[Instead of moving to enact a strong and effective data protection law, the
government of the day is trying to leverage the Cambridge Analytica expose
to gain petty political advantages over rivals and whitewash the hugely
intimidating Aadhaar as it stands today.

<<There is one obvious response to this false comparison: consent. For
whatever it is worth, Facebook, and others like Google and Amazon, are
voluntary services, which an individual may choose to engage with and
provide their data to. Aadhaar was supposed to be voluntary too, but this
government has made it mandatory not just to have a Unique Identity number
but also link it with a huge number of services.

This means that the government can make it impossible for Indians to get
services that they are due without Aadhaar, whether those are food rations,
their provident fund accounts or a phone connection. Being off Facebook
does not take away any of anyone’s rights or access to public services. At
a basic level, Facebook cannot influence the relationship between Indians
and the government. Aadhaar seeks to define that relationship.

But in some ways that response alone is not adequate.>>]

https://scroll.in/article/873267/aadhaar-analytica-why-both-data-protection-scandals-should-deeply-disturb-everyone

Aadhaar Analytica: Why both data protection scandals should deeply disturb
everyone
Arguing that Facebook collects more data than Aadhaar is both naive and
misses the point.

Aadhaar Analytica: Why both data protection scandals should deeply disturb
everyone
HT Photo

6 hours ago

Rohan Venkataramakrishnan

The Bharatiya Janata Party-run government and other supporters of the
Aadhaar project seem to have taken the recent Facebook-Cambridge Analytica
revelations as an opportunity rather than a warning sign. The controversy,
which involves the Facebook user data of more than 50 million people being
used by the political consulting firm to create strategies for Donald
Trump’s election campaign in the US, stands as proof that Aadhaar is the
least of our data protection troubles, they claim. The real danger, as far
as these people are concerned, lies elsewhere.

“Forget Aadhaar, Facebook threat real,” said the headline to one column by
Sunil Jain in the Financial Express. Another piece in the Pioneer says
there is “collective hypocrisy” from those who have misgivings about
Aadhaar but have not spoken up about the danger posed by social networks.
“We are outraging over Aadhaar and its threats to privacy, when the GAFA
foursome knows the colour of our underpants,” writes R Jagannathan in
Swarajya, referring to Google, Amazon, Facebook and Apple.

The government may not have drawn the connection explicitly, but it was
impossible not to compare the two when IT Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad was
wagging his finger at Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg on the same day that
Attorney General KK Venugopal told the Supreme Court that Aadhaar data was
safe because it sat behind tall, thick walls. On Sunday, Tourism Minister
KJ Alphons offered up a different variant of this, saying Indians have no
problem “getting naked” for the white man, but claim that their privacy has
been breached when asked to give their fingerprints to their government.

Question of consent
There is one obvious response to this false comparison: consent. For
whatever it is worth, Facebook, and others like Google and Amazon, are
voluntary services, which an individual may choose to engage with and
provide their data to. Aadhaar was supposed to be voluntary too, but this
government has made it mandatory not just to have a Unique Identity number
but also link it with a huge number of services.

This means that the government can make it impossible for Indians to get
services that they are due without Aadhaar, whether those are food rations,
their provident fund accounts or a phone connection. Being off Facebook
does not take away any of anyone’s rights or access to public services. At
a basic level, Facebook cannot influence the relationship between Indians
and the government. Aadhaar seeks to define that relationship.

But in some ways that response alone is not adequate.

For one, optional services like Facebook and Google are so large at this
point that many see them almost as utilities. They may not be mandatory,
but vast swathes of those who are online can be expected to have interacted
with either Google or Facebook at some point. Attempting to stay away from
either seems nearly impossible. So it might be disingenuous to rely too
much on the consent argument.

Linking to other services
That said, the pro-Aadhaar argument rests on the belief that Facebook and
Google scoop up as much information about individuals as they possible can.
The services want to look at users’ photos, know whom they talk to, gauge
their political views and spy on everything they read, listen to and watch.
Aadhaar, per this view, simply collects names, addresses, a few more
demographic details, and biometrics. How could that be dangerous?

The answer is linking. Aadhaar is built on providing each resident a single
12-digit number that serves as their ID. This number is then seeded across
multiple databases, from the public distribution system to schools and
colleges to utility corporations. Many private companies, from banks to
telecom service providers to insurance agencies also collect Aadhaar
numbers now, in a manner that could help them build customer profile
databases that could have serious implications for everything from what
prices or interest rates Indians are quoted to whether they can get
insurance and be admitted at a hospital. In effect, UIDAI itself may have
collected only some information for each individual, but the ability to
track individuals across multiple databases is what makes the Aadhaar
project as disturbing as Facebook and Google.

Non-binary discussion
Most importantly, this is not a binary discussion. Facebook and Google are
not pitted against each other in a zero-sum contest to see which one can
collect and store more information about Indians. The two can easily end up
being used together and the combination of data controlled by all of these
entities would be even more disturbing from a privacy angle. Apple’s recent
decision to host iCloud services in China have raised concerns about an
authoritarian government forcing private services to hand over their data.

The Cambridge Analytica scandal is no balm, allowing us to be sanguine
about Aadhaar fears as being a lesser evil than the bigger data breaches
abroad. Instead, they should both serve as deafening alarm bells that tell
us how being able to protect our data from the prying eyes, either of
private companies or the government, is one of the most important issues of
our times. India is currently in the process of trying to figure out a data
protection regulatory regime. If anything, rather than trying to compare
the two scandals, citizens should be using the fears about Cambridge
Analytica and Aadhaar to push for data protection rules that are as strong,
clear cut and transparent as possible.



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