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*Debit card data breach highlights Aadhaar usage risk, say experts*
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By Vivek Ananth

MUMBAI - While the recent breach of 3.2 mln debit cards sent the government
and banking industry into damage control mode about the data breach, there
might be another risk under the radar going unnoticed- Aadhaar-linked
database, said cyber security and privacy experts.

The Reserve Bank of India has made it mandatory from January 1 2017 for
every ATM and point of sale device at vendors to be biometrically enabled.
This means that an individual with a bank account linked with Aadhaar could
withdraw cash or make a payment through a biometric authentication.

Every Indian resident's Aadhaar number is embedded in the records of banks,
government agencies and other service providers, wherever they voluntarily
produced it as a means of identification or to receive government subsidy
and services.

As every bank transaction gets validated by an Aadhaar number an electronic
trail gets generated, which can be monitored.

"Every time you authenticate, you leave a mark," said Usha Ramanathan an
independent law researcher. "How many times you have used it, how many
times you opened it, what are the timings... all that metadata... will tell
them how often it gets used."

In September, the Unique Identification Authority of India issued
regulations, which allows service providers to retain such authentication
data for seven years.

Cyber security and privacy experts state that constant vigilance,
heightened technology awareness and sensitivity for adhering to privacy
concern are needed by people and agencies handling Aadhaar details.
There is still no mechanism to monitor the misuse of data by service
providers who use the Aadhaar database, Ramanathan said.

The authority says it prescribes strong data protection norms to its
service providers on maintenance of Aadhaar-linked databases.
"First of all, (Aadhaar) Act requires us to have a very strong data
protection policy," said Ajay Bhushan Pandey, chief executive officer of
the Unique Identification Authority of India. "...We follow one of the
highest international standards. There are some of the steps that need to
be taken to ensure the data is protected and we follow that."

This is though limited to the Aadhaar database that is maintained by the
authority and many of the service partners involved in performing Aadhaar
verification using biometrics. The authority also prohibits publication of
the Aadhaar number of any resident with any linked database.

There are regulations in place under the Information Technology Act 2000
which govern maintenance and storage of all digital records of individuals,
like bank records, information shared with an app developer over the
internet and any other service provider while providing services.

"The data protection section in the IT Act (Information Technology Act
2000)) does not apply to the government," said Sunil Abraham, executive
director at Centre for Internet and Society, a Bengaluru-based policy think
tank which researches internet and digital technologies. "The data
protection section... does not comply with international best practice and
therefore does not comprehensively protect the right to privacy."

None of the above regulations make it mandatory that a service provider
inform its customers about a data breach of private information. The breach
at the ATMs was detected recently but they happened over 4 months ago.
Banks' customers weren't informed about the breach or asked to change their
cards' personal identification numbers till recently, when emails and text
messages were sent out to customers informing them.

"No government can at present promise perfect security for even its most
critical personnel data," Mishi Choudhary, legal director at Software
Freedom Law Center said. "No 'platform' company, with all the immense
profits earned from processing the data of hundreds of millions of
customers, can claim to guarantee perfect security of customer data."
Currently, the only recourse available is to file a complaint with the
local police station if a person finds that Aadhaar details have been
unlawfully used or given away without consent.

If offences are committed under the Aadhaar Act, then the punitive
provisions associated with it too will follow, Pandey said.End


Edited by Krishnadevan Vijayaraghavan
Copyright Cogencis Information Services Ltd. 2013. All rights reserved



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