Millennium Post

EPFO suspends services through CSC; says no data leakage

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

NEW DELHI: Services pertaining to Aadhaar-seeding with PF accounts done by Common Service Centre (CSC) have been suspended "pending vulnerabil­ity checks", retirement fund body EPFO said on Wednesday but maintained that there was no data leakage.

The statement from the EPFO came amid reports of a letter purportedl­y written by EPFO Central Provident Fund Commission­er V P Joy to CSC'S CEO, Dinesh Tyagi on March 23 flagging the data theft issue.

While announcing the suspension of CSC services, the EPFO said, "Warnings regarding vulnerabil­ities in data or software is a routine administra­tive process based on which the services which were rendered through the CSC have been discontinu­ed from March 22, 2018." The EPFO said there is nothing to be concerned about and that all necessary measures are being taken to ensure that no data leakage takes place.

"No confirmed data leakage has been establishe­d or observed so far. As part of the data security and protection, the EPFO has taken advance action by closing the server and host service through the CSC pending vulnerabil­ity checks," it said in a statement.

The retirement fund body's statement came after reports had suggested theft of data of subscriber­s by hackers from 'aadhaar.epfoservic­es.com', a website operated by the CSC that comes under the Ministry of Electronic­s and IT.

The issue of data theft was purportedl­y raised by Joy in his letter dated March 23.

"... it has been intimated that the data has been stolen by hackers by exploiting the vulnerabil­ities prevailing in the website (aadhaar.epfoser- vices.com) of EPFO...," the purported letter had said.

The retirement fund body has been seeding Aadhaar with Universal Account (PF) numbers of its subscriber­s to improve delivery of services. It has planned to go paperless by August this year and then all its services would be provided online.

Separately, Aadhaar-issuing body, Unique Identifica­tion Authority of India (UIDAI) clarified that there is no data compromise from its servers, and asserted that the Aadhaar database "remains safe and secure". Asked about EPFO'S chief 's letter to CSC CEO, a top IT ministry official said that since vulnerabil­ity has been flagged, the ministry would take action to plug the gaps in case they exist. "We will have it looked at. A vulnerabil­ity has been pointed out, and so we will (undertake) the exercise to plug the vulnerabil­ity, if it is there," said the official.

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