Thursday, September 27, 2018

[rti4empowerment] 'Aadhaar is a major national security risk'

 


'Aadhaar is a major national security risk'

September 27, 2018 11:00 IST
'If your data is hacked you cannot go to court. Only UIDAI can go to court.'
'UIDAI is lying that Aadhaar is completely secure.'
Illustration: Dominic Xavier/Rediff.com
Nikhil Pahwa, founder, editor and publisher of the Web site Medianama, is a vociferous critic of Aadhaar.
He has still not got an Aadhaar card and says, sadly, he will now have to get one after the Supreme Court's judgment on Wednesday, September 26.
"The government argued against the Fundamental Right to Privacy in the Supreme Court to delay the hearings for Aadhaar. Had they not done that, the case would have finished in 2016 itself. During that time, millions of people went for Aadhaar so it became a fait accompli, and that was the intention all the time," Pahwa tells Rediff.com's Syed Firdaus Ashraf.

You called for the 'destruction of Aadhaar' in a tweet. Why do you hold such strong views against it?
Aadhaar is the making of a surveillance State. Profiling of citizens is already being done at the state-level in state resident data hubs.
I think it is dangerous for democracy if states are allowed to profile citizens to such an extent.
It is happening in Rajasthan. I think even (Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister Nara) Chandrababu Naidu is building a similar database, linking all aspects of a citizen's life with the Aadhaar number.
Aadhaar is dangerous for us as citizens.
Also, there is no means to know what kind of fakes exist in the Aadhaar system.
If you look at the enrolment software hack, which Huffington Post reported (external link), it allows people outside of India to enrol for Aadhar who are not necessarily in the database.

At some point of time there will be certain damage that will be done to individuals before it is destroyed.
The United Kingdom considered unique identity projects before the Labour Party came to power and destroyed it because it was very serious (issue).
I don't think Aadhaar complies with the Fundamental Right to Privacy. I disagree with the Supreme Court that it isn't unconstitutional.
I understand the judges have gone by their own wisdom, but I would go with Justice (D Y) Chandrachud's distinct judgment.
Also, Aadhaar is extremely unsecure and I think the Supreme Court needs to take that in cognisance.
There are reports coming out every day of data being leaked and software being hacked.
The UIDAI (Unique Identification Authority of India) is lying that Aadhaar is completely secure.
The assumption is that biometrics are safe and secure, but you say it is not so.
We leave our biometrics on every glass of water that we pick up. There are students who have cloned fingerprints to mark proxy attendance.
Biometrics, in fact, is the least secure form of authentication. You cannot change your biometrics.
You can change your PIN and password, but you cannot change your biometrics.
If your biometric gets copied, and it is very easy as biometric have been copied from photographs, you are compromised for your entire life.

That sounds dangerous.
It is a fact. Biometrics are not secure.
You pick up a glass of water and are you telling me your fingerprints cannot be copied?
Of course, it can be copied and they do that in forensics.
There is a college in Mumbai where students replicated thumb prints to mark proxy attendance.
In Surat, biometric data was being sold and two traders were arrested for that.
Biometrics are less secure than passwords. All major businesses get hacked at one point or other time, but they protect users by keeping data in silos.
Secondly, when something goes wrong with passwords, they change the password. But how do you change your fingerprints?

Since I have already given my biometrics for a mobile phone connection, how can that be misused?
(Finance Minister) Arun Jaitley had said in Parliament once that there are a number of cases where people's money has been funnelled out of their bank accounts.
There are a number of cases like that and we did stories on Medianama.
Let me ask you this since you got an Aadhaar how often you have used biometric authentication. Hardly ever, right?

Except while connecting my SIM card to Aadhaar...
Most people use a one-time password-based system (for that).
In a country where the population barely understands technology, look at the number of instances where money is being funnelled out by using OTP and UPI (the Unified Payments Interface).
Phishing attacks are already happening. Now the problem is when that happens, you will not link back to the source of loss of data.
TRAI (the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India) chief R S Sharma (recently) tried to point out that losing data is not problematic. But just because he was not harmed today does not mean he will not be harmed in future.
People, though, went and located all sorts of information about him (on Twitter).

The Modi government brought in Aadhaar as a money bill, which you have criticised. It may have been procedurally wrong, but was there any other problem with that decision?
Why did the government want to pass this bill so desperately?
I am not going to question the intent of the government in terms of why they wanted this bill to be passed so desperately.
My problem is that it did not go under the scrutiny of the Rajya Sabha. In fact, there were amendments pushed by the Rajya Sabha which were not accepted by the government.
Therefore, it is highly problematic how it was dealt with. I would just say what they did procedurally and operationally was wrong.
I think it is very disappointing that the Supreme Court has upheld Aadhar as a money bill as that opens the doors for this government and governments to follow to misuse the money bill provision.

The United States has the social security number, most democracies have a citizens ID card. Can't Aadhaar be of some use in a similar way?
Scroll.in has done a story about it and we too have done (a story) on this.
Aadhaar is not a social security number and social security number is not a 'linked' number.
You can change your social security number but you cannot change your Aadhaar number.
I am not sure whether this provision has been removed or not, but under the Aadhaar Act, if your data is hacked you cannot go to court. Only the UIDAI can go to court.
That is inherently unconstitutional.
The social security number is also not linked to biometrics. If you want to look at the US situation, the social security numbers were hacked last year.
Any centralisation of data is problematic. If we have multiple identification cards and identification numbers we can choose to keep ourselves secure by using different cards and different identification methods in different circumstances.
I can give my driving licences or other ID or Aadhaar. Hopefully not Aadhaar.
I will never use Aadhaar as I have still not got Aadhaar.

You don't have an Aadhaar card yet?
No. I might be forced to get one now as it has been made mandatory for PAN.
Look, I saw the dangers very early and decided that I didn't want to risk myself.
My Supreme Court has failed me (on Aadhaar) and my government has already been failing me, so I might get one.

Linking Aadhaar with phone numbers helps track criminals. An alleged terrorist was arrested in Gaya because of Aadhaar.
I have never heard anything like this. In Pathankot, there was a terrorist who was found with Aadhaar,.
An Uzbek woman who committed a crime in Andhra Pradesh had Aadhaar in a different name.
I have never heard of a terrorist being caught because of Aadhaar.
Aadhaar is not proof of identification.
A CNN-IBN journalist proved there is a problem with Aadhaar when he got Aadhaar in a fake name by producing a fake driving licence.
They did not verify his address like they do for a passport for which the police comes to your home, checks your address and also with neighbours to confirm your address.
Where is that kind of verification in Aadhaar? Aadhaar is based on any other ID. It is not proof of address.

Phone linking with Aadhar helps national security.
How does it help? If I have an Aadhaar card in a fake name and then I get a mobile with a fake Aadhaar, how does it help national security?

Granted there are loopholes.
This is not loophole. This is a problem.
If you look at the Huffington Post report (external link), it says anyone in the world could have enrolled for Aadhaar.
It was a sophisticated hack. Anyone in the world could have enrolled for Aadhaar and that was certified by multiple security experts globally.
So someone sitting in Pakistan could have potentially enrolled for Aadhaar with their fingerprints and you would never know. There was no way of knowing it.

Why did the Modi government not realise these things?
I have been saying this for a while now. Aadhaar is a major national security risk for India.
I wish the Supreme Court realised it and I hope the Indian Army realises it.
UIDAI does not have a monitoring mechanism. They have an audit mechanism.
When journalists report issues, that is when they (UIDAI) act on it.
And what they do? They file an FIR against journalists who report on the Aadhaar problem so more people do not report problems on Aadhaar.
What kind of security policy is this? Look at what happened to the Tribune newspaper story.
UIDAI comes out and says 'Oh, but there is no problem'.
How can you trust a government body that lies like that?

There are good things about Aadhaar too, like the leakage in subsidies being plugged.
We have done an analysis on the leakage of subsidies. The government took data which was not attributable to Aadhaar, but they just attributed to Aadhaar.
There have been instances where they have taken data for one small part of one district and attributed that to the entire country over a longer period of time.
The World Bank has largely retracted the report which the government had cited as proof of savings.
There is no trustworthy information coming out from the government on Aadhaar.
They went and argued against the Fundamental Right to Privacy in the Supreme Court to delay the hearings for Aadhaar.
Had they not done that, the case would have finished in 2016 itself.
During that time, millions of people went for Aadhaar so it became a fait accompli, and that was the intention all the time.

Syed Firdaus Ashraf / Rediff.com
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Wednesday, September 26, 2018

[rti4empowerment] Justice Chandrachud - the sole dissenting and sensible voice in Aadhar judgement

 

If you observe with a cool and sane mind,
Justice Chandrachud is the only one who has comprehensively dealt with all the aspects of the petitioners challenge against the Aadhaar scheme and the right view of the unconstitutionality of the scheme. 

I hope the petitioners will go in appeal to a larger bench of the Supreme Court of India against the judgement of four other Justices of the constitutional bench who gave a contrary judgement to that of Justice Chandrachud and the verdict of the four Justices will be overturned. 

There is a great flaw in the majority judgement of the four justices in allowing linking of Aadhaar with PAN for the reason that already PAN is mandatory to open a Bank Account and also for Stock Market operations and many other matters and if Aadhaar is linked to PAN, then it is indirectly linked to all other databases wherein PAN is linked and thus defeats the very restrictions imposed by the majority judgement for Bank Accounts, Mobile SIM etc. 

Is it not a great flaw and has not the honourable justices overlooked this aspect? 
OR 
Is this another shameful way of sneaking in the snake through the grass??

It is a matter of shame on the part of the Government of India to say PAN is not a foolproof identity having introduced the same by the Government of India itself and harassing the citizens saying PAN is not foolproof and therefore take an Aadhaar Card and link it with PAN. At this rate the Government may in future ask the citizens to take another identity card saying Aadhaar is not foolproof. 

What sort of Government of India the citizens of this?

One, with a hidden agenda of complete and total big brother surveillance state.

The courts are not charged with judging the viability of Aadhar but whether something like this is
RIGHT OR WRONG.

And AADHAR is patently and unequivocally wrong whichever way you look at it.
It reduces humans to the level of tagged animals in the wild.
The argument of wanting to stem corruption is blatant lie since corruption occurs within high level industrialists in an unholy nexus with the the govt. itself and in its high handed manner of doling out benefits that we are entitled to by default.

Aadhar is wrong
Aadhar is evil 
and it could very well be the precursor to the mark of the beast mentioned in 
The Bible (Book of revelations Ch 13)

SAY NO TO AADHAR
SAY YES TO FREEDOM

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[rti4empowerment] 'Even if one person dies because of Aadhaar, you scrap Aadhaar'

 

'Even if one person dies because of Aadhaar, you scrap Aadhaar'




September 26, 2018 13:57 IST
'You want poor people who take 5 kg rice to produce an Aadhaar card.'
'The poor man may or may not have Aadhaar.'
'Poor people are losing their food and dying.'
In 2012, Bezwada Wilson was among those who filed a PIL challenging Aadhaar for violating citizens' right to privacy. This was ultimately upheld by the Supreme Court in August 2017.
On Wednesday, September 26, 2018, soon after the apex court declared Aadhaar to be Constitutional, Wilson, national convener of the Safai Karamchari Andolan and a winner of the Magsaysay Award, spoke to Rediff.com's Syed Firdaus Ashraf.
Your first reaction to the Supreme Court judgment upholding Aadhaar.
It is disappointing because we said in our petition that privacy is important and we cannot reveal our details unnecessarily to the State. And now the judgment is saying that it does not affect privacy.
Secondly, we are talking about the most marginalised sections and the court is saying that the majority got benefits (from Aadhaar). So what?

The court is not here to protect the majority or minority. They are not forming a government, but giving a judgment.
You have to give justice to the least.
Why do you think revealing details to the government is a problem?
There is no need to give so much information to the State, there is no point in it.
Individuals must have the freedom to hold their information and must decide what to reveal and what not to reveal.
We Indian citizens are not some foreigners who are coming from outside and need to be accountable (to the State). We don't need to do that.
I don't need to give so much information to the State.
Different ministries of the government are taking my (personal) information, like the external affairs ministry issues passports because of Aadhaar.
So the State is telling every citizen that it will give passports only if they give all their (personal) details. But why?
What is wrong if the government asks for such details while issuing a passport? That is how democracy works, isn't it?
No, democracies don't work like that.
Democracies work with the willingness of the people and not by imposing something on the people. It does not work that way.
Aisa nahi hota hai na, the government comes and says that you cut your hair and trim your beard because they want you to look good.
It is my wish whether I want to trim my beard or cut my hair.
How did Vijay Mallya go out of the country in spite of Aadhaar?
Will Aadhaar stop all this nonsense?
Will Aadhaar stop all the non-performing assets?
Why is Aadhaar so important for giving subsidies to the poor?
You want to streamline the subsidies of the poor. Why not begin with the rich people?
The government is completely suppressing the poor and their aspirations. Let them have their freedom.
Why do you want to have such kind of judgment?
Linking Aadhaar with subsidies is good because it can stop leakages.
Do you mean to say we never gave subsidy without Aadhaar in this country?
Aadhaar is going to control food?;
Digitalisation is not a solution for corruption.
What is the solution then? India has tried different methods to stop corruption in the last 70 years.
We have not done anything wrong with the poor and their subsidies. We made a mistake with the rich people.
You find out how much benefit rich industrialists are getting from the government. Show some courage, as nobody is asking these questions.
You want poor people who take 5 kg rice to produce an Aadhaar card. The poor man may or may not have Aadhaar.
Thumb impressions are not matching and the government wants an Aadhaar card.
Poor people are losing their food and dying.
Even if one person dies because of Aadhaar, you scrap Aadhaar.
The government is not here for a benefits business. It is here to reach the poorest.
Aadhaar originally came about because there was corruption in the subsidy system and it was seen as a route to plug it.
Then catch hold of the corruption of industrialists, why are you going after food subsidy?
Why do you want to start with the poor?
How many politicians use Aadhaar?
In the name of the poor they are playing this game!
Do you feel the government has no right to ask questions of citizens?
My privacy is my right. That is my fundamental right and they have already sold (my) information, which has been proved.
They will only come with one or two examples how Aadhaar is good, but one or two instances mean that these kinds of things (selling personal information) can happen.
Photograph: PTI Photo
Syed Firdaus Ashraf / Rediff.com
 

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[rti4empowerment] The Aadhaar Nightmare

 

The Aadhaar Nightmare

Last updated on: September 26, 2018 15:04 IST
In a reputed school in Delhi, two sets of parents rushed to get Aadhaar cards made on being told that without them their children would not be allowed to appear for the final Board examination.
In Bengaluru, a techie was unable to withdraw his provident fund because he did not have an Aadhaar number.
And a father from Mumbai knocked on the court's doors after his son was denied admission to a college for want of this contentious card.
Veenu Sandhu glimpses the Aadhaar nightmare.
Photograph: Kind courtesy Akshay Mahajan/Creative Commons. Please note the image has been published only for representational purposes.
In a nation divided by many things, the 12-digit unique identity number is holding lives to ransom.
With opinion about Aadhaar often oscillating between two extremes, a small -- and shrinking -- group of individuals across the country has chosen not to equip themselves with the identity number that requires them to share their biometric and demographic data.
At least not until India's apex court mandates them to do so.
Meanwhile, the unique ID number, which was originally proposed in 2009 as a voluntary welfare tool that would help the State reach every last, poor citizen of the country, has assumed a form that few seem to be clear about.
Despite the interim order of the Supreme Court in 2013, stating that 'No person should suffer for not getting Aadhaar', the scheme was being interpreted arbitrarily by agencies and institutions such as banks, insurance and credit card companies, school boards, universities, mobile service operators and even hospitals.
If not their top managements, then the junior staff that deals directly with people invariably pushes customers, clients and applicants to cough up their Aadhaar numbers.
Illustration: Uttam Ghosh/Rediff.com
Caught in this ever-increasing confusion are those who have either voluntarily chosen to live life without Aadhaar (subject to the court ruling) or those who are simply uncomfortable sharing their or their children's sensitive data with anybody who demands it for a service.
Some are holding out. Others have been pushed to a point where they no longer can.
Sibal Sridhar, who has been working in Delhi for over two decades, went without salary for three months after joining a new organisation because of the difficulties in transferring his employee provident fund account for lack of an Aadhaar number.
This was despite the Employee Provident Fund Organisation clarifying in March this year that employees like him will have to give a written undertaking to their employer stating that they do not have an Aadhaar number.
The undertaking would then be forwarded to the regional provident fund commissioner's office for processing.
After some back and forth, the employer told Sridhar that it would be best for all if he simply applied for an Aadhaar number, which he has now unhappily done.
Illustration: Uttam Ghosh/Rediff.com
This is one reason that Gurugram-based Abhineet Mohan is dreading the time he decides to switch companies. He has already had bitter experiences for not possessing the unique identity number.
"My wife and I wanted to upgrade our car, so I approached a bank for a loan. I had every possible document -- my career record (salary slips), gas bills, property papers, bank account details, and so on," he says.
Everything was on track, till the bank asked for a copy of his Aadhaar card.
"When I said I didn't have one, they said they could not sanction a loan."
So he approached another bank, and then another.
Frustrated, but determined not to succumb, Mohan called the car dealership to cancel the booking.
The dealer, also determined to make a sale, contacted the bank and convinced it to sanction the loan.
"I have a credit rating score of over 750. All my earnings and savings are in the bank. I pay my bills online, and on time," says Abhineet.
And yet it was the car dealer, and not he, who finally got the bank to do the job without an Aadhaar number, he adds, appalled.
This wasn't, however, the only problem he faced as an Aadhaar-less citizen of India.
"People who are resisting Aadhaar are like those tribes who live hidden in the Andaman and Nicobar forests. They don't want to come out and embrace the modern world."
When his new car met with an accident, the insurance company refused the claim because he could not furnish an Aadhaar number.
"'It will cost you Rs 60,000 to get the car fixed, Sir. Just get an Aadhaar,' the insurance guy told me," says Mohan.
He dug in his heels and demanded that the company put the reason for denying the claim in writing on its letterhead or he would go to court.
The company buckled. "Every step of the way is a fight now," he says.
A senior official with a leading insurance company, who does not wish to be named, says a premium amount or claim above Rs 100,000 requires the claimant to submit Anti-Money Laundering documents, including proof of residence.
An Aadhaar card as proof of residence is only one of many documents that can be submitted.
"But why not just get an Aadhaar number?" he adds. "To my mind people who are resisting Aadhaar are like those tribes who live hidden in the Andaman and Nicobar forests. They don't want to come out and embrace the modern world."
The mother of a Class 3 student in Noida said the class teacher told her that failure to submit the Aadhaar number would affect the child's promotion to Class 4.
This is one of the sentiments that is pushing Aadhaar.
"And so is ignorance at the junior staff level," says a high-ranking bank official. He, too, does not wish to be named -- a recurring request from officials in matters concerning Aadhaar.
The banker, too, has found himself at the receiving end of this Aadhaar-for-service frenzy. During a routine annual medical check-up, the woman at the cash counter of the diagnostic centre insisted that he produce his unique ID card.
"She said her seniors had directed her to ask for it," he says.
Hospitalisation of a loved one -- and children's education -- are emotional areas that force Aadhaar compliance.
Several school boards, both central and state, have been instructing affiliated schools to collect students' Aadhaar numbers.
The mother of a Class 3 student in Noida said when she got such a notice from school, she called the class teacher who told her that failure to submit the Aadhaar number would affect the child's promotion to Class 4.
Another parent said his daughters, in classes 4 and 8, were humiliated by their teachers because of his resistance to Aadhaar and lack of Aadhaar cards. He has now filed applications for the unique ID for them.
A circular from Gerry Arathoon, chief executive and secretary, Council for Indian School Certificate Examination, to principals of affiliated schools spelt out that students in Classes 9 and 11 who do not have an Aadhaar card should obtain it by July 31, 2018.
If they failed to do so, the circular added, the 'schools will not be allowed to confirm their candidature for the Year 2019 Examinations and their admission cards will not be issued as their names will be automatically withdrawn'.
Arathoon confirmed that such a circular has been issued. "Aadhaar is compulsory for everybody now," he says.
The Central Board of Secondary Education also requires students to submit their Aadhaar number to be allowed to sit for their Class 10 and 12 final examinations.
Bengaluru-based Amit Bansal, co-founder and CEO of NextElection, a new community-driven town hall platform for politicians, journalists and citizens, is waiting for the Central Board of Direct Taxes to comply with the recent Delhi high court order so that he can file his IT return.
In July this year, the court asked CBDT to accept e-filing of returns without quoting an Aadhaar number or Aadhaar enrolment number.
The court said there should be an 'opt out' option for people filing their returns online, says Tripti Poddar, the Delhi-based advocate for the petitioners in the matter.
Like Sridhar, Bansal has had trouble with his employee provident fund as well.
The alumnus of the Indian Institute of Management-Bangalore wanted to withdraw his PF when he was launching his own company, but has not been able to do so without an Aadhaar number.
He also wants to register his company and apply for a Director Identification Number (DIN) -- a unique number given to an existing or potential director of any incorporated company. While the form for this puts an Aadhaar card in the list of conditional (optional) documents, the experience is that the form does not get uploaded without the Aadhaar number attached.
Illustration: Dominic Xavier/Rediff.com
"The system is booby-trapped," says Delhi-based Siddhantrao Hemant who has had a DIN for 17-odd years and holds statutory positions as director in some companies. He has been resisting Aadhaar all this while, but no longer.
"Now if my DIN goes into default, then every company of which I am a director runs into a problem," he says. "So, for someone like me the stakes of resisting Aadhaar have gone up exponentially. I am willing to stick my neck out, but when other people are involved, it is not fair for me to continue doing so."
His voice drops as he says that now he has no choice but to get himself an Aadhaar number. "I feel really bad because it has taken a huge emotional cost."
The list of stories is long. On a visit to London, one person found that his forex card would not work. His bank told him that was because he had not submitted his Aadhaar number.
Another could not get a pre-paid phone connection converted to post-paid.
Yet another opted out of her mobile wallet when it insisted on an Aadhaar number.
"What they are doing is limiting our options, excluding us, slowly but steadily," says Abhineet Mohan.
Meanwhile, far away from the courts, at the Tirumala temple, flocks of the devout, too, are told that an Aadhaar number is a must for sarva darshan and that voter ID cards can be submitted only if they don't have Aadhaar.
Thus putting god, too, on the side of Aadhaar card-holders.
Some names have been changed on request.
Veenu Sandhu
Source:
 



With best wishes,
from                    
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Rahul,
Owner - The CYBUGLE & 60seconds
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Posted by: Rahul <bruntno1@yahoo.com>
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