In 2009, I became extremely concerned with the concept of Unique Identity for various reasons. Connected with many like minded highly educated people who were all concerned.
On 18th May 2010, I started this Blog to capture anything and everything I came across on the topic. This blog with its million hits is a testament to my concerns about loss of privacy and fear of the ID being misused and possible Criminal activities it could lead to.
In 2017 the Supreme Court of India gave its verdict after one of the longest hearings on any issue. I did my bit and appealed to the Supreme Court Judges too through an On Line Petition.
In 2019 the Aadhaar Legislation has been revised and passed by the two houses of the Parliament of India making it Legal. I am no Legal Eagle so my Opinion carries no weight except with people opposed to the very concept.
In 2019, this Blog now just captures on a Daily Basis list of Articles Published on anything to do with Aadhaar as obtained from Daily Google Searches and nothing more. Cannot burn the midnight candle any longer.
"In Matters of Conscience, the Law of Majority has no place"- Mahatma Gandhi
Ram Krishnaswamy
Sydney, Australia.

Aadhaar

The UIDAI has taken two successive governments in India and the entire world for a ride. It identifies nothing. It is not unique. The entire UID data has never been verified and audited. The UID cannot be used for governance, financial databases or anything. It’s use is the biggest threat to national security since independence. – Anupam Saraph 2018

When I opposed Aadhaar in 2010 , I was called a BJP stooge. In 2016 I am still opposing Aadhaar for the same reasons and I am told I am a Congress die hard. No one wants to see why I oppose Aadhaar as it is too difficult. Plus Aadhaar is FREE so why not get one ? Ram Krishnaswamy

First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win.-Mahatma Gandhi

In matters of conscience, the law of the majority has no place.Mahatma Gandhi

“The invasion of privacy is of no consequence because privacy is not a fundamental right and has no meaning under Article 21. The right to privacy is not a guaranteed under the constitution, because privacy is not a fundamental right.” Article 21 of the Indian constitution refers to the right to life and liberty -Attorney General Mukul Rohatgi

“There is merit in the complaints. You are unwittingly allowing snooping, harassment and commercial exploitation. The information about an individual obtained by the UIDAI while issuing an Aadhaar card shall not be used for any other purpose, save as above, except as may be directed by a court for the purpose of criminal investigation.”-A three judge bench headed by Justice J Chelameswar said in an interim order.

Legal scholar Usha Ramanathan describes UID as an inverse of sunshine laws like the Right to Information. While the RTI makes the state transparent to the citizen, the UID does the inverse: it makes the citizen transparent to the state, she says.

Good idea gone bad
I have written earlier that UID/Aadhaar was a poorly designed, unreliable and expensive solution to the really good idea of providing national identification for over a billion Indians. My petition contends that UID in its current form violates the right to privacy of a citizen, guaranteed under Article 21 of the Constitution. This is because sensitive biometric and demographic information of citizens are with enrolment agencies, registrars and sub-registrars who have no legal liability for any misuse of this data. This petition has opened up the larger discussion on privacy rights for Indians. The current Article 21 interpretation by the Supreme Court was done decades ago, before the advent of internet and today’s technology and all the new privacy challenges that have arisen as a consequence.

Rajeev Chandrasekhar, MP Rajya Sabha

“What is Aadhaar? There is enormous confusion. That Aadhaar will identify people who are entitled for subsidy. No. Aadhaar doesn’t determine who is eligible and who isn’t,” Jairam Ramesh

But Aadhaar has been mythologised during the previous government by its creators into some technology super force that will transform governance in a miraculous manner. I even read an article recently that compared Aadhaar to some revolution and quoted a 1930s historian, Will Durant.Rajeev Chandrasekhar, Rajya Sabha MP

“I know you will say that it is not mandatory. But, it is compulsorily mandatorily voluntary,” Jairam Ramesh, Rajya Saba April 2017.

August 24, 2017: The nine-judge Constitution Bench rules that right to privacy is “intrinsic to life and liberty”and is inherently protected under the various fundamental freedoms enshrined under Part III of the Indian Constitution

"Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the World; indeed it's the only thing that ever has"

“Arguing that you don’t care about the right to privacy because you have nothing to hide is no different than saying you don’t care about free speech because you have nothing to say.” -Edward Snowden

In the Supreme Court, Meenakshi Arora, one of the senior counsel in the case, compared it to living under a general, perpetual, nation-wide criminal warrant.

Had never thought of it that way, but living in the Aadhaar universe is like living in a prison. All of us are treated like criminals with barely any rights or recourse and gatekeepers have absolute power on you and your life.

Announcing the launch of the # BreakAadhaarChainscampaign, culminating with events in multiple cities on 12th Jan. This is the last opportunity to make your voice heard before the Supreme Court hearings start on 17th Jan 2018. In collaboration with @no2uidand@rozi_roti.

UIDAI's security seems to be founded on four time tested pillars of security idiocy

1) Denial

2) Issue fiats and point finger

3) Shoot messenger

4) Bury head in sand.

God Save India

Showing posts with label Justice B.S.Chauhan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Justice B.S.Chauhan. Show all posts

Monday, March 31, 2014

5387 - Nilekani has been too clever by half in pushing Aadhaar; now, he must face flak - First Biz





Nandan Nilekani, father of the Aadhaar unique biometric identity project, has tried to put on a brave face over the Supreme Court’s decision last Monday that effectively puts a question-mark over its future. The court said that Aadhaar’s use cannot be made mandatory for anyone seeking to avail oneself of subsidy schemes, and also struck down a Bombay High Court decision that called on the Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI) to share biometric data for criminal investigations.
Nilekani, who till recently was tomtomming his accomplishment of giving Aadhaar cards to 600 million residents (not necessarily Indian citizens), even took credit for the court decision. 

Business Standard quoting him as saying: "The ruling from the Supreme Court…was in response to a motion filed by the UIDAI itself, since the agency didn't want to share resident data for a criminal investigation. The UIDAI has always valued the privacy of resident data... and the agency went to the court to ensure that people's privacy is protected."

However, what Nilekani did not talk about was the court’s observation that its orders making Aadhaar non-mandatory, issued last September, were being flouted.

Justice BS Chauhan, who along with Justice J Chelameswar constituted the bench hearing the public interest litigation against Aadhaar, told the Solicitor-General in court: “I have received a lot of letters which say that Aadhaar card is mandatory despite court orders. We had already passed orders saying no one should suffer for not having Aadhaar card. How can you insist on Aadhaar card? If there are any instructions that Aadhaar is mandatory, it should be withdrawn immediately.”

There are two issues emanating from Nilekani’s claims and pretence that Aadhaar was voluntary.

First, since Nilekani resigned as UIDAI chief barely two weeks ago to contest the Bangalore (South) Lok Sabha elections on a Congress ticket, he cannot claim ignorance of the Supreme Court’s orders of September 2013 making Aadhaar non-mandatory. As UIDAI chief he should have specifically told Aadhaar applicants that this was not needed, and if they wanted a card, they did so voluntarily. UIDAI did not widely publicise this.

Second, even on the point of privacy, surely he would not have been unaware of the potential for abuse when so much biometric data is collected by private parties without any law to safeguard misuse. And yet, he pushed ahead without any law to prevent this abuse. He let us down on privacy.

What this proves is that Nilekani used his clout with the UPA government to go full steam ahead with his pet scheme even though he knew safeguards were not in place. He would also have known that it could be misused. From a public spirited leader, this level of nonchalance about privacy is not expected. In fact, one can suspect that he used a weak government to push through a deliberate plan to ask people to part with their biometrics while giving people the misleading impression that it had the full sanction of the law.

We now know that Aadhaar not only did not have the backing of a law, but its use for government transactions was being extended covertly after September 2013 even after the court specifically said it was not compulsory.

Nilekani says that Aadhaar was never mandatory, but can he feign ignorance about how it was really being pushed on the ground by LPG dealers and banks? LPG dealers were pushing Aadhaar long after the Supreme Court order to deny people subsidised cylinders. Banks were pushing Aadhaar in order to get over tough KYC (know your customer) norms. As Aadhaar KYC norms are far easier to comply with, banks could then wash their hands off KYC compliance by accepting Aadhaar as the validator. Many banks have been holding Aadhaar camps to persuade account holders to seed their accounts with the number to receive government subsidies. Did banks not know this was not needed?

Voluntary compliance with Aadhaar when the applicant is not specifically told about its non-mandatory nature is no different from deliberately misleading the public.

When Sebi clears any share of mutual funds for sale to the general public, these issues have to specifically highlight the risk factors. But here we are collecting biometric data – something that is the private property of the individual except where the law provides for its collection by the state – and the public is not warned about it.

Nilekani has now protested to the Election Commission against his political opponent in Bangalore (South) Ananth Kumar for making Aadhaar his target. But he has only himself to blame. If he talks of Aadhaar as his success, its failure to pass muster with the Supreme Court is his failure too.

Nilekani has probably been too clever by half in trying to push a good scheme in the wrong way – without legislative backing, and with little protection for the hapless poor who think this is the route to subsidy benefits. A CobraPost sting showed that Aadhaar can easily be purchased for a fee - compromising the whole process.The use of private parties for collecting biometris has often resulted in Aadhaar numbers being issues to dogs and even trees in the past.

He should thus be ready to face the flak.

Is there any way to rescue Aadhaar? Yes.

First, it needs to be suspended and the data sealed till a legislation is passed.

Second, the law should specify that it cannot be used for any fishing expedition by the investigation agencies or the government without the permission of the resident.

Third, Aadhaar can be restricted only to the poor. It must be used to exclude the rich so that subsidies can be better targeted.
Aadhaar has to be re thought through, not junked. 

To read why, read here.

Thursday, March 27, 2014

5365 - Don’t exclude those without Aadhaar, share data: SC - Indian Express


Written by Utkarsh Anand | New Delhi | March 25, 2014 2:45 pm

SC restrained UIDAI from sharing Aadhar card info with any agency. (PTI Photo)


SUMMARY
SC also ruled that people cannot be denied any service or benefit for not having an Aadhaar card.

The Supreme Court Monday restrained the Centre and the Unique Identification Authority of India from sharing the vast biometric database of Aadhaar cards with any third party or agency without the consent of the registered person.

It also ruled that people cannot be denied any service or benefit for not having an Aadhaar card. The UIDAI database has personal information of 60 crore people and is processing more than 10 lakh enrollments a day.

Emphasising on the confidentiality of the database, the court said the UIDAI shall be prohibited from handing out any information to a third party — government or private — unless the card-holder consented.

On using the database in criminal investigation, a bench led by Justice B S Chauhan said that information about fingerprints and other data could be shared only after a suspect approves it.
While issuing notices on a petition moved by the UIDAI against an order of the Bombay High Court that seeks to examine if its biometric database can be used in criminal investigation, the court agreed to hear the case along with a bunch of other petitions challenging the very validity of the Aadhaar card.

The CPI(M) and some civil liberties organisations have repeatedly charged the government with compromising vital data of Indian citizens while the BJP has questioned giving Aadhaar cards to illegal migrants, besides the absence of a legislative enactment to validate the Aadhaar scheme.

During the court proceedings on Monday, the bench also took up grievances being raised before it on making the Aadhaar number compulsory for delivery of social services and subsidies. The court questioned why authorities were still insisting on production of Aadhaar cards by applicants when it had held otherwise last year.

The bench then ordered that no person shall be deprived of any benefit or services for want of the Aadhaar card and that the government shall ask its departments to issue necessary circulars making this clear. The court said any order passed by authorities to make Aadhaar mandatory shall be withdrawn immediately.

The latest controversy involved an order of a Goa court, asking the UIDAI to give the CBI biometrics of all residents enrolled with Aadhaar in the state to help solve the gangrape of a seven-year-old girl. The court noted that the database, which includes recording of fingerprints, iris and facial images of applicants, was supposed to be devoid of duplication and tamper-proof.
The girl was raped in a school in Goa’s Vasco city 14 months back but the case is yet to be cracked. However, there were some chance fingerprints recovered from the scene of crime and the magistrate thought UIDAI could match these fingerprints with its database to help ascertain the identities of the assailants.

Aggrieved by this order, the UIDAI moved Bombay High Court and claimed validation of the magistrate’s order will open the floodgates of such directives by other courts as well other authorities. It added the UIDAI system was developed “for civilian use and for non-forensic purposes”.

But the high court recorded that the UIDAI had agreed to test the competence of its database in comparing the chance fingerprints with its biometric record and also asked the director general of the Central Forensic Science Laboratory to examine the technological capabilities of the UIDAI database.

The UIDAI, however, termed the high court’s order wrong and erroneous and petitioned the Supreme Court. It added questions relating to right to privacy of users was also a subject matter of the bunch of PILs currently being adjudicated by the SC and hence no order could be passed to share information of the applicants in the meantime.

Wednesday, March 26, 2014

5354 - Aadhaar cannot be mandatory: SC - Business Standard


Says its order of Sept last year is clear that no one can be deprived of any service for not having an Aadhaar number


BS Reporter  |  NEW DELHI  March 25, 2014 Last Updated at 00:06 IST

The Supreme Court on Monday directed the central government not to share Aadhaar card details with any agency without the consent of the card holder. It also asked the government to immediately withdraw all orders which had made the card compulsory for registration of marriage or property or availing of the subsidy on cooking gas cylinders or for any other service.

The court reiterated its order of September last year that no one should suffer for not having the card. A bench of judges B S Chauhan and J Chelameswar passed the order in a case from Goa involving gang rape. A court there had asked the Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI) to share the biometric data of residents in the state to crack the case. The authority petitioned the high court at Mumbai against this but the latter did not prevent the sharing of Aadhaar details with the probe agency.

Solicitor General Mohan Parasaran, who argued for UIDAI, was told by the judges that they were receiving a number of letters complaining the government was insisting on an Aadhaar card for providing services despite the September order. “You issue instructions withdrawing the notifications making the Aadhaar card mandatory for availing of services,” the court said. Parasaran, who also represented the government said, “We will do it immediately.” The court observed it had already passed an order in this regard and it should be strictly implemented.

While staying the high court order, the Supreme Court issued notice to the Central Bureau of Investigation, which is probing the gang rape, seeking its response to the UIDAI petition.

The apex court has been hearing for some time a challenge to the validity of the Aadhaar scheme, moved in several public interest petitions. The hearings are yet to be completed.

The privacy issue, one of the main attacks on the scheme, was highlighted in this case of the gang rape of a seven-year-old girl in a school 14 months earlier. The investigators have some fingerprints and they want the Aadhaar cards of all residents to ascertain the identity of the suspects.  The card is supposed to be the authoritative record for fingerprints, iris and facial images.

UIDAI told the Supreme Court if the high court upheld the Goa court order, it would open a floodgate of such demands by courts and other authorities. It said the UIDAI system was developed “for civilian use and for non-forensic purposes”. If the data is used for non-civilian purposes, it would affect scores of innocent people, the appeal said.

Sharing information with other agencies would violate a person’s right to privacy, since the current data sharing policy and guidelines clearly provided that biometric data cannot be shared without the consent of a resident, it was argued.

5353 - Supreme Court’s order exposes illegality of Biometric aadhaar, NPR and PII - India Resists



Now opposition parties should promise destruction of database of biometric features created so far 

Promoters of Biometric aadhaar and NPR emerged as killers of privacy unlike heroes like Julian Assange, Edward Snowden and Bradley Manning

March 24, 2014 New Delhi: Hearing the Special Leave to Appeal (Criminal) No(s).2524/2014, which has been linked with the previous case Writ Petition (Civil)    494 of 2012, the Supreme Court bench of Dr. Justice B.S. Chauhan and Justice J. Chelameswar passed an order that exposes the illegality of the unscientific exercise of indiscriminate biometric data collection by Planning Commission's UIDAI, Home Ministry's Registrar General of India for Aadhaar number and National Population Register (NPR) and other government and private agencies.

Supreme Court has passed this order asking Government of India to delink all programs from biometric aadhaar. Non-Congress political parties have denounced biometric aadhaar as a case of fraud and a national betrayal. The same holds true for NPR.

Welcoming the order, Citizens Forum for Civil Liberties (CFCL) demands that the opposition parties should promise that new government after the Lok Sabha elections will destroy the illegal and illegitimate database of biometric features as has been done in UK and other countries.

Notably, even as data thieves and brokers are feeding memory of online companies, the dictum “Internet never forgets” faces challenge from legislatures in USA which are grappling with Do Not Track Me Online Act and European General Data Protection Regulation that includes right to be forgotten. The European Parliament passed the regulation on March 12, 2014. In the absence of any regulatory resistance, data mining mafia is on the prowl in India through aadhaar and NPR. The marriage of internet with biometric data consequents in the death of privacy and democratic rights.   

Biometric data itself has scientifically been proven to be 'inherently fallible' especially because of constant decay of biological material in human body. Global experience demonstrates that the trust in junk science of biometrics is misplaced. The stolen biometric passport of a passenger in the missing Malaysian airliner has exposed its claims for good.

The incident of two of the 239 passengers who were on the Malaysian airliner that disappeared on March 8, 2014 between Kuala Lumpur and Beijing having used stolen European passports based on biometric data including electronically stored fingerprints and facial images merits attention. It is this very biometric technology which is the basis of biometric unique identification (UID)/aadhaar number and National Population Register (NPR).

In post-independent India, except for the Emergency period never was privacy under such unprecedented assault. 

In the light of these developments there is a compelling need to explore the following questions:
1.         What is the technological basis of 12 digit unique identification (UID)/aadhaar number and NPR?
2.         What is the basis of the editorial claims like “privacy issues can be take care of once supporting legislation is in place” be considered defensible. Is this what is called putting the cart before the horse?

Is there a biological material in the human body that constitutes biometric data immortal, ageless and permanent? Besides working conditions, humidity, temperature and lighting conditions also impact the quality of biological material used for generating biometric data. Both aadhaar and NPR are based on the unscientific and questionable assumption that there are parts of human body likes fingerprint, iris, voice etc” that does not age, wither and decay with the passage of time.

In a RTI reply dated October 25, 2013, UIDAI shared its contract agreement with Ernst & Young states in a most startling disclosure from the contract agreement is its admission that “biometric systems are not 100 % accurate”. It admits that “uniqueness of the biometrics is still a postulate.” In an admission that pulverizes the very edifice on which UID/aadhaar and the NPR rests, it writes, “The loss in information due to limitations of the capture setup or physical conditions of the body, and due (to) the feature representation, there is a non-zero probability that two finger prints or IRIS prints coming from different individuals can be called a match.” 

This is underlined in bold letters in the contract agreement. In simple words, “non-zero probability that two finger prints or IRIS prints” turning out to be a match means that there is a probability that biometric data of two different individuals can be identical.

The contract agreement states, “the Unique ID will be a random 12-digit number with the basis for establishing uniqueness of identity being biometrics”. The agreement further states, “we will provide a Unique Identity to over 113.9 crore people.” This is evidently a fraudulent claim because UIDAI with which the agreement has been signed has mandate to provide Unique Identity to only 60 crore residents of India and not to 113.9 crore people. 

A report “Biometrics: The Difference Engine: Dubious security” published by The Economist in its 1 October 2010 issue observed “Biometric identification can even invite violence. A motorist in Germany had a finger chopped off by thieves seeking to steal his exotic car, which used a fingerprint reader instead of a conventional door lock.” This reveals the frightening ramifications of using biometrics as a basis for identification.
Another report “Biometric Recognition: Challenges and Opportunities” concluded that the current state of biometrics is ‘inherently fallible’. That is one of the findings of a five-year study was jointly commissioned by the CIA, the US Department of Homeland Security and the Defence Advanced Research Projects Agency.

As to privacy, in the contract agreement between the President of India for UIDAI, as purchaser and L-1 Identity Solutions Operating Company, and Accenture Services Pvt Ltd accessed through RTI at clause 15.1 it is stated, "By virtue of this Contract, M/s Accenture Services Pvt Ltd/Team of M/s Accenture Services Pvt Ltd may have access to personal information of the Purchaser and/or a third party or any resident of India, any other person covered within the ambit of any legislation as may be applicable."  The purchaser is President of India through UIDAI. The clause 15.3 of the agreements reads, "The Data shall be retained by Accenture Services Pvt Ltd not more than a period of 7 years as per Retention Policy of Government of India or any other policy that UIDAI may adopt in future."  This clearly implies that all the biometric data of Indians which has been collected so far is now available to US Government and French Government. 

In “Broken Promises of Privacy: Responding to the surprising failure of Anonymisation”, a 77 page long study by Paul Ohm Associate Professor at the University of Colorado Law School illustrates how central identity databases facilitate the reverse audit trail of personal information. This paper underlines that the assumption of robust anonymization of electronic identity has been blown up, “casting serious doubt on the power of anonymization, proving its theoretical limits…” 

Sam Pitroda’s public information infrastructure (PII) is tagging people, tagging places, tagging programmes etc to connect 2.50 lakh Panchayats all over the country. UID/aadhaar and NPR of Chandramouli are subsets of this program. Ever wondered as to why the votaries of privatization of every imaginable natural resource ‘for public welfare’ have become advocates of centralization of biological information of Indians ‘for public welfare.’ The rationale for the stateization of personal sensitive information of Indian residents and citizens appears dubious.

Not surprisingly, Government's own Draft Discussion Paper on Privacy Bill stated, “Data privacy and the need to protect personal information is almost never a concern when data is stored in a decentralized manner" unlike UIDAI, NPR and PII.

Human body came under assault as a result of forced vasectomy of thousands of men under the notorious family planning initiative of Sanjay Gandhi. Nilekani and his ilk have acted worse than Sanjay Gandhi in putting Indians’ body under the assault of biometric surveillance. 

Earlier it appeared strange as to how the aadhaar cases namely, Writ Petition (Civil)    494 of 2012 W.P(C) NO. 829 of 2013, W.P (C) NO. 932 of 2013, T.C.(C) NO. 152 of 2013, T.C. (C) NO. 151 of 2013, W.P (C) NO. 833 of 2013 and CONMT.PET. (C) NO.144/2014 IN W.P.(C) NO.494/2012 which were listed for hearing on 4th March, 2014 got knocked out from the priority list of hearing, after passing 14 orders and ongoing hearing in the case ahead of the Lok Sabha elections. 
Supreme Court’s previous 14 Orders in the aadhaar case are as under:
































While whistleblowers like Julian Assange, Edward Snowden and Bradley Manning have joined the ranks of hall fame as the defenders of privacy as a basic human right, likes of Nandan Nilekani, C Chandramouli and Sam Pitroda have joined the hall of infamy with entities like National Security Agency as killers of privacy. The latter are admittedly in the business of ‘cloudifying’ databases that has the potential to turn governments into puppets at least as far as control over database is concerned.


For further details: Gopal Krishna, Member, Citizens Forum for Civil Liberties (CFCL), Mb: 9818089660, E-mail:gopalkrishna1715@gmail.com

5352 - Aadhaar data cannot be shared with govt agencies without user consent:SC - Media nama


By NT Balanarayan on Mar 24th, 2014  |  1 Comment

In a big blow to the Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI), Supreme Court today ruled that Aadhaar cannot be mandatory for any government service. It also announced that the organisation cannot share Aadhaar details of any individual with government agencies without getting consent from the person for the same.

The petitioners told the three-judge bench headed by Justice BS Chauhan that the project violates right to privacy and that it was not backed by any statute, thus compromising national security. 

They also argued that “biometrics” is an unreliable and untested technology and public funds were being channeled to private enterprises without sufficient validation.

The Indian government has not yet succeeded in passing the National Identification Authority of India bill, that would have legalised Aadhaar and its use for direct cash benefits. It had earlier approved Rs 3,436.16 crore for Phase IV of the UID (Aadhaar card) scheme in May 2013. This fund includes Rs 1,600 crore to cover the cost of enrolling an additional 40 crore residents, Rs 490 crore updation services, Rs 1,049 crore for printing and dispatch of Aadhaar letters and Rs 247.16 crore towards additional cost for construction of buildings for headquarters, data centers and non-data centers of UIDAI.

The court had passed an interim order last year stating that Aadhaar cards should not be mandatory for social services, after a PIL was raised by Karnataka High Court judge KS Puttaswamy. He claimed that various state governments had linked social benefits to Aadhaar and that this had resulted in many people losing these benefits. Besides this, the PIL also claimed that the UID was violating Article 21 – “Protection of life and personal liberty: No person shall be deprived of his life or personal liberty except according to procedure established by law.” To get an Aadhaar card, one has to submit biometric details such as finger printing and iris scan.

The Centre, UIDAI and three oil PSUs – IOCL, BPCL and HPCL had then filed affidavits with the apex court seeking modification of its order. That being the case, Nandan Nilekani the former head of UIDAI project seems pretty pleased with the decision.

Happy to learn that the Hon'ble Supreme Court has upheld the principle of data privacy that the UIDAI has emphasised for #Aadhaar all along!

Chances of errors: UDIAI had announced earlier this month that it had issued 60 crore Aadhaar numbers. Though the number of sign-ups is pretty impressive, it is not clear how many of those have errors. UIDAI itself rejected Aadhaar numbers of 30 lakh people in Orissa a few days back because of errors and there have been several claims of Aadhaar cards with incorrect photos. One of the key points of Aadhaar is that it would be impossible for one person to get more than one Aadhaar card, but that myth too has been busted. These are just the cases that have been reported so far and there is no clear number that has been verified by a third-party on the number of errors that have cropped up in the project.

How this will affect CMS, India’s PRISM: There was the possibility of the government using Aadhaar data in its Centralised Monitoring Agency (CMS) as part of its surveillance efforts. Now that the Supreme Court has told UIDAI not to share the data with any government agency without explicit permission from the person, it’s not clear how the government will go about it.

That said, it is worth remembering that UIDAI had approached the apex court after the Goa high court ordered it to share biometric details of everyone who is enrolled in Goa with the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI).

What abut financial sector?
UIDAI has been trying to highlight the advantages of Aadhaar in financial services, with Nandan Nilekani saying in October last year that the authority will introduce P2P payments using Aadhaar in two months. However, it has been a no show till now, may be because not enough people have linked bank accounts with Aadhaar to make it work as planned.

Reserve Bank of India has been trying to enforce the inclusion of biometric sensors in all new credit card swiping machines to enable use of Aadhaar-based biometric authentication while making card-based payments. This move has been questioned by MP Rajeev Chandrasekhar and by banks who felt it was being rushed and implemented without understanding the implication it has on banks.

With the new ruling it’s not clear what happens to this RBI circular. Why would banks invest so much money in setting up costly infrastructure for a service that not many people may use? Biometric based transaction will be most helpful in rural areas, where education levels are lower, but are banks really willing to invest so much money on building the infrastructure there?

Schemes where state government made Aadhaar card mandatory

- Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) employees had not received their salary for the month of December 2012 due to lack of UID card. The salary was stopped as per instructions from municipal commissioner Sitaram Kunte and additional municipal commissioner Manisha Mhaiskar. BMC had asked their staffers to get the aadhaar card back in 2011. However, BMC has now given them an extension of two months to get the UID card and have paid their salary for the month of December 2012.

- The revenue department experimented with mandating UID number or an enrollment slip for availing any of the 20 services offered by the revenue department.

- The Bombay High Court had suggested to the state government to consider linking ration cards with Aadhaar cards to tackle the menace of bogus and duplicate ration cards.

- The Ministry of External Affairs had advised all Passport Issuing Authorities to accept Aadhaar letter as Proof of Address and Photo identity. The ministry hopes this will makes passport documentation less cumbersome.

- Maharashtra government had planned to launch the Aadhaar-linked liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) subsidy project in Mumbai.

- Reserve Bank of India advised all banks to include biometric sensor in all new credit card swiping machines, to enable use of Aadhaar-based biometric authentication.

The Aadhaar scheme was launched in the hope of eliminating those who are undeserving of the subsidies. Various state governments had launched couple of schemes such as Direct cash transfer. However, Aadhaar card poses a privacy risk as it collects biometric data. If this data is compromised somehow, which by the way is not that difficult these days, there’s no way citizens could do anything to change it. Biometric data is not like a password, where you can change it if it’s compromised.


Also read: Who Owns The UID Database?

Who Owns The UID Database? – Usha Ramanathan

Those enrolling on the UID database have not been informed that their data is to yield profit for the UIDAI, Rs 288.15 crore a year and its only investor, the government, does not even own the data. How many in the government are even aware of this  investing  of ownership in an entity that  continues to remain deliberately undefined and opaque

The Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI) was set up by an executive notification dated 28 January 2009. As per the notification, the Planning Commission was to be the nodal agency “for providing logistics, planning and budgetary support” and to “provide initial office and IT infrastructure”. As part of its “role and responsibilities”, the UIDAI was to “issue necessary instructions to agencies that undertake creation of databases, to ensure standardisation of data elements that are collected and digitised and enable collation and correlation with UID and its partner databases”. It was to “take necessary steps to ensure collation of the National Population Register (NPR) with the UID”. And, the UIDAI “shall own and operate” the UID database.
In July 2009, Nandan Nilekani was appointed as the chairman of the UIDAI, representing a lateral entry of a person from the private sector into the government, with the rank of a Cabinet minister.

The UID project proceeded without a law, despite the seriousness of privacy and security concerns till, caving in to public pressure, a draft Bill was prepared by the UIDAI in June 2010; and it was not till December 2010, after the project had begun to collect resident data, that this Bill was introduced in Parliament. The Bill stayed close to the framework for corporate control over databases that was later enunciated in the report of Technology Advisory Group on Unique Projects (TAG-UP) of which Mr Nilekani was the chair, and which gave its report in January 2011.

The Bill to give statutory status to the UIDAI was roundly rejected by the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Finance in December 2011. The Parliamentary Committee recommended that both the Bill and the UID project be sent back to the drawing board. There has been no effort since to reintroduce the Bill. Every time the UIDAI is confronted with questions about the legality of its enterprise, its officers assert that the executive order of 28 January 2009 is the legal instrument from which they derive their authority; and that order makes them the ‘owner’ of the database.

In the context of the UID project:
• Residents from whom the data is being collected have not been informed that the government is not the owner of the data, or of the database; nor what the legal status of the ownership by the UIDAI will mean for the citizen/resident;

• the UIDAI set up a Biometrics Standards Committee in September 2009, which gave its report in December 2009. Its report reveals that the UIDAI intended to “create a platform to first collect identity details of residents, and subsequently perform identity authentication services that can be used by government and commercial service providers”;

• the “UIDAI Strategy Overview”, in April 2010, estimated that it would generate Rs288.15 crore annual revenue through address and biometric authentication once it reaches steady state, where authentication services for new mobile connections, PAN cards, gas connections, passports, LIC policies, credit cards, bank accounts, airline check-in, would net this profit. Those enrolling on the UID database have not been informed that their data is to be yield profit for the UIDAI; they were perhaps expected to read up from the UIDAI website

• as set out in the TAG-UP report, the data we think we are giving to the government is to end up on the database of what will be in the nature of a private company once it reaches steady state.

(Dr Usha Ramanathan is an independent law researcher on jurisprudence, poverty and rights)
These excerpts have been reproduced here with permission from MoneyLife

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Tuesday, March 25, 2014

5351 - Supreme Court asks Centre to withdraw orders making Aadhaar compulsory for any service Live Law




While hearing the petitions, which challenged the Constitutional, validity of Aadhaar card with those opposing the mega project saying no statute supported it and it also compromises with national security, the Supreme Court asked the Government of India to remove all orders, which make the Aadhaar card obligatory for availing any service and also directed the Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI) that without the prior permission of the card holder it should not share any information relating to an Aadhaar card holder with any government agency.
Further, a three-judge bench headed by Justice BS Chauhan was also told that the project besides violating the right to privacy,the “biometrics”, which is the foundation of the project, is an unreliable and experimental technology and public funds are being directed to private enterprises without adequate authentication.Earlier in 2013, the apex court, which had said Aadhaar card not to be made compulsory for people for availing any government services, issued an interim order and further stated that nobody should be divested of any such facilities for want of the card. Later the apex court was moved by the Centre, UIDAI and three oil PSUs – IOCL, BPCL and HPCL, seeking alteration of its earlier order that Aadhaar card is not obligatory and no person should suffer for want of it in getting the benefits of government schemes.

By way of an executive order of January 28, 2009, the petitioners, including Justice K Puttaswamy; former high court judge and Major General SG Vombatkere, who retired as Additional Director General, Discipline and Vigilance in Army HQ sought to restrain the Centre, Planning Commission and the UIDAI from issuing Aadhaar cards. It was contended by senior advocate Shyam Divan in the beginning of the arguments that there was no statute to back the project and even if there were one, the statute would be violative of Articles 14 and 21 of the Constitution as the project empowers scrutiny of individuals and imposes upon right to human dignity.
The senior advocate stated that the action under the challenged project of collecting personal biometric information without statutory backing is ultra vires even where an individual willingly agrees to part with biometric information. His contention was that due to the absence of statutory guidance on who and how the biometric information has to be collected, the project would not stand the test of Constitution. The advocate said some private entities have been given the task without sufficient authentication. He further called the project ultra vires,as under the constitutional scheme any action of the state that could possibly affect an individual’s freedom must be backed by statute.
The petitioners said that because individuals are not informed about vital aspects such as possible misappropriation of the information, the absence of any statutory protection, and commercial value of the information and that private parties are involved in collecting biometric information without safeguards, the procedure adopted by UIDAI in collecting data was also violative of Article 21. On an earlier occasion it was stated by the bench, which is hearing a batch of petitions challenging the scheme that the stand of state governments needs to be considered while deciding the case on Aadhaar card.

5349 - Aadhaar R.I.P - Financial Express



fe Bureau | Updated: Mar 24 2014, 22:32 IST

 SUMMARYThe Aadhaar programme, touted by the UPA as a game changer for its potential to reduce wastage in government schemes...

The Aadhaar programme, touted by the UPA as a game changer for its potential to reduce wastage in government schemes, found the rules changed on Monday with the Supreme Court directing the Centre to withdraw any order that would have made the 12-digit unique identification number compulsory for availing doles and other entitlements, reports fe Bureau in New Delhi.

The SC order comes at a time when the Aadhaar-enabled direct benefit transfer scheme for LPG (DBTL) has already been rolled back in all the 184 districts it was launched and the enrolment for Aadhaar itself has slowed down considerably in most parts of the country. Reports have said the DBT scheme could result in savings up to 1.2% of GDP for the government once it pan-India roll-out is complete.

A three-judge SC bench headed by justice BS Chauhan also ordered the Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI) not to share any information of the Aadhaar card holders with any other agency. The bench said biometric or any other data should not be shared with any authorities unless the person gives consent in writing.

Finance minister P Chidambaram, in his interim budget speech, reiterated that DBTL scheme would be rolled out throughout the country. In a recent interview to FE, however, the minister said Aadhaar needed to be overhauled. The transfer of LPG subsidies to the bank accounts of beneficiaries through the Aadhaar platform was believed to be easier to do than doling out food or fertiliser subsidies or other entitlements using the unique number and biometric database. But the DBTL scheme was stopped early this year owing to implementation that had hardly been impeccable. Political resistance and consumers raising a hue and cry over the hassles involved also led to suspension of DBTL in all districts it was rolled out.

Chidambaram had said in his interim budget speech: “Let me reiterate that the government remains fully committed to Aadhaar under which 57 crore unique numbers have been issued so far and to opening bank accounts for all Aadhaar holders in order to promote financial inclusion.”

In January, the Madras High Court had directed oil companies not to insist on the submission of Aadhaar cards for availing of direct transfer of subsidy. Social activists such as Aruna Roy filed a petition against the use of Aadhaar.

Political parties such as the Trinamool Congress and CPI(M) too opposed the Centre's move to link Aadhaar cards with DBTL.

However, several experts supported the Aadhaar programme, arguing that it would help make government spending for welfare schemes more efficient and less wasteful. “Savings (by way of DBT) in different scenarios could be from 0.2-1.2% of GDP, depending on the schemes targeted and whether all the states participate," UBS Securities had said. At present, the government spends 10-12% of GDP on various social welfare schemes.


Montek Singh Ahluwalia, deputy chairman of the Planning Commission, said the savings in subsidies would alone be of R65,000 crore per annum thanks to the DBT scheme. He wanted to shift all welfare and subsidy benefits through Aadhaar-based cash transfer scheme. The government wanted to extend the DBT coverage to food, fertilisers, diesel, kerosene and educational scholarship schemes in a gradual manner.

Monday, March 24, 2014

5340 - Withdraw orders making Aadhaar mandatory for any service: SC to Centre - IBN Live




New Delhi: The Supreme Court has directed the Government of India to withdraw all orders, which make the Aadhaar card mandatory for availing any service. The court has also directed the Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI) not to share any information pertaining to an Aadhaar card holder with any government agency without the prior permission of the card holder.

The Supreme Court was hearing the petitions challenging the Constitutional validity of Aadhaar card with those opposing the mega project saying it was not backed by any statute and compromises with national security.


Further, a three-judge bench headed by Justice BS Chauhan was also told that the project not only violates the right to privacy but the "biometrics", which is the foundation of the project, is an unreliable and untested technology and public funds are being channeled to private enterprises without sufficient validation.

Earlier in 2013, the apex court had also issued an interim order which had said Aadhaar card be not made mandatory for people for availing any government services and nobody should be deprived of any such facilities for want of the card.

The Centre, UIDAI and three oil PSUs - IOCL, BPCL and HPCL - had later on moved the apex court seeking modification of its earlier order that Aadhaar card is not mandatory and no person should suffer for want of it in getting the benefits of government schemes.

The petitioners, including Justice K Puttaswamy; former high court judge and Major General SG Vombatkere, who retired as Additional Director General, Discipline and Vigilance in Army HQ; also sought to restrain the Centre, Planning Commission and the UIDAI from issuing Aadhaar cards by way of an executive order of January 28, 2009.

Senior advocate Shyam Divan had in the beginning of the arguments by saying that "there is no statute to back the project" and even if there were one, the statute would be violative of Articles 14 and 21 of the Constitution as the project enables surveillance of individuals and impinges upon right to human dignity. Maintaining that whenever state seeks to impinge upon fundamental rights, its action must be backed by statute and not mere executive fiat, the senior advocate said, "Here, the action under the impugned project of collecting personal biometric information without statutory backing is ultra vires even where an individual voluntarily agrees to part with biometric information."

He contended that the project would not stand the test of Constitution as there is no statutory guidance on who and how the biometric information has to be collected. The advocate said the task has been given to some private entities without sufficient validation. Further, there was no clarity on storage, usage and protection of data, he said, adding "the project is also ultra vires because under the constitutional scheme any action of the state that could potentially impinge on an individual's freedom must be backed by statute."

The petitioners said that the procedure adopted by UIDAI in collecting data was also violative of Article 21 as individuals are not told about crucial aspects such as potential misuse of the information, the absence of any statutory protection, commercial value of the information and that private parties are involved in collecting biometric information without safeguards. 

The bench, which is hearing a batch of petitions challenging the scheme, had earlier said the stand of state governments needs to be considered while adjudicating the case on Aadhaar card.

Meanwhile, a total of 576.16 million Aadhaar cards had been issued till January 31, with Maharashtra topping the list with 82.99 million beneficiaries, the government informed the Lok Sabha last month. Andhra Pradesh (79.06 million) and Tamil Nadu (44.33 million) were placed in the second and third spots, Minister of State for Planning Rajeev Shukla said in a written statement. They were followed by Madhya Pradesh (42.44 million), Karnataka (41.76 million), Rajasthan (38.33 million), West Bengal (34.92 million), Kerala (30.44 million), Gujarat (26.43 million) and Jharkhand (25.82 million).

(With additional information from PTI and IANS)

Thursday, February 27, 2014

5176 - ‘Personal details collected for Aadhaar scheme liable to be misused’ - Odisha Sun Times

New Delhi, Feb 4 :

The Aadhaar scheme Tuesday came under attack in the Supreme Court for exploiting people’s ignorance and collecting their personal details which can not only be exploited commercially and encroach upon their privacy but were liable to misuse by government agencies.

“The government will know each and every dimension of a Aadhaar card holder – be it his/her medical record, banking transactions or even the movement at the airports and that is where their right to privacy is breached,” senior counsel Shyam Divan told an apex court bench of Justice B.S.Chauhan, Justice J. Chelameswar and Justice M.Y.Eqbal.

Divan told the court that because of his Aadhar card, the central depositories of all agencies know all steps of his movements, his medical health records, bank records, all become available to the government agencies through the Aadhaar card number.

Divan, who appeared for the petitioner Justice (retd.) K.S. Puttaswamy, said the “government has manner and method of tracking a person that too without any statutory mandate.”
Justice Puttaswamy has contended that the entire Aadhaar scheme was unconstitutional as the biometric data collected under it was an incursion and transgression of individual privacy.
On his plea, the court had issued notice to all states Nov 26, 2013.

Taking exception to the entire scheme being run by a private body, Divan said: “We have somebody which is an entirely private body. They approach the (gullible) people, don’t tell them about their private status, seek demographic details of the people including their finger prints, facial photograph and that of iris including their bank account number.”

“What is wrong if someone voluntarily gives personal details,” the court asked Divan.

“Our order (of Sep 23, 2013) says it should not be forced and if that order is not being violated, then there is nothing wrong,” it observed.

Divan had had earlier argued that even if the Aadhaar scheme was voluntary, even then the government could not keep such personal data of the citizens as it violated article 14 and 21 of the constitution and would remain a coercive instrument in the hands of the government.

The court said that from the point of view of national security, the Aadhar card will be important as it can help to identify illegal immigrants.

The hearing in the matter will continue on Feb 11.

(IANS)

Monday, February 24, 2014

5170 - SC begins final hearing on constitutional validity of Aadhaar - ZEE News

Last Updated: Tuesday, February 04, 2014, 18:08

New Delhi: The Supreme Court on Tuesday began the final hearing on the petitions challenging the constitutional validity of Aadhaar card with those opposing the mega project saying it was not backed by any statute and compromises with national security. 

Further, a three-judge bench headed by Justice BS Chauhan was also told that the project not only violates the right to privacy but the "biometrics", which is the foundation of the project, is an unreliable and untested technology and public funds are being channeled to private enterprises without sufficient validation.



"The project is arbitrary and illegal as it allows private dominion over biometrics without governmental control thereby compromising personal security and national security," senior advocate Shyam Divan submitted before the bench, also comprising justices J Chelameswar and M Y Eqbal, which wanted to know the difference between the National Identity Number and Aadhaar. 

The final hearing began in the backdrop of the apex court's interim order which had said Aadhaar card be not made mandatory for people for availing any government services and nobody should be deprived of any such facilities for want of the card.

The Centre, Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI) and three oil PSUs -- IOCL, BPCL and HPCL -- had later on moved the apex court seeking modification of its earlier order that Aadhaar card is not mandatory and no person should suffer for want of it in getting the benefits of government schemes. 

The petitioners, including Justice K Puttaswamy; former high court judge and Major General SG Vombatkere, who retired as Additional Director General, Discipline & Vigilance in Army HQ; also sought to restrain the Centre, Planning Commission and the UIDAI from issuing Aadhaar cards by way of an executive order of January 28, 2009.


PTI


First Published: Tuesday, February 04, 2014, 18:08

5169 - SC Begins Final Hearing on Aadhaar - New Indian Express

By Express News Service - NEW DELHI
Published: 05th February 2014 09:01 AM
Last Updated: 05th February 2014 09:01 AM

The Supreme Court on Wednesday began the final hearing on the petitions challenging the Constitutional validity of the Aadhaar card, with those opposing the mega project contending that it was not backed by any statute and also compromised national security.

A three-member Bench headed by Justice B S Chauhan heard the petitioners’ contention that not only did the project violate the right to privacy but the biometrics, on which the project is based, was an unreliable and untested technology and public funds are being routed to private enterprises without sufficient validation.

5164 - Have you got President’s nod for Aadhaar, SC asks Centre - The Hindu

J. VENKATESAN

Scheme infringes on right to privacy, says petition

The Supreme Court on Tuesday asked the Union government whether it obtained the nod from the President before the Aadhaar scheme was started.

A Bench comprising Justices B.S. Chauhan, J. Chelameswar and M.Y. Eqbal, hearing a batch of petitions challenging the validity of the Aadhaar scheme, asked Solicitor-General Mohan Parasaran to give an explanation in this regard on February 11, when the matter would be taken up for further hearing.

Senior counsel Shyam Divan, appearing for petitioners, K.S. Puttaswamy, retired judge of the Karnataka High Court, and others, contended that the scheme was unconstitutional as individuals obtaining an Aadhaar number were required to part with personal information such as biometrics, iris and fingerprints, which infringed on right to privacy, held to be part of the fundamental right to life under Article 21. He argued that there were no safeguards or penalties and no legislative backing for obtaining personal information.

The Bench told counsel: “If anybody says he wants to voluntarily give details can the court say no, you should not give? You can say, make the scheme voluntary. Those who do not want to give details let them not. Whether we follow the scheme or not it is for you to accept. It should be voluntary. He will not be discriminated against for non-possession of the card. But you tell us whether it should be banned at all. Your apprehensions and misgivings cannot be a ground for challenging the constitutional provisions. If it is done in the interest of security of a nation, is it unconstitutional? Even otherwise no fundamental right is absolute.”

Mr. Divan said, “But that is our grievance, they are giving the card to not only citizens but also illegal migrants. They have so far not changed the protocol of the scheme to bring in any safeguard.” He said the linkage of Aadhaar number with various governmental benefits and services such as food security under the newly enacted Food Security Act, LPG subsidy, the Employees’ Provident Fund, and other DBT benefits, made enrolment with the Aadhaar scheme and obtaining Aadhaar scheme mandatory, completely falsifying the government’s claim of it being voluntary.