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 Microsoft. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Microsoft. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 8, 2016

10516 - Microsoft willing to extend Skype for Aadhaar authentication - Biometric Update



October 3, 2016 - 

Microsoft has presented various “case scenarios” to the Indian government on how Skype can be used for identity authentication using Aadhaar.

Aadhaar is the 12-digit unique identification number issued by the Indian government to every individual resident of India. The Aadhaar project aims to provide a single, unique identifier which captures all the demographic and biometric details of every Indian resident. Currently, Aadhaar has issued over 900 million Aadhaar numbers, and has enrolled approximately 850 million people, with a goal of ultimately enrolling 1.28 billion people.

The program, governed by the Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI), is currently used to authenticate delivery of social services including: school attendance, natural gas subsidies to India’s rural poor, and direct wage payments to bank accounts. The system also provides identification to people who do not have birth certificates.

According to several published reports, UIDAI is in talks with Microsoft for embedding the identification technology onto its mobile devices. Earlier this month, BiometricUpdate.com reported that Indian government officials invited executives from Apple Inc., Microsoft Corp., Samsung Electronics Co. and Alphabet Inc.’s Google to discuss the integration of Aadhaar with their various mobile technologies.

While Apple offered a negative response concerning mobile integration, reports have noted that Microsoft is willing to partner with the Indian government on Aadhaar and other identity authentication projects.

Microsoft India Chairman Bhaskar Pramanik told media sources: “We have presented various case scenarios on how Skype can be used. We already support iris authentication on Windows 10. Now it depends on them how they want to proceed.”
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According to reports, the global software giant has already partnered with the Andhra Pradesh state government in testing a pilot project designed to reduce high school dropout rates. 

Using data analytics, the solution predicts how many students will drop out of school, helping teachers make better decisions to curb the problem. Microsoft notes it will extend the program to Punjab and is also discussion with other states to extend it elsewhere through India.

Microsoft is also reported to have established another pilot project that assists farmers to obtain SMS notifications on when is the best time to sow seeds, so that they can obtain the best yield.


By taking the position to work with the central and state governments, Microsoft is positioning itself to participate in the estimated, multi-billion dollar Aadhaar third-party marketplace.

Friday, September 30, 2016

10478 - Skype can be used for Aadhaar-based ID authentication: Microsoft - Skype


Skype can be used by people to authenticate themselves for accessing government services that require Aadhaar-based authentication.

By: PTI | Updated: September 23, 2016 10:45 am

Microsoft says Skype can be used for Aadhaar based ID authentication.
Microsoft today said it has presented to central authorities various “case scenarios” on how its Skype service can be used for identity authentication using the Aadhaar database. “We have presented various case scenarios on how Skype can be used. We already support iris authentication (on Windows 10). Now it depends on them how they want to proceed,” Microsoft India Chairman Bhaskar Pramanik told PTI.
Citing an example, he said Skype can be used by people to authenticate themselves for accessing government services that require Aadhaar-based authentication.
The Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI) is in discussions with handset makers and operating system providers for embedding the identification technology onto mobile devices. This will help people authenticate their Aadhaar biometrics on the phone itself to avail of various government schemes, subsidies and services.

Bhaskar did not comment the proceedings of the meeting as company representatives were not present at the meeting. Talking about the Indian market, Pramanik said the country is of strategic importance.
“This is because of three things — talent, innovation and market (opportunity). We are actively working with the government across areas to contribute to the Digital India mission and transforming India,” he said.
Microsoft has partnered Andhra Pradesh government for rolling out a pilot that is solving the issue of high rates of school drop outs. Using data analytics, the solution predicts how many students will drop out of school, helping the teachers make better decisions and curb the problem.
“We are in discussions with other states as well. Punjab has already signed up for the project,” he added. The US-based company is running another pilot that helps farmers get SMS notifications on the best time to sow seeds in their fields, so that they get the best yield.
Another key area of focus for the company is cloud. “We have partnered PwC, where PwC will become a Microsoft Cloud Solution Provider. This will help Microsoft extend its reach organisations of all sizes in India across industries like financial services, government, manufacturing, retail and healthcare,” he said.

Saturday, June 4, 2016

10074 - Skype Microsoft




The Indian Express
Microsoft, Satya Nadella, Ravi Shankar Prasad, Aadhaar fir digital ID, Satya Nadella Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella in New Delhi on Monday. (express ...

10073 - Using Aadhaar for Skype calls: Minister okay with Microsoft plan - Indian Express

On the meeting with Satya Nadella, Prasad said: “He expressed great confidence in India’s emerging digital profile...We discussed possibilities of enhancing cooperation with Microsoft in various areas of Digital India”.

Microsoft’s plan to link its video calling service Skype with the Aadhar database for making authenticated calls with government institutions and others is expected to move further with Minister of Communications and Information Technology Ravi Shankar Prasad indicating his consent to the plan, said a source privy to the minister’s meeting with Microsoft’s CEO Satya Nadella here on Monday.

On the meeting with Nadella, Prasad said: “He expressed great confidence in India’s emerging digital profile…We discussed possibilities of enhancing cooperation with Microsoft in various areas of Digital India”.
Microsoft has already launched a pilot programme to use the Aadhaar database and integrate it with Skype that would allow users to authenticate themselves with using that identification system with a fingerprint or iris scan and then communicate with someone on the other end, maybe even a government agency.
In February, on his visit to India, Microsoft’s president and chief legal officer Brad Smith had said that the proposed system could be used to enable people to testify in a government proceeding or get a licence.

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The Aadhaar system relies on biometrics, which are considered the most accurate for establishment of a unique identity. The programme uses a combination of fingerprints, retina scans, and photographs.
However, sources within the government said that before seeing the light of the day, Microsoft’s project may run into some hurdles now that a new Aadhaar law is in place that lays increased emphasis on protecting the privacy of citizens.
The new law places several restrictions on when and how the Unique Identification Authority of India, the nodal body of Aadhaar, can share data. The law particularly notes that the biometric information of those enrolled with Aadhaar will not be shared with anyone.
During discussions over the new law in the Parliament before it was passed, Minister of Finance Arun Jaitley had said that while bio-metric data will strictly not be shared with anyone, some data can be shared with consent of the individual.
- See more at: http://indianexpress.com/article/technology/tech-news-technology/microsoft-satya-nadella-ravi-shankar-prasad-aadhaar-digital-id-2826438/#sthash.fCCnofpV.dpuf


Friday, May 13, 2016

9965 - Aadhaar in Andhra: Chandrababu Naidu, Microsoft Have a Plan For Curbing School Dropouts - The Wire



The massive data-driven governance project brings focus on the efficiency of government schools, data privacy and the role of Aadhaar in technology-driven development.

New Delhi/Bangalore: Imagine the following. Two weeks after a new school year starts, the teacher of a government school in a tiny Andhra Pradesh town receives a message from her mandal’s education officer, informing her that of the twenty students in her class, six are likely to drop out by the end of the year.
At a meeting later that week with the education officer and the school’s principal, the teacher gets to know that if two of her students don’t score above 75% in English, they may feel that their chances of getting a job after graduating are slim and thus are unlikely to spend more time in formalised schooling.
At the fingertips of this education officer, just a mouse click away, is a wealth of data that will allow her to make better decisions – courtesy of a faceless machine from Microsoft’s high-tech, machine learning lab.

Come this summer season, this futuristic scenario is likely become a reality for a little over 5 million students and 10,000 schools in Andhra Pradesh.

The Chandrababu Naidu-led administration plans to triangulate and collect information from a number of databases including the Aadhaar system, funnel that data into Microsoft’s machine learning platform, use the company’s software to flag at-risk children, and ultimately “monitor” a student as she moves throughout her academic journey.

The state government’s ambitious plan – for which The Wire spoke to representatives from Microsoft, various Andhra Pradesh government officials and activists who work in the field of education – represents not only Big Data-fuelled decision-making in action but also highlights the intimidating potential of the UID project.

The problem that Naidu and Microsoft are looking to solve is both simple on paper and dangerously tragic in reality: various organisations put the dropout rate of students who enter government schools in India from anywhere between 40% (before reaching 8th standard) to 64% (in the case of girl students). Andhra Pradesh, in particular, has a bad reputation on this front, with activists pointing out that seven out of every 10 girl students drop out before they reach 10th standard.
The consequences of this problem have been showing for sometime. Data from the recently released National Sample Survey shows that the literacy rate in both Andhra Pradesh and Telangana is the second lowest in the country after Bihar.  

A more effective grip
The need for any form of algorithmic regulation stems from a lack of control and Andhra Pradesh and its problem of school dropouts are no different. As one Andhra Pradesh government official put it, it’s difficult for the state government to have a pulse on the exact state of its schools and their overall efficiency.
“We get data from our schools, on dropouts, three months down the line. Everything has a time-lag and therefore it’s tough to take decisions and understand what works. A comprehensive look has not been taken at which school locations do better than one another when it comes to dropouts,” the official, who didn’t wish to be identified, says.
Enter Microsoft. Last year, when CEO Satya Nadella was in Hyderabad to meet Naidu, Microsoft and the state government signed a number of agreements to use the software giant’s machine learning software and apply them in the areas of education, agriculture and e-citizen services. According to Microsoft, these solutions would be “built and deployed to address specific problems within each of the fields to achieve better outcomes for the state.”
“What was offered was literally a solution. Azure, our cloud offering, comes with a bunch of high-value services which are effectively part of the overall Cortana Analytics Suite (CAS). CAS has a lot of tools and algorithms… a lot of data-crunching capabilities that can provide a lot of useful insight as long as you pump in the data and the right modelling,” Anil Bhansali, Managing Director of Microsoft India (R&D) told The Wire.

Building the data pipeline
Getting the right data has proven to be a trying, if surmountable obstacle, for Microsoft and the state government. The pilot project that the two parties ran earlier this year, which covered a little over 1,000 schools and used the data of 50,000 students, was restricted to tenth standard students.
Why tenth standard? Bhansali refers it to as one of a few inflexion points, because “that’s [10th standard] when you have one of your first standardised tests and there are a reasonable set of students who drop out from 10th to 11th.” Tenth standard is also, incidentally, where the state government has a great deal of digitised data on its students: the results of the tenth board examination are already online and the state’s education department also has access to the children’s hall-ticket data which has details on gender and subject wise grading.
Microsoft’s CAS works at two different levels: its most basic function serves as a form of business intelligence,which gives the Andhra Pradesh education department simple analytics such as the percentage of girl students that drop out versus boys; students from X region are more likely to pass eight standard than students from Y region and so on.
Its machine learning capabilities however also allow it to carry out more complex, predictive analytics. Given historical data and specific parameters that adequately measure the driving forces behind school dropouts, the software can start extracting patterns and start making predictions on which student is likely to drop out.
The three databases that the Andhra Pradesh government has tapped into, and which was fed into Microsoft’s system, are: the Unified District Information System for Education (U-DISE), educational assessment data that was taken from various sources, and socio-economic information from the UIDAI-Aadhaar system.
These three sources of data correspond to three attributes that the two parties believe contribute greatly towards dropping out: how well the student does academically, the school’s physical infrastructure and teacher skill and experience level, and the student’s socio-economic status.
The U-DISE database — which is a nation-wide database set up by the Ministry of Human Resources Development — contains school infrastructure information (how many functioning toilets etc) and data on teachers and their work experience. It’s a valuable and relatively easy resource to tap into.
Student assessment and enrolment data is perhaps the most difficult as when the project expands to include lower classes, a lot of this still needs to be digitised in a format that Microsoft’s software can consistently tap into. Last but not least, as discussed and analysed below, the Aadhaar database provides the missing piece (socio-economic information) as well as serving as a foundation for the Andhra Pradesh government to keep track of its students.

Click and see the dropout



Microsoft is going on the offensive this time. Credit: The Intercept/Getty Images

While actual, targeted interventions didn’t happen during the pilot project, the Microsoft system now, according to Bhansali, has an over 90% prediction rate for determining who is at risk of dropping out. This number however may change once the company gets yearly feedback and see if its predictions match the students who drop out.
The end result is a rather simple web portal that comes with a database on student dropout predictions that can be accessed by each mandal’s education officer, who will use that data to hopefully intervene. “Literally the education officer at the mandal level or district level can choose the mandal and a specific school and what they can get is a list of students along with the probability of whether they will drop out,” says Bhansali.
“They [the Andhra Pradesh government] want every school principal to be able to see this model and see that anybody who is at risk of dropout, there is sort of customised counselling and help.”
Some of the initial insight from Microsoft’s software re-affirms long-standing notions of what causes school dropouts — girl students tend not to attend classes if toilets in a school do not work — but other factors such as how well students score in key subjects like Mathematics or English speak to educational theories of how outdated and irrelevant school syllabuses may be holding back students who can’t and don’t follow a traditional schooling route.
“Traditionally, we’ve focused a lot into infrastructure, which is of course important. But for students to continue, they also need to perform well. What we see from the data is of course that students from English-medium schools tend to drop out less than local language schools. But also that if students score less in Mathematics and English they feel that their chance of getting a white collar job after twelfth standard or getting into a good college is less and so they stop coming to school,” said one Andhra Pradesh education department official.
Algorithmic governance
The idea behind algorithmic governance or regulation is simple: it allows the government to do away with its previously inefficient and bureaucratic methods of deciding where to allocate resources, how to judge institutions based on their past and future performances, and how to assess the efficiency of a recent law or regulation.
Consequently, dropouts may end up being only the tip of the iceberg. As Bhansali points out, the same set of “very rich data” could be used to analyse a number of other issues, both within the field of education and outside it.
“Now, the set of data we have… we could and are using it to answer the question of who will drop out and who will not. But I could [also] in theory, and we are working with the education department… actually figure out which teachers are being more efficient,” he says.
In this context, the data pipelines that have been set up could be used to judge the efficiency of various government schools and divert resources and attention to weaker performers while rewarding and learning lessons from schools that do a better job at educating its students and curbing dropouts.
It could also be used to address the weaknesses of the average government school teacher. While the current project is already aimed at doing so, by helping predict dropouts, the machine learning software could also be used as an indicator of how well a teacher thinks her class is doing. For instance, in tenth and twelfth standard classes, which is when standardised tests take place, a teacher roughly knows what percentage of her class will do well, what percentage will fail and so on.
The Microsoft system could potentially be used therefore to keep track and determine the difference between predicted and actual outcomes. This would effectively introduce a system of accountability: If a teacher can’t provide an accurate assessment of her class’s success, either there are factors beyond the teacher’s control or the teacher requires greater training.
The Aadhaar-Andhra Nation
For the Andhra Pradesh government, the Aadhaar system is crucial to its project of predicting dropouts and using technology to increase the efficiency of its schools. At the most fundamental level, socioeconomic indicator data from the UID database is fed into Microsoft’s software.
Aadhaar data also helps in building a socioeconomic profile of the student. One person with direct knowledge of the matter told this correspondent that the state government could use the UID system to identify whether a student’s parents were part of the NREGA system; thus providing it with data on potential income and family status which in turn could help in predicting dropout risk. The Wire, however, couldn’t independently confirm this claim though.
This lays the ground-work for a system that, according to a Microsoft newsletter, can capture a “360-degree view of students, mapped close to 100 variables”.
An integral part of this is how the Aadhaar system is also being positioned as a method to track a student’s journey through the education system. The need for this became clear during the pilot project, when the government needed to pinpoint the number of dropouts between tenth and twelfth standard. To do this, the tenth standard results of all students had to be connected to their enrolment in the eleventh standard after which the exit points of the dropouts could be mapped.
This becomes an exhausting process if the government has to do it for each student within the state as they move from elementary to higher education.  Obviously, there needs to be greater collaboration between departments and ensure that school management information systems can link up, one government official admitted, while speaking with The Wire.
The most attractive solution, however, would be to use the Aadhaar platform as a unique identifier, thus allowing the government to follow a student throughout his education journey. There are a number of indicators that the Andhra Pradesh government is headed in that direction: The Sakshi Post has covered extensively the state government’s initiatives at making the Aadhaar card compulsory for students. A few months ago, it published a report that detailed the government’s efforts in collecting the Aadhaar details of nearly “41 lakh school students out of a total 60 lakh students.”
The reasons given for the state government’s aggressive Aadhaar push are similar to how Aadhaar has been sold elsewhere; that it would go a long way in eliminating double admissions and examination fraud. However, other measures that the education department is mulling — for instance the implementation of the Aadhaar number on the Class X marksheet — dovetail nicely with the project of curbing dropouts and being able to track the state’s students as they move from one grade to another.
Privacy privacy privacy
The elephant in the room — when it comes to any sort of data-driven governance and algorithmic regulation — is that of privacy. Embarking on projects such as this without proper safeguards, especially in light of the debate surrounding the Aadhaar system and the lack of privacy legislation in India, could be downright dangerous.  At the end of the day, terabytes of data are being funnelled towards to a Silicon Valley-based company whose community’s approach towards privacy has taken a beating since the Edward Snowden revelations.
When asked, Bhansali pointed out that unless the client asks for it, no personally identifiable information is used.
“We take it [privacy] very seriously. These data centres [for the project] are in India. When we work for the government, the data resides in India. From that point of view, nothing goes out of the country,” he says.
In addition to this, Microsoft also claims that the data is tied to the Andhra Pradesh government account and that the company itself doesn’t have the right to use it or repurpose it. “We don’t store any of the data ourselves.. It’s tied to the government’s account. The Andhra Pradesh government owns that data, that nobody else shares or uses. They decide whether the data needs to be shared,” Bhansali said.
Effectiveness and legacy
The Andhra Pradesh- Microsoft data-driven governance initiative represents a growing number of attempts at using citizen data to increase the efficiency of the Indian State; to make more informed decisions. Decisions that in the past were perhaps made by intuition, or a need to impress a certain constituency, but can now be taken with the help of cold-hard facts.
How successful will Naidu and Microsoft’s attempt be at curbing school dropouts? Anita Kumar of Plan India – NGO that fights for girl child education and against child labour in Andhra Pradesh, has one or two concerns but believes that overall the project definitely has the potential to help.
“Firstly, there are a few fundamental issues which plague school dropouts. Fundamental issues such as how far away the school is from a girl student’s home. While it is officially supposed to be one kilometre away, in tribal and forest regions this is rarely so, social issues also still persist,” says Kumar.
To be fair, however, algorithmic regulation isn’t geared to deal with these issues and Kumar agrees. Where she thinks it will be effective is in hopefully highlighting how a one-size-fits-all curriculum doesn’t work for a substantial number of government schools and increasing the accountability of teachers.
“What is missing in Andhra Pradesh especially, and generally throughout India, is a high quality of engagement with the child. That child-friendliness atmosphere is lacking in government schools. The teaching methodology is not participatory and we aren’t looking at how we engage the child and so on. These factors can’t be immediately quantified as well,” she says.
While the child-friendliness of government schools in Andhra Pradesh can’t be quantified, the data that does exist on problems such as corporal punishment in government schools isn’t pretty. In July 2015, a school in Telangana made news after a student died after being forced to kneel in the hot sun as punishment for not completing her homework.
A number of studies over the last five years consistently place Andhra Pradesh as one of the top three states in terms of corporal punishment at schools.
The initial results of a Young Lives India Study conducted across a ten-year period (with 2016 set to be the last round of surveys) in Andhra Pradesh showed that 92% of younger students reported witnessing some form of corporal punishment at school while 77% of younger students personally experienced some form of corporal punishment at schools.
“If students continue to be beaten and the teacher-student relationship doesn’t change, then dropouts will continue,” Kumar says.
Microsoft and Bhansali agree on this count. “Technology can’t solve all the problems,” says Bhansali. “It can help the organisation and allow us to conduct meaningful interventions. Can our software be fed data, analyse a problem, allow for more targeted intervention and then reduce the percentage of dropouts? That’s our aim.”

Sunday, March 6, 2016

9384 - Tech giants unwilling to link biometrics to Aadhaar - Biometric Update



February 22, 2016 - 
Officials in the Indian government claim that Apple, Microsoft and Google are not making their proprietary biometric systems available to be used for Aadhaar authentication. The officials claim that these companies are acting as “gatekeepers” and are averse to allowing open access to their smartphone software development frameworks to leverage biometric functionality.
Aadhaar, recognized as the world’s largest universal civil ID program and biometric database, is currently used by the Indian government to provide social services. To date, Aadhaar has issued over 900 million Aadhaar numbers, and has enrolled approximately 850 million people, with a goal of ultimately enrolling 1.28 billion people.

With wider enrollment, government officials predict that Aadhaar will become a platform for financial transactions since the Indian government has proposed use of Aadhaar to issue bank accounts to all Indian households.

The government has also committed to expand the use of Aadhaar for social services, implementation of a universal healthcare scheme, along with enhanced monitoring of government employee attendance and truancy. The government has also proposed using Aadhaar for private sector employment ID validation, along with national security and crime-related surveillance applications.

Unnamed government officials told the Indian Express that they are dissatisfied with stance of the tech companies because while not everyone has a credit card, nearly everyone in India has a mobile phone that can enable financial transactions.

“The mobile number that you have for the phone is ‘what you have’. A phone is one factor of authentication. There are ways to confirm that this mobile number is yours, for instance through mechanisms such as “one time password”. The second factor of authentication is the biometric, which can be an iris scan or a fingerprint. India’s Aadhaar is unique in the world, and can make the mobile instrument provide a two-factor authentication for online transactions,” an official said.


A problem emerges, however, if smartphone developers are uncooperative and do not allow their software frameworks to interact with other authentication systems such as Aadhaar. An uncooperative stance means that software developers must seek alternative middleware alternatives to link Aadhaar to existing and ubiquitous phone platforms including Apple iOS and Google Android.

9379 - User Authentication: Tech majors spurn move to link Aadhaar with biometrics - Indian Express

Step can potentially replace multi-factor authentication for secure transactions.


Written by Anil Sasi , P Vaidyanathan Iyer | New Delhi | Published:February 19, 2016 1:53 am

Global technology companies such as Apple, Google and Microsoft have so far fobbed an attempt by the Government of India to let their proprietary software allow matching of a user’s fingerprint or iris scan as captured in the mobile instrument with his or her biometrics as stored in the Aadhaar database.

If allowed, this will let a smartphone user to electronically undertake myriad financial transactions. The biometrics on the phone can potentially replace multi-factor authentication for credit cards and other such secure transactions by offering two-factor authentication at the click of a button.

According to senior government officials, companies such as Apple, Google and Microsoft are acting as “gatekeepers” and are averse to allowing open API (application programme interface) that facilitates programmatic access to a proprietary software application.

- See more at: http://indianexpress.com/article/business/business-others/user-authentication-tech-majors-spurn-move-to-link-aadhaar-with-biometrics/#sthash.9YT2hMjT.dpuf

Friday, January 30, 2015

7278 - Maharashtra Digital Identity project launched with Microsoft - The Hindu

MUMBAI, January 29, 2015
Updated: January 29, 2015 08:58 IST


ALOK DESHPANDE

Maharashtra government will launch the country’s first ‘Digital Identity’ project for individual benefit schemes like Direct Benefit Transfer for LPG, in collaboration with Microsoft India.

The announcement followed a meeting between Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis and Microsoft (India) chairman Bhaskar Pramanik.

Linked with Aadhaar

Elaborating the concept, Mr. Fadnavis said the Aadhaar card would be the base of the project. “It will be mainly used for all individual benefit schemes, such as NREGA and pension scheme. The digital identity will be linked with the Aadhaar card,” he said.

All non-confidential data of the citizens will be digitised and stored in cloud computing facilities provided by the Microsoft. “The requirement of multiple identity cards will vanish due to this. It will work like a digital locker where all documents right from ration card to degree certificates will be available at one click,” said Mr. Fadnavis.

The State government is planning to implement the pilot project in a village with more than 500 families. After evaluation, the scheme may be expanded to urban areas as well.


The Maharashtra government has also announced its plan to set up a ‘value chain’ between the State, World Economic Forum (WEF) and private companies to benefit the farmers. Around 25 lakh farmers will be accommodated in a chain where the company will directly buy grains from the farmer. “The farmers will cultivate crops as per the demands of a specific company and the product will be directly sold to the company,” said Mr. Fadnavis, who recently attended the WEF at Davos in Switzerland.

7277 - Maharashtra government ropes in Microsoft for creating digital IDs for citizens - dna


Thursday, 29 January 2015 - 7:25am IST | Agency: dna | From the print edition


The state government is working with software giant Microsoft on a project to grant citizens a digital identity which will merge all other identities like driving licences and passports. People will also be given access to an Aadhaar-linked online repository which will store all important certificates and will be used while applying for jobs and services.


Chief minister Devendra Fadnavis said they were working on a pilot project with Microsoft to grant a digital identity to people. "The base ID will be Aadhaar and all IDs will be seeded with it. A digital ID will be created and a person will be able to use it everywhere," he added.

Citizens will also be granted a digital locker to store information regarding their degrees and other details.

Fadnavis said in a meeting with Microsoft on Wednesday, the software giant had said they would set up two major data centres in Mumbai and Pune, with the largest capacity in Asia. One such centre has also been planned in Chennai and the three facilities will together cost Rs2,100 crore.

"Once these three data centres are ready, the entire country and South Asia can be handled from there," added Fadnavis.
The state IT department had earlier worked on a "preliminary prototype" of this e-locker from where, if a citizen is applying online for any service, the government department concerned can easily pull out these documents, and add fresh documents applied for by the applicant in this repository. The e-locker will store all important certificates like those related to birth, passport and education.

People will also be able to take printouts of their documents, degrees and certificates from the digital locker, which will have built-in security features. The department had experimentally rolled out the project and operationalised the https://elocker.maharashtra.gov.in website on an "experimental basis."

Over nine crore of Maharashtra's 11.23 crore population has enrolled for Aadhaar.

The state government plans to develop Mumbai as a finance hub with the chief minister holding bilateral meetings with companies on the sidelines of the recent World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos. Corporate majors like Credit Suisse are looking at Mumbai for their expansion plans.

Saturday, December 3, 2011

2038 - Indian UID, Aadhar Project Is A Proprietary, Non Open Source Project? - MuktWare

Mon, 2011-11-21 05:44 by Swapnil Bhartiya

Regunath Balasubramanian, principal architect of the UIDAI (Unique Identification Authority of India) said during an event, "The main reason to use OSS (open source software) in the Aadhaar project was not to save cost but to avoid vendor lock-in. And it was important that we have an ability to replace hardware, software or storage."

Interestingly according to the UIDAI web site there is no metion of any open source technologies used for the project. The only layer which seems to be using some kind of low-level open source is UID Biometric Middleware layer. Rest of the infrastructure is supposedly using proprietary technologies.

Since the web site doesn't give any info on the technologies used, it won't be wrong to conclude that the UID servers are running Microsoft Windows and use Microsoft's proprietary technologies as much as possible. I wonder why the project has not published information on the technologies used as it is a government project funded by the taxpayers money. Should not taxpayers know who is benefitting from this massive project?

If this be the case, why is UID project wasting tax-payer's money on Microsoft's expensive and highly insecure servers, when the Indian government has its own GNU/Linux based operating system. 

UIDAI project is being headed by Nandan Nilekani, the co-founder of Infosys. Infosys is known for its blind support for Microsoft. Infosys was one of those companies supported Microsoft controverical OOXML[PDF] format despite India's objections to the format.

If you look at the awarded contract, you don't find a single Open Source vendor including Red Hat, Novell or Canonical. Most contracts have gone to Microsoft's pet companies such as Wipro, HCL and TCS (the same companies which supported Microsoft's OOXML format). Why are Open Source players missing from such a massive project.

UID Is Using Microsoft Technologies
According to a discussion in the Indian LUG, it appears UIDAI is clearly using and pushing Microsoft technologies. One poster writes, "I've been to the UID registration camp in my area. There is no involvement of linux/open source software. The data entry module was made in .NET and was working on an HCL laptop with Windows. The backend, AFAIK, is running on windows servers with MS SQL Server. It is truly sad."

Balasubramanian further said during the event, "We have also reduced licence cost for the world’s largest distributed deployment on thousands of CPU cores. We used OSS like Apache Hadoop, Hive, ZooKeeper, MySQL, Tomcat, Spring and Mule."

Really?

UID Endorses Microsoft Technologies
The UIDAI documents which provides step-by-step instructions to install the AADHAAR Enrolment Client and Biometric components needed for Biometrics capturing clearly requires Microsoft technologies.

Here is an excerpt from the document:
This document provides step-by-step instructions to install the AADHAAR Enrolment Client and Biometric components needed for Biometrics capturing. The document is not intended to be a user manual for the AADHAAR Enrolment Client. The application has been built to work with the given pre-requisites.

1.1 Installation Pre-requisites  
• Operating System: Windows XP SP3 OR Windows 7 (only 32-bit editions)
• Windows Installer 4.5
• Microsoft .Net Framework 3.5 SP1
• Microsoft SQL Server 2008 R2 Express
• Aadhaar QSS SDK Setup 
• Vendor Device Manager
All the above mentioned Pre-requisites are mandatory. The 'Enrolment Client' application should be installed & executed only after the successful installation of the pre-requisites.

You can see how the UID project has made Microsoft technologies mandatory. You can't use it without Microsoft. There is no mention of Linux in this important document.

That clearly states that other than the already popular and powerful open source technologies such as Apache and MySQL rest of the stack is proprietary. Calling UID/Aadhar an Open Source project is like calling a Tata tractor a Mercedes just because one of its four tyres is a Mercedes tyre.

I can conclude that looking at the IT stack of UID, it is a pure proprietary project.