<p>Supreme Court of India, under the leadership of <strong><span class="key-term" data-definition="Chief Justice of India — the head of the Indian judiciary, responsible for administration of the Supreme Court and overall judicial policy (GS2: Polity)">CJI</span> Surya Kant</strong>, announced two flagship initiatives aimed at digitising the judicial workflow: <strong><span class="key-term" data-definition="One Case, One Data (OCOD) — a unified digital platform envisaged to track a case across all courts, enabling standardized data and analytics (GS2: Polity, GS3: Technology)">OCOD</span></strong> and <strong><span class="key-term" data-definition="Su‑Sahayak — an AI‑driven chatbot on the Supreme Court website that assists users with case status, orders, and FAQs (GS2: Polity, GS4: Ethics)">Su‑Sahayak</span></strong>.</p>
<h3>Key Developments</h3>
<ul>
<li>OCOD will create a single digital trail for a dispute as it moves from district courts to High Courts and the Supreme Court, linking appeals, orders and related documents.</li>
<li>Su‑Sahayak, integrated into the Court’s front‑end, helps users locate case status, cause lists, judgments, e‑services and FAQs through a text‑based conversational interface.</li>
<li>The initiatives promise reduced manual verification, reciprocal access across courts, and more accurate judicial statistics.</li>
</ul>
<h3>Important Facts</h3>
<p>India’s judiciary comprises thousands of district and subordinate courts, each using varied software and record‑keeping practices. A unified data set could enable administrators to pinpoint procedural bottlenecks, streamline case management, and support data‑driven policy decisions. However, the rollout raises concerns about interoperability of legacy records, protection of private information, and the need for extensive staff skilling.</p>
<p>OCOD’s success hinges on standardising data formats across jurisdictions. If achieved, it could allow real‑time monitoring of case pendency, helping the Ministry of Law and Justice allocate resources more efficiently. Su‑Sahayak builds on earlier tools such as <em>SUVAS</em> (translation of judgments) and <em>SUPACE</em> (fact‑and‑precedent processing), but remains primarily text‑based, limiting accessibility for non‑literate users.</p>
<h3>UPSC Relevance</h3>
<p>These reforms intersect with several UPSC syllabi: <span class="key-term" data-definition="Digital divide — the gap between those who have access to digital technologies and those who do not, affecting equitable access to justice (GS4: Ethics, GS3: Society)">digital divide</span> concerns highlight the risk of marginalising lawyers and litigants lacking digital infrastructure. The need for cloud backups, scanners and updated software may be affordable for metropolitan firms but burdens independent practitioners in district and taluka courts.</p>
<p>Potential emergence of "digital middlemen"—intermediaries charging fees to navigate the e‑filing portal—raises questions of regu</p>