http://www.thestatesman.net/news/3514-threat-of-exclusion-and-of-surveillance.html

*Threat of exclusion, and of surveillance*


*The aadhaar project has become the bane of average Indians, threatening
their access to all manner of services. basic questions have sometimes been
asked and almost never been answered, says*

*Usha Ramanathan, in the first of a multi-part series.*



The Unique Identity (UID) project has been around for over four years. The
Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI) was set up by an executive
notification dated 28 January 2009 and came into its own after Mr Nandan
Nilekani was appointed as chairperson in July 2009. Now it has, as some
observers say, become an experiment being conducted on the entire  country.

In its early stages, it was marketed, simply, as giving the poor and the
undocumented an identity. It was to be voluntary, and an entitlement. But,
it is evident even from the Strategy Overview document of the UIDAI that it
was never intended to be an entitlement that people may choose to adopt or
ignore. That document said that "enrolment will not be mandated", but went
on to add: "This will not, however, preclude governments or registrars from
mandating enrolment". So, the potential for compulsion was built into the
architecture of the project. Starting in 2012, voluntariness began to be
eroded, and threats of exclusion from services and entitlements began to be
bandied about. By January 2013, a virtual panic was set off when it was
announced that various services and entitlements would not be accessible to
persons who did not have a UID number.

Mr Nilekani has said time and again that half the population is expected to
be enrolled by the end of 2014; yet, there have been warnings that people
without a UID number may find themselves unable to access benefits and
subsidies if they did not have it, if a bank account had not been opened,
and if the UID number were not embedded in the bank account. So, subsidy
for cooking gas, kerosene, and scholarships, for instance, became dependent
on having a bank account seeded with the UID, or aadhaar, number. In case
anyone wonders what the UIDAI has to do with these decisions, it is the
chairperson of the UIDAI, Mr Nilekani, who chaired the committees that
recommended these changes. The reports are in the public domain.


>From its inception, the UID project has been about creating the 'database
resident'. The website of the Department of Information Technology, which
has been renamed as Department of Electronics and Information Technology,
modestly carrying the acronym DeitY, has said all along that "Project UID,
a Planning Commission initiative, proposes to create a central database of
residents, initially of those above the age of 18 years". Except, that the
UIDAI got more ambitious and wanted everyone, from the newborn to the
oldest resident, on its database. And it was always intended to converge
various databases to construct a profile of the individual, and to this
effect the website of DeitY says that "the project envisages provision of
linking of existing databases, as well as providing for future additions,
by the user agencies". The MoUs between the UIDAI and various registrars
that include the state governments, oil companies, banks and the
Registrar-General of India, who is in charge of census and the National
Population Register and socio-economic and caste census, not only provide
for various additional fields of data being collected during enrolment, but
also for having the UID number appended to each such database.

As for biometrics, documents reveal that when the decision was made to use
fingerprints and iris for enrolment, there was no knowledge about whether
these biometrics would work in India, given the demographic and
environmental conditions. In fact, it has since been found that with age
the fingerprint fades, that manual labour makes the fingerprint difficult
to read, that malnourishment-induced cataract blights an estimated 8-10
million people, and so on. In fact, as recently as 23 April 2013, Mr
Nilekani said in his speech at the Centre for Global Development in
Washington: "We came to the conclusion that if we take sufficient data,
biometric data of an individual, then that person's biometric will be
unique across a billion people. Now we have to find that out. We haven't
done it yet. So we'll discover it as we go along." First, the conclusion.
Then they will wait to find out! That is why some observers of the project
have been saying that it is an experiment being conducted on the entire
population. The consequences of failure have not been discussed, although,
in a talk at the World Bank in Washington on 24 April 2013, Mr Nilekani
said in response to a question about what he thought was the greatest
downside risk to the UID: "To answer the question about what is the biggest
risk," he said "in some sense, you run the risk of creating a single point
of failure also."

There is more to cause concern, and much to be answered about UID.


The UID project is proceeding without the cover of law. There is only the
notification of January 2009 which says the UIDAI "owns" the database, but
which says nothing about how it may be used, or what will happen if it
fails or if there is identity fraud, or some outside agency gains access to
the database. A Bill was introduced in Parliament in December 2010, after
the project had been launched and data collection had begun. The Bill
collapsed in December 2011 when the Parliamentary Standing Committee found
it severely defective, and after it found that the Bill and the project
needed to be sent back to the drawing board. There is no sign yet of a
Bill, and any protection that the law may offer is non-existent. There is
no law to protect privacy either.

*Convergence and snooping*

The UIDAI, and Mr Nilekani, have refused to address the probability of
surveillance, convergence, tracking, profiling, tagging and intrusions into
privacy that is likely to result from the creation of the database of
residents and the intended convergence. The link between technology,
databases, governmental power and corporate involvement in creating,
maintaining, managing and using databases has produced various scenarios of
surveillance that we ignore at our peril. PRISM is such a stark
demonstration of the ambitions that can fuel a state that the UIDAI can no
longer just say `no comment' when asked about the surveillance potential
being created.

In the same period, the state has already set up agencies such as the
Natgrid, NCTC, NTRO, CCTNS, MAC which will use the potential for
convergence of databases that the UID makes possible. In April 2011, the
government made rules under the IT Act 2000, by which it would be able to
access any data held by any "body corporate". More recently, we have been
hearing about the CMS, or the Central Monitoring System, speaking to a
surveillance and control approach that will have the state snooping on us
with no oversight, no prior permission, no answerability at any time to
anyone.

The companies engaged by the UIDAI to manage the database include L1
Identity Solutions and Accenture. The UIDAI, in response to an RTI request,
has claimed that they have no means of knowing that these are foreign
companies, given the process of their selection! Yet, a search on the
internet reveals the closeness between the L1 Identity Solutions and the
CIA, and that after a recent transaction, it is part-owned by the French
government; while Accenture is in a Smart Borders Project with the US
Department of Homeland Security. Data security, personal security, national
security and global surveillance are all drawn into a ring of concern, but
remain unaddressed.




-- 
Peace Is Doable

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