TIMELINE: WHO KNEW WHAT, AND WHEN
The following table summarizes the ancient world’s engagement with Pi across civilizations and eras:
| Period | Culture / Source | Pi Value Used | Accuracy |
| ~3300–1300 BCE | Indus Valley Civilization | Implicit in circular construction | Practical — no written record (script undeciphered) |
| ~3000 BCE (oral) | Vedic India (Rigveda) | 360° circle cosmology, circular geometry in ritual | Conceptual — oral tradition, astronomical |
| ~2560 BCE | Egypt (Great Pyramid) | Pi ≈ 3.1416 (encoded in proportions) | Within 0.04% — possibly unintentional |
| ~1900–1600 BCE | Babylon (YBC 7302) | Pi ≈ 3.125 (= 25/8) | Accurate to 0.53% |
| ~1850 BCE | Egypt (Kahun Papyrus) | Pi ≈ 3.1605 (= 256/81) | Accurate to 0.60% |
| ~1650 BCE | Egypt (Rhind Papyrus) | Pi ≈ 3.1605 (= 256/81) | Accurate to 0.60% — fully documented method |
| ~1500–800 BCE | India (Sulbasutras, oral → written) | Pi ≈ 3.004 to 3.125 (multiple values) | Practical geometry for altar construction |
| ~800 BCE | India (Baudhayana Sulbasutra) | Pi ≈ 3.088–3.125 | Explicit geometric construction procedures |
| ~250 BCE | Greece (Archimedes) | 3.14085 < π < 3.14285 | Accurate to 2 decimal places — rigorous bounds |
| ~263 CE | China (Liu Hui) | Pi ≈ 3.14159 (3072-gon) | Accurate to 5 decimal places |
| ~480 CE | China (Zu Chongzhi) | Pi ≈ 355/113 | Accurate to 7 decimal places |
| ~499 CE | India (Aryabhata) | Pi ≈ 3.1416 (“approximate”) | Accurate to 4 decimal places + irrationality intuition |
| ~1400 CE | India (Madhava) | Infinite series for Pi | Conceptually revolutionary — anticipates calculus |
PART VII — THE ERASURE PROBLEM: WHY DOES THE WEST NOT KNOW THIS?
Given all of the above — given that India had sophisticated Pi-related geometry centuries before Egypt, that Egypt had it before Babylon, and that Babylon had it before Greece — why does every popular history of mathematics still begin with “Pi was discovered by Archimedes”? The answer is uncomfortable, and it involves a combination of colonial historiography, the survival of sources, linguistic barriers, and the structure of Western academic tradition.
The Survival Problem
Indian mathematics was largely transmitted on palm-leaf manuscripts, which decay within centuries in India’s climate. Egyptian papyri survived because of Egypt’s extreme dryness. Babylonian clay tablets survived because they are virtually indestructible. Indian palm-leaf manuscripts, with the exception of a small number of texts that were copied forward through monastic and scholarly traditions, simply did not survive. We are almost certainly missing vast quantities of ancient Indian mathematical knowledge — not because it did not exist, but because it was written on material that time destroyed.
The Colonial Historiography Problem
When European scholars began systematically studying the history of mathematics in the 18th and 19th centuries, they did so within an intellectual framework that positioned ancient Greece as the origin of rational thought, scientific inquiry, and mathematical proof. Non-European mathematical traditions were routinely framed as “practical” or “empirical” rather than “theoretical” — a distinction that, while sometimes valid, was also used to diminish non-Western contributions. The systematic study of Indian mathematical history by scholars like George Thibaut (who first published the Sulbasutras in the 1870s) came late, and its implications for the standard narrative of mathematical history have not yet fully percolated into popular understanding.
The Language Barrier
The Sulbasutras, the Aryabhat, Madhava’s works, and the broader Sanskrit mathematical literature require fluency in Sanskrit and familiarity with the Devanagari script to read in original. The scholarly community working on ancient Indian mathematics, while growing, remains smaller than the community working on Greek, Latin, Egyptian, and Babylonian sources — simply because the language skills required are rarer in Western academia. This creates a structural disadvantage in the visibility of Indian contributions.
The historical record, when read honestly and completely, does not support the narrative that Pi was “discovered” in ancient Greece. It supports a narrative in which Pi was discovered — gradually, collectively, across millennia — by multiple civilizations, with the Indian subcontinent holding the earliest and deepest engagement with circular geometry. Archimedes’ contribution was methodological rigour, not priority of discovery.
PART VIII — THE DEEPER QUESTION: WHY DID SO MANY DISCOVER PI INDEPENDENTLY?
Perhaps the most profound insight that emerges from this deep history is not about any single civilization’s priority — it is about why Pi was discovered so many times, independently, across cultures separated by oceans and centuries. The answer reveals something fundamental about Pi itself, and about the human mind.
Pi was discovered repeatedly because circles are everywhere — in the sun, the moon, the wheel, the well, the eye, the fruit, the orbit. Any civilization that begins to measure, to build, to observe, and to think mathematically will encounter Pi. It is not a human invention. It is a feature of the universe, waiting to be found by any sufficiently curious intelligence. The Egyptian scribe, the Vedic priest, the Babylonian astronomer, and the Greek geometer all found it because it was always there — in the ratio between the rope stretched around a circular altar and the rope laid across it as its diameter.
Pi’s repeated independent discovery across ancient civilizations is perhaps the strongest evidence of its objective reality. It was not invented by any culture. Each culture discovered it, as if uncovering a fact that had always been true. The question “who discovered Pi?” may, in the end, be the wrong question. The right question is: what does it mean that a non-repeating, irrational, transcendental number — the ratio of two of the simplest things in geometry — was hidden in plain sight in every circle ever drawn by every hand in human history, long before the human mind was ready to fully understand what it had found?
“Pi was not waiting for Archimedes. It was not waiting for anyone. It was written into the circle from the moment the universe decided circles would exist.”
π : 3.14159265358979323846264338327950288…
Known in India before Egypt. Known in Egypt before Babylon. Known in Babylon before Greece. Known by the universe before any of us.

Srinivasa Ramanujan and His Pi work
Ramanujan’s Magic: The Man Who Knew Infinity
No discussion of Pi is complete without the Indian mathematical genius, Srinivasa Ramanujan. In 1914, while living in obscurity in Madras, Ramanujan published a paper listing 17 formulae for calculating Pi. These weren’t just incremental improvements; they were leaps of genius. They were so efficient that each term of his series yielded several new digits of Pi, making them thousands of times faster than classical methods.
For decades, mathematicians wondered: Where did these come from? Ramanujan claimed the goddess Namagiri gave him the equations in his dreams. It turns out, he was dreaming of the future of physics.
In a stunning discovery made in late 2025, physicists at the Indian Institute of Science (IISc) found that Ramanujan’s 100-year-old formulae perfectly describe the mathematics underlying black holes, turbulence, and percolation (how fluids move through porous materials) . The team, led by Professor Aninda Sinha, discovered that the “starting point” of Ramanujan‘s work aligns with logarithmic conformal field theories—complex physics used to describe the universe at its most chaotic points, such as the critical phase transition of water or the edge of a black hole. Ramanujan wasn’t just calculating a number; he was describing the fabric of spacetime without even knowing it.
Why March 14? (And the “Pi Minute”)
We celebrate Pi on March 14th because in American date format, it reads as 3/14 . The tradition began in 1988 at the San Francisco Exploratorium, spearheaded by physicist Larry Shaw. He saw an opportunity to invite people into the “joy of mathematical learning” .
The ultimate celebration occurred in 2015. On 3/14/15 at 9:26:53 a.m. , the date and time matched the first ten digits of Pi: 3.141592653 . This “Super Pi Day” was a once-in-a-century event.
Google’s Celebration
Google fully embraces Pi Day with interactive Google Doodles. In 2010, the logo was redesigned with circles and pi symbols. For the 30th anniversary in 2018, Google featured a delicious-looking pie baked by celebrity chef Dominique Ansel, complete with a crust designed to represent the circumference formula. Google Doodles interactive designs often include: animated circles, puzzles., mini games, tributes to famous mathematicians.
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Shock, Silence, and a Political Vacuum in Maharashtra: An NDA Ally, Deputy Chief Minister, and NCP Chief Ajit Dada Pawar Dies in a Plane Crash
Published
2 months agoon
January 28, 2026
Today morning, Maharashtra wakes up not to headlines, but to Shock, disbelief and grief.
The name that Maharashtra has spoken for over four decades—with familiarity, disagreement, admiration, and dependence: Ajit Dada Pawar is no more.

The fiery, outspoken, intelligent, visionary and a people’s leader sixty-six year-old Maharashtra Deputy Chief Minister, NDA ally and Nationalist Congress Party (NCP-AP faction) leader Ajit Dada Pawar was among five people killed on Wednesday 28th January 2026 morning when their Bombardier Learjet-the aircraft, a business jet crashed while landing around 8:45 a.m. at Baramati airport section amid poor visibility. The Dada was flying from Mumbai to attend Zilla Parishad election events at Baramati, district Pune.
The Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) has confirmed that all five people on board the plane have been killed. According to Flight Radar, the flight took off from Mumbai at 8:10 a.m. and it disappeared from radar around 8:45 am. There were five people on board when the aircraft crashed at 8:50 a.m., a police official said in a statement.
The Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau (AAIB) will launch a probe into the fatal Baramati plane crash. The AAIB team will soon visit the crash site.
Maharashtra’s Deputy CM Ajit Pawar and four others were killed in the crash, today.
The news of the plane crash is going to be altered the course of the state’s politics, and of a name that has been inseparable from Maharashtra’s power structure for over four decades: Ajit Dada Anantrao Pawar. The atmosphere that now grips Maharashtra—a mix of shock and question.
For Ajit Dada Pawar was not merely another office-holder. He was an institution of work, authority, and relentless governance.

Remain As A Memory – Maharashtra CM Devendra Fadnavis, Maharashtra Dy CM Eknath Shinde with Maharashtra Dy CM Late Ajit Dada Pawar
Born on 22 July 1959, an eight-term MLA from Baramati Assembly Constituency, a former MP, a six-time Deputy Chief Minister, and a finance minister trusted even in unstable coalitions, Ajit Dada Anantrao Pawar was known less for oratory and more for outcomes.
A 21 Yr old would’ve been embarrassed looking at his energy at 66 Yrs. used to get up at 5 am. Used to start his official work at 6 am. Day never used to end up before late midnight. But never a sign of tiredness on his face. A true grassroot leader.
Much of who Ajit Dada Pawar became cannot be spoken of without mentioning Sharad Pawar, his uncle, mentor, and towering presence in Indian politics. Sharad Pawar did not merely introduce him to public life; he shaped his instincts. From him, Ajit Pawar learned the grammar of power in Maharashtra—how rural cooperatives breathe, how sugar belts decide elections, how irrigation is not just water but politics, livelihoods, and dignity.
Yet, over time, Ajit Pawar stepped out of that shadow, forging an identity that was unmistakably his own: decisive, impatient with indecision, fiercely administrative.
He spoke bluntly, often impatiently but with honesty, sometimes controversially. But few questioned his grasp of governance or his ability to move the system. Minister of several departments (Finance and Planning, Energy, Water Resources, Rural Development, Water Supply and Sanitation, Irrigation, etc.)- his imprint was everywhere.
As the Finance Minister, Ajit Dada never let the economic clock of the state slip. He made financial provisions for many development projects in the state. Lakhs of people in Maharashtra along with the workers of Nationalist Congress party have a feeling of being defeated and leaderless today.
The kingdom has suffered immense losses due to the demise of Ajit Dada as He was, to many, the embodiment of relentless work.
The Baramati plane crash did not claim only Ajit Dada’s life. Besides Ajit Dada, the mentioned individuals also died in this tragic accident: Sumeet Kapoor: Pilot, Sambhavi Pathak: Co-pilot, Videep Jadhav: PSO. Pinky Mali: Crew Member
MP Supriya Sule cousin, Ajit Dada Pawar’s wife Sunetra Pawar and son Parth Pawar reached Baramati following the tragic plane crash that claimed the life of Maharashtra Deputy Chief Minister Ajit Dada Pawar. Visibly overcome with grief at the airport, Supriya Sule broke down and said, ‘Sabka ladla chala gaya’, remembering her cousin and ‘Dada’, as family members and supporters gathered to mourn the loss.
The last rites of Maharashtra Deputy Chief Minister Ajit Pawar, killed in a plane crash, will be held with full state honours on Thursday (January 29, 2026) in Baramati, Pune district.
Union Home Minister Amit Shah, BJP National President Nitin Nabin, Maharashtra CM Devendra Fadnavis, Maharashtra Deputy CM Eknath Shinde, Maharashtra Governor Acharya Devvrat and many leaders from various opposition parties are expected to attend the last rites, which will be held at Vidya Pratishthan ground, Baramati at 11 a.m. with full state honours to acknowledge Ajit Dada whose working relationship with power was respected even by opponents.
The Condolence from some leaders

Maharashtra Dy CM Ajit Dada Pawar With PM Narendra Modi, Maharashtra Dy CM Eknath Shinde And Others.
PM Narendra Modi wrote on X- Shri Ajit Pawar Ji was a leader of the people, having a strong grassroots level connect. He was widely respected as a hardworking personality at the forefront of serving the people of Maharashtra. His understanding of administrative matters and passion for empowering the poor and downtrodden were also noteworthy. His untimely demise is very shocking and saddening. Condolences to his family and countless admirers. Om Shanti.
Maharashtra CM Devendra Fadnavis wrote on X- Dada is no more!
My dear friend and colleague, a mass leader with a strong people’s connect, Deputy Chief Minister Ajitdada Pawar lost his life in a plane accident. This is an extremely shocking, heart wrenching news. I’m numb. I do not have any words to express these devastating emotions.
I have lost my brave friend with a huge heart.
This is a tragic and personal loss for me. And it is irreparable loss! I pay my deep, humble, heartfelt respects to dear Dada. My deepest condolences to his entire family and NCP family. We stand together with them in sorrow and tough times. 4 more people lost lives in this accident. My condolences to their families too. We are with them. I’ve cancelled all my scheduled programs and will go to Baramati.
Aum Shanti
Maharashtra Dy CM Eknath Shinde wrote on X-
” My elder brother went. Ajit Pawar’s death has brought down a mountain of grief in Maharashtra. The entire Maharashtra has suffered huge losses. Such a thought did not occur in any dream. Ajit Dada was a man of his word. We worked as a team when I was the CM, and he was Dy CM. As team we had started the Ladli Behen Yojana, and Ajit dada played an important role in it..”
Deputy Chief Minister of Andhra Pradesh Pawan Kalyan wrote on X-
Deeply shocked by the tragic news of the passing of the Maharashtra Deputy Chief Minister, President of NCP and an NDA alliance leader, Sri Ajit Dada Pawar ji, in a devastating plane crash today. His dedicated public service and immense contributions towards the welfare and development of the people of Maharashtra will always be remembered, and his enduring commitment to the people will continue to be held with respect.
I express my profound condolences on his passing and extend my deepest sympathies to his family members, admirers, and party cadre during this moment of immense grief.
The Succession
The question of succession has also begun to surface, quietly but inevitably. Will the mantle fall to wife Sunetra Tai Pawar, whose recent political foray brought her into public view beyond Baramati? Or to son Parth Pawar, whose name carries legacy but whose political journey remains unfinished? Or will seasoned leaders like Praful Patel, Chhagan Bhujbal, or Sunil Tatkare attempt to consolidate control?
In moments like these, parties fracture or find new centres or merge—future offers surprise outcomes to consolidate NCP-AP faction.
About the trending Assassination Conspiracy Through Plane Crash

Today, after Ajit Dada’s death due to a plane crash, reacting to W. Bengal CM Mamata Banerjee’s reaction, NCP Supremo and former Maharashtra CM Sharad Pawar released a statement saying, “The accidental death of Ajit Pawar is a tremendous shock to Maharashtra. Today, Maharashtra has lost a capable and decisive leader. The loss is irreparable, but some things are simply beyond our control. I wasn’t planning to speak to the media today, but I learned that some media outlets were suggesting from Kolkata that there was some political angle behind this accident. But there is no politics involved; this is purely an accident. The pain of this death is felt by Maharashtra and all of us. Please do not bring politics into this. That’s all I wanted to say.”
This statement by Pawar Senior put an end to the political controversy being created by vested political leaders and parties.
Blog
Super Duper Blockbuster Dhurandhar: Did You Know Where the Ranveer Singh’s Spy Thriller Was Actually Shot?
Published
3 months agoon
December 18, 2025
When Locations Become Characters: Result, The Visually Amazing Geography of Dhurandhar
Blockbuster films don’t just narrate with their stars — they progress with intention.
And Dhurandhar is a rare example of a movie where geography quietly becomes visually a character of its own. Every street, bridge, village, and mountain ridge convey weight, tension, and meaning. The places you see on screen are not accidental backdrops; they are carefully chosen tools of storytelling.

Image Courtesy: Jio Studios
Directed by Aditya Dhar and powered by the intensity of Ranveer Singh and Akshaye Khanna, Dhurandhar unravels into espionage, moral ambiguity, and fractured loyalties. To make that world believable, the film had to step far beyond studio walls — and sometimes, beyond boundaries.
Bangkok: Building Lyari, Karachi Without Crossing It
When the film went on floors in July 2024, Mumbai’s monsoon made large-scale outdoor shooting nearly impossible. But this wasn’t just a weather problem — it was a creative one. The story demanded scale, density, chaos, and control, all at once. Studios wouldn’t suffice.
That search led the team to Bangkok.

Image Courtesy : Jio Studios
Here’s where the magic happened. In a quiet corner of the city, on a sprawling six-acre plot, an entire version of Karachi’s Lyari area rose from the ground — brick by brick, lane by lane. No shortcuts. No heavy reliance on CGI. Just craftsmanship.
Over 500 workers, most of them Thai artists and technicians, worked relentlessly for nearly 20 days, transforming raw land into a living, breathing neighbourhood. Rooftops felt cramped. Alleys looked worn. Walls carried the fatigue of decades.
On camera, it didn’t look “inspired by” Lyari — it felt like Lyari.

Image Courtesy : Jio Studios
Thailand offered something priceless: freedom. Crowded streets could be controlled. Night shoot takings could stretch longer. Action could unfold without compromise. Chase sequences, covert operations, sudden bursts of violence — all staged with precision, yet grounded in reality.
And that’s why, when the film unfolds, you never feel like you’re watching a set. You feel like you’ve entered a place.
Mumbai: Controlled Chaos and Raw Muscle
Eventually, the journey returned home.
By February 2025, Dhurandhar shifted base to Mumbai. At Filmistan Studios, gripping choreographed indoor scenes and controlled action sequences took shape. But Mumbai wasn’t just about interiors.
A massive four-acre outdoor set was constructed at Madh Island — designed for explosions, collisions, and sequences where everything seems moments away from collapse. Fireballs lit up the night sky. Stunts demanded absolute precision. This was spectacle built the old-school way.

Image Courtesy: Jio Studios
For high-speed chase scenes, the production moved to the Dombivli-Mankoli Bridge. Long, open stretches allowed vehicles to roar, zigzag, and collide while the cinematography captured every nerve-wracking thrill shots.
The bridge wasn’t dressed up — it was used as-is, lending grit and realism.

Image Courtesy: Jio Studios
Then came a emotional shift. In July 2025, a stylised song sequence was filmed at the iconic Golden Tobacco Factory in Vile Parle. Industrial, textured, and visually striking, it offered contrast — a brief breath in a film otherwise heavy with tension.
Punjab: Quiet Streets, Heavy History
Not all drama is loud. In November 2024, the second schedule moved north to Punjab. Near Amritsar, scenes were shot close to the Golden Temple — not as visual spectacle, but as emotional connect. The calm, spiritual atmosphere subtly deepened the narrative.

Image Courtesy : Jio Studios
In Khera Village, rooftops were reshaped, signs rewritten, and streets redesigned to resemble border-adjacent regions. For three to four days, the village transformed — not into a postcard, but into a believable frontier where suspicion hangs in the air.
Even locations like the Sector 16/17 underpass in Amritsar were woven into the story with intent, their everyday anonymity amplifying the tension of the scenes shot there.
Ladakh: Where the Story Strips Bare
The most unforgiving location came last.
Ladakh isn’t just visually stunning — it’s physically demanding. High altitude. Thin air. Unpredictable weather. For the cast and crew, it tested endurance as much as commitment.
But what Ladakh gives in return is irreplaceable.

Image Courtesy: Jio Studios
Wide, empty landscapes. A sense of isolation that presses down on the frame. Silence that feels louder than dialogue. In Dhurandhar, Ladakh becomes a mirror for vulnerability — a place where the spy is exposed, stripped of allies, and forced to confront survival itself.
No studio could replicate that feeling.
Why These Locations Matter
Dhurandhar doesn’t depend on action alone to leave its mark. Its locations carry emotional codes:
Bangkok-built Lyari breathes chaos and control

Mumbai delivers muscle and momentum

Punjab adds cultural depth and quiet tension

Ladakh brings isolation and existential risk

The film’s story — exploring the nexus between politicians, gangsters, and terror networks, following an Indian spy deep inside hostile territory — demands authenticity. And that authenticity comes from places that feel lived-in, not manufactured.
With powerhouse performances from Ranveer Singh, Akshaye Khanna, Sanjay Dutt, and Arjun Rampal, Soumya Tandon, Sara Arjun, the film’s world feels dangerous because it looks real.

Image Courtesy : Jio Studios
For fans, discovering these locations isn’t just trivia — it’s a window into the ambition behind the film.
Dhurandhar didn’t just travel to shoot scenes. It travelled to find truth.
And that’s why, long after the credits roll, the places stay with you.
Also, read Dhurandhar Review and comment : https://bharatnewsupdates.com/dhurandhar-film-review-a-powerful-action-packed-engrossing-yet-a-bit-dragged-out-theatrical-experience/
Blog
Sanchar Saathi: Safeguarding the common man of India under the growing online digital threats. Opposition’s Says “Snooping” “Big Boss” “Tracker” !
Published
3 months agoon
December 2, 2025
As more of our lives spent working, banking, business task online, so is the vulnerability around our smartphones are growing immensely. From fraudulent scam calls to phone thefts and tempered devices, staying safe and guarded often feels overwhelming.
That’s where Sanchar Saathi, created by the Department of Telecommunications (DoT), guard us — a single platform app built to help common Indian individuals safeguard themselves every day.
Here’s how it helps:
1. Report Fraud Calls and Messages — ‘Chakshu’

If you receive dubious calls, SMS or WhatsApp messages claiming to be from:
a. Banks or government offices
b. Police or telecom authorities
c. Fake investment or trading schemes
d. KYC updates or payment alerts.
you can easily report them through Chakshu. This helps stop scams before they spread to others.
2. Block or Track Your Lost Mobile Phone

Losing a phone can feel like losing your whole life.
Sanchar Saathi lets you:
a. Block your lost/stolen phone so nobody else can use it
b. Help generate a trace if someone tries to use it
c. Unblock it again when it’s found
This works across all Indian telecom networks
3. 
Sometimes, unknown numbers are issued using your ID without your permission.
With this tool, you can:
✔ See how many mobile connections are linked to your name
✔ Report numbers you never took
✔ Cancel extra or misused SIMs
This protects your identity from being used for fraud.
4. Verify if Your Phone Is Genuine

Fake and cloned phones are common — and risky.
By typing your IMEI number, Sanchar Saathi detects whether your device is original, safe, and legally valid in India.
A must confirmation tool before buying a used phone!
5. Report International Calls That Pretend to Be Local

Fraudster often call from various other countries while showing a +91XXXXXXX number on screen.
These fraud calls:
a. Hide their real identity
b. Try to cheat people
c. Harm national security
Reporting them helps authorities deactivate such networks.
6. Find Your mobile Internet Service Provider 
Not sure which Wireline Internet Service provider serves your area?
Simply enter your PIN code, address, or ISP name and get the instant details
This helps when choosing your internet provider or migrating your present internet service provider.
7. Verify Trusted Customer Care Contacts

Scammers often pretend to be from banks or companies.
This feature lets you:
✔ Check if a number is genuinely from the organization
✔ Confirm verified email IDs and website links
It’s a quick way to impersonate falling into a fraud trap.
Why Sanchar Saathi Matters
India’s digital growth is fast — but so are the growing cyber threats and scam.
Sanchar Saathi gives every smartphone user simple tools to stay protected:
a. Stops scammers from misusing your identity
b. Prevents lost devices from being misused or re-sold
c. Helps curb cloned & illegal phones
d. Gives peace of mind when communicating online
The government has even directed phone makers to pre-install Sanchar Saathi on new smartphones, so people can safeguard all these
protections from day one.
A Safer Digital India, A Surging Digital India
Sanchar Saathi is a very important security safeguard app — it facilitate real time fraud prevention for every Indian who posses a mobile phone.
By staying alert and using this app, we can mitigate scam, fraud, reduce theft, and build a more safe digital India together.
Opposition’s “Snooping” “Big Boss” “Tracker” Privacy Rhetoric Against Sanchar Saathi App
The Government Department Of telecommunication’s (DoT) directive to all mobile handset manufacturers and importers to sell pre installed Sanchar Saathi app in all new devices within 90 days, has drawn as expected a sharp privacy rhetoric from the Oppositions.
- “The Modi government’s diktat to all mobile manufacturers to install Sanchar Saarthi app on all new and existing phones is a brazen attack on individual privacy and liberty. No democracy in the world has ever attempted to do so.
The notification issued by the government has no mention of seeking individual consent to install the app or providing the option to delete it at any time. @AamAadmiParty condemns such gross dictatorial actions and demands immediate withdrawal of the notification“
stated by Arvind Kejriwal on X.
While Rahul Gandhi, Leader of Opposition in the Lok Sabha, said he would speak in the debate in the House about it, his sister and Congress MP Priyanka Gandhi Vadra called it a “snooping app”.
2. “#SancharSaathi app is yet another addition to the long list of attempts by the BJP to strangulate the voice of the people.
Modi Govt’s unilateral directions to preload this app without taking into confidence various stakeholders and citizens is akin to dictatorship.
Why does the Govt want to know what citizens talk with their family and friends?” stated by Mallikarjun Kharge on X.
3. Big Brother cannot watch us. This DoT Direction is beyond unconstitutional.
The Right to Privacy is an intrinsic part of the fundamental right to life and liberty, enshrined in Article 21 of the Constitution.
A pre-loaded government app that cannot be uninstalled is a dystopian tool to monitor every Indian. It is a means to watch over every movement, interaction and decision of each citizen. This is part of the long series of relentless assaults on the Constitutional Rights of Indian citizens and will not be allowed to continue. We reject this Direction and demand an immediate rollback – stated by Senior Congress leader KC Venugopal on X.
4. Sanchar Saathi mobile application mandate to every mobile phone manufacturer as a permanent mobile feature by the GoI is nothing but another BIG BOSS surveillance moment. Such shady ways to get into individual phones will be protested and opposed & if the IT Ministry thinks that instead of creating robust redressal systems it will create surveillance systems then it should be ready for a pushback! –
stated by Priyanka Chaturvedi, Rajya Sabha MP from Shiv Sena (UBT) on X.
Amid the massive opposition parties uproar surrounding the Centre’s directions to phone manufacturers to pre-install the Sanchar Saathi app on all mobile devices, responding to the media’s queries, Government Of India – Dot Minister Jyotiraditya Scindia has clarified that –
The digital security of every citizen of the country is our top priority. The ‘Sanchar Saathi’ app aims to enable everyone to protect their privacy
and remain safe from online fraud.
It is a completely voluntary and democratic system – users can activate the app and avail its benefits, or if they do not wish to, they can
easily delete it from their phone at any time.
Public trust in Sanchar Saathi is continuously growing.
– Over 200 million people have used the portal so far.
– Over 15 million users are connected to the app.
– Over 14.3 million mobile connections were disconnected when citizens selected ‘Not My Number’.
– 2.6 million mobile phones were traced, of which 72.3 million phones were successfully returned to citizens.
– 40.96 million fraudulent mobile connections reported by citizens were disconnected.
– 620,000 fraud-linked IMEIs have been blocked.
This initiative is a significant step towards strengthening protection, transparency and a customer-first approach.
@DoT_India
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