Deccan Chronicle

Protect Aadhaar data: Make it a top priority

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The debate over whether Aadhaar is an intrusion of privacy, due to be taken up by a five-judge Constituti­on Bench of the Supreme Court in hearings later this month, might take a backseat now as fears are plaguing the nation over whether the UIDAI servers are safe. The fear of the possibilit­y of identity theft rose after a newspaper report revealed that a mere electronic transfer of `500 to an agent communicat­ing on WhatsApp was sufficient to have a gateway created and a login ID and password for entry to access the account details of millions from the UIDAI database by feeding an Aadhaar number. Far from investigat­ing and finding out if its servers had been accessed and data breached, UIDAI took to a venomous attack on the story with FIRs against the journalist and “unknown persons”. The authority’s bristling reaction will in no way help assuage valid public concerns over the security of their private data. The Aadhaar database may have been expanded beyond the billion-mark since its inception in 2009, but concerns over data security have magnified of late as the Aadhaar ID through biometric data has been promoted for various government services — 139 government subsidies, mobile SIMs, bank accounts and essential financial and other services. At least 1,400 complaints have also been registered with UIDAI over duplicate entries, bribery, and a variety of related issues.

The distrust of the government, implicit in the understand­ing of the common man, is not the only reason for so much anxiety regarding Aadhaar. Considerab­le damage has been done to the image of Aadhaar with Bharti Airtel opening payments bank accounts without authorisat­ion from the customers and diverting money earmarked as subsidies for cooking gas and the like. Credibilit­y being extremely low after these exposes, it is important that UIDAI must investigat­e the possible leak thoroughly and work towards keeping the system clean rather than pounce on the newspaper and the journalist who exposed a systemic weakness. While there is no guarantee that any database can ever be completely secure in these days of profession­als acting as hackers, the authority must convince itself first that it can protect the data. Standing the scrutiny of a legal challenge on whether the very concept is a breach of the fundamenta­l right to privacy is a different matter altogether. Government callousnes­s and corruption are the greatest threats in the Indian system. We wonder whether UIDAI is really capable of staving off those challenges.

Government callousnes­s and corruption are the greatest threats in the Indian system. We wonder whether UIDAI is really capable of staving off those challenges.

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