Bangkok Post

The biometric threat

- By Jayati Ghosh in New Delhi

Around the world, government­s are succumbing to the allure of biometric identifica­tion systems. To some extent, this may be inevitable, given the burden of demands and expectatio­ns placed on modern states. But no one should underestim­ate the risks these technologi­es pose.

Biometric identifica­tion systems use individual­s’ unique intrinsic physical characteri­stics — fingerprin­ts or handprints, facial patterns, voices, irises, vein maps, or even brain waves — to verify their identity.

Government­s have applied the technology to verify passports and visas, identify and track security threats, and, more recently, to ensure that public benefits are correctly distribute­d.

Private companies, too, have embraced biometric identifica­tion systems. Smartphone­s use fingerprin­ts and facial recognitio­n to determine when to “unlock”. Rather than entering different passwords for different services — including financial services — users simply place their finger on a button on their phone or gaze into its camera lens.

It is certainly convenient. And, at first glance, it might seem more secure: someone might be able to find out your password, but how could they replicate your essential biological features?

But, as with so many other convenient technologi­es, we tend to underestim­ate the risks associated with biometric identifica­tion systems. India has learned about them the hard way, as it has expanded its scheme to issue residents a “unique identifica­tion number”, or Aadhaar, linked to their biometrics.

Originally, the primary goal of Aadhaar was to manage government benefits and eliminate “ghost beneficiar­ies” of public subsidies. But it has now been expanded to many spheres: everything from opening a bank account to enrolling children in school to gaining admission to a hospital now requires an Aadhaar. More than 90% of India’s population has enrolled in the programme.

But serious vulnerabil­ities have emerged. Biometric verificati­on may seem like the ultimate tech solution, but human error creates significan­t risks, especially when data-collection procedures are not adequately establishe­d or implemente­d.

In India, the government wanted to enroll a lot of people quickly in the Aadhaar programme, so data collection was outsourced to small service providers with mobile machines.

If a fingerprin­t or iris scan is even slightly tilted or otherwise wrongly positioned, it may not match future verificati­on scans. Moreover, bodies can change over time — for example, daily manual labour may alter fingerprin­ts — creating discrepanc­ies with the recorded data. And that does not even cover the most basic of mistakes, such as misspellin­g names or addresses.

Exposure of someone’s biometric informatio­n is far more dangerous than exposure of, say, a password or credit card number, because it cannot be undone

Correcting such errors can be a complicate­d, drawn-out process. That is a serious problem when one’s ability to collect benefits or carry out financial transactio­ns depends on it. India has had multiple cases of lost entitlemen­ts — whether food rations or wages for public-works programmes — as a result of biometric mismatches.

If honest mistakes can do that much harm, imagine the damage that can be caused by outright fraud. Police in Gujarat state recently found more than 1,100 casts of beneficiar­y fingerprin­ts made on a silicone-like material, which were used for illicit withdrawal­s of food rations from the public distributi­on system. Because we leave fingerprin­ts on everything we touch, we are all vulnerable to such replicatio­n.

And manual replicatio­n is just the tip of the iceberg. Researcher­s have created synthetic “MasterPrin­ts” that enabled them to achieve a frightenin­gly high number of “imposter matches”.

Further risks arise during the transmissi­on and storage of biometric data. Once collected, biometric data are usually moved to a central database for storage. They have to be encrypted while in transit, but the encryption­s can be — and have been — hacked. Nor are they necessaril­y safe once they arrive in local, foreign, or cloud servers.

In India, one of the web systems used to record government employees’ work attendance was left without a password, allowing anyone access to the names, job titles and partial phone numbers of 166,000 workers.

Three official Gujarat-based websites were found to be disclosing beneficiar­ies’ Aadhaar numbers. And the Ministry of Rural Developmen­t accidental­ly exposed nearly 16 million Aadhaar numbers.

Moreover, an anonymous French security researcher accused two government websites of leaking thousands of IDs, including Aadhaar cards.

That leak has now reportedly been plugged. But, given how many public and private agencies have access to the Aadhaar database, such episodes underscore how risky a supposedly secure system can be.

Of course, such vulnerabil­ities exist with all personal data. But exposure of someone’s biometric informatio­n is far more dangerous than exposure of, say, a password or credit card number, because it cannot be undone. We cannot, after all, simply get new irises.

The risk is compounded by efforts to use collected biometric data for monitoring and surveillan­ce, as is occurring in China and elsewhere. In this sense, the large-scale collection and storage of people’s biometric data pose an unpreceden­ted threat to privacy. And few countries have anything close to adequate laws to protect their residents.

In India, revelation­s of the Aadhaar programme’s weaknesses have largely been met with official denials, rather than serious efforts to protect users.

Worse, other developing countries, such as Brazil, now risk replicatin­g these mistakes, as they rush to adopt biometric technology. And, given the large-scale data breaches that have occurred in the developed world, these countries’ citizens are not safe, either.

Biometric identifica­tion systems are permeating every facet of our lives. Unless and until citizens and policymake­rs recognise and address the complex security risks they entail, no one should feel safe.

Jayati Ghosh is a professor of Economics at Jawaharlal Nehru University in New Delhi and executive secretary of Internatio­nal Developmen­t Economics Associates. ©Project Syndicate, 2020, www.project-syndicate.org

 ??  ?? An election official scans a voter’s finger with a biometric device at a polling station during a parliament­ary election in Kabul, Afghanista­n.
An election official scans a voter’s finger with a biometric device at a polling station during a parliament­ary election in Kabul, Afghanista­n.

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