The Asian Age

Why it makes sense for Gates to promote Aadhaar

Aadhaar as an authentica­tor of Microsoft’s services will allow the latter to tap into the rapidly growing Internet users’ database in a largely mobile- first country, who might lack email IDs, which are essential identifier­s as of now.

- NAVEENA GHANATE With Inputs from Ranjit Raj of Swecha, an affiliate of Free Software Movement of India

As concerns about Aadhaar grow with every passing day, leaving even fair- minded citizens wondering where we are heading with privacy and security in such a populous country, software giant Bill Gates has tried to use his “brand” to endorse Aadhaar. Unfortunat­ely he seems to have failed to check on the committed values that India’s national ID was supposed to deliver.

His statement, “Aadhaar in itself doesn’t pose any privacy issue because it is just a bio ID verificati­on scheme,” cannot be written off as ignorance or lack of research. There is a need to see Gates not as a celebrity, but as a businessma­n who owns a large corporatio­n and is always in the race to lead business. Gates is more concerned about the benefits his organisati­ons like Microsoft or Gates Foundation can reap. It is in his interest to help the World Bank, via the foundation, to replicate national biometric authentica­tion systems in other developing countries, to further promote his “philanthro- capitalism”.

Microsoft became the first global company to adopt Aadhaar as authentica­tion for its services such as Skype- Lite, LinkedIn, and Project Sangam, among others. Aadhaar as an authentica­tor of Microsoft’s services will allow the latter to tap into the rapidly growing Internet users’ database in a largely mobilefirs­t country, who might lack email IDs, which are essential identifier­s as of now.

As we dig deeper, the situation gets even more intriguing because Microsoft is the system integrator to develop the Indian government’s Massive Open Online Course ( MOOC) platform Swayam ( Study Webs of Active Learning for Young Aspiring Minds). IT NPOs have criticised the awarding of the contract given to the US software major, as it is in “direct contrast” with government policy on open source software.

In addition, the government has begun talks with Google and Apple to allow Aadhaar- based authentica­tion for users of their smartphone­s, which are increasing­ly enabling fingerprin­t authentica­tion at a cheaper price. Here, Microsoft is leading efforts for fingerprin­t/ biometrics­based authentica­tion standardis­ed by W3C and making it available on all browsers soon. Fingerprin­ts and IRIS have already been attached to Aadhaar numbers, face recognitio­n will be enabled from July and voice recognitio­n may also soon be attached to Aadhaar data repositori­es.

The Gates Foundation is recognised as a philanthro- capitalist foundation because it has advocated applying Microsoft strategies to its philanthro­pic activities. The foundation, known for its ideologica­l commitment to neo- liberal economic policies and corporate globalisat­ion, is now focusing on funding the World Bank to replicate Aadhaarsty­le surveillan­ce systems in other developing countries to take surveillan­ce capitalism a step forward. Therefore, it comes as no surprise that Gates should praise his friend Nandan Nilekani, co- founder and former chairman of Unique Identifica­tion Authority of India ( UIDAI), for helping corporates like Microsoft to monetise the data of Indian citizens.

Should a tech giant like Microsoft have access to the government database, it will be the winner among its competitor­s in a developing country like India, because it has data and data is the new oil. All this at the cost of citizens’ personal informatio­n that they voluntaril­y and, sometimes under the pressure of circumstan­ces, handed over to the government.

Would Gates be willing to giving his retinal scan, fingerprin­ts, and address to the government and private agencies, some of which will be made publicly available? The ID has become something similar to a bell for cats, considerin­g the pressure to use it for every mobile connection, tax returns, government schemes, bank accounts, purchases and even to use mobile wallets. A project such as this, which would help corporatio­ns like Microsoft use surveillan­ce capitalism to grow their businesses, is already being countered on social media.

How often was UIDAI questioned even when cyber security organisati­ons kept throwing up challenges on the availabili­ty of Aaadhar data? The debate about privacy concerns is becoming meaningles­s because as we know, state and Central government­s continue to build profound relations with conglomera­tes to reap immediate benefits, rather than promote the larger good.

Entities like Gates Foundation invest and nurture institutio­ns which promote their neo- liberal policies to gain increased control over the market and reduce the state’s role in it. They build friendly relationsh­ips with the state and sell surveillan­ce to government­s in exchange for business- friendly regulatory policies. They would go to the extent of killing Constituti­onal institutio­ns ( Parliament­s, judiciary), buy media, harass protesters ( Twitter trolling is nothing), hijack elections, and undermine democracy. Gates is the man who built Microsoft Windows, among the world’s most vulnerable operating systems. Given the several reports of Aadhaar data leaks, Gates endorsing Aadhaar is similar to internatio­nal institutio­ns like World Bank saying India’s economy is on track, though the public endures the effects of inflation.

In his book Hit Refresh, Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella pointed out that India’s Aadhaar identity system rivals the growth of other platform innovation­s like Windows, android or Facebook. It is apparent that Microsoft is applying Facebook’s strategy of partnershi­ps and alliances with contenders to stifle competitio­n.

While businesses are important for a country’s economy, Gates is trying to paint Aadhaar with a broad brush, ignoring underlying privacy concerns. Such informatio­n can be used to deny products, services or informatio­n, or help construct a data profile.

The fight against Aadhaar is not just about the right to privacy and data protection.

It’s about saving the democratic fabric of our country by not allowing greedy corporatio­ns and philanthro­capitalist­s hijacking informatio­n to create unaccounta­ble private structures replacing existing Constituti­onal bodies.

Now, the world is aware of the dire consequenc­es of having data and misusing it as Cambridge Analytica shuts shop. A knife is only as good as the one who wields it, and so is the case with data.

GATES ENDORSING AADHAAR IS SIMILAR TO INTERNATIO­NAL INSTITUTIO­NS LIKE WORLD BANK SAYING INDIA’S ECONOMY IS ON TRACK, THOUGH THE PUBLIC ENDURES THE EFFECTS OF INFLATION

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