[That's pretty much disturbing.

It has at least two major aspects.

l. *Privacy of the individual Aadhaar holders.*
The UIDAI did, in all probability, breach the boundaries of legality by
sharing data from its database with another body, that too without informed
and explicit consents of the people affected.

ll. *The voting rights of eligible citizens.*
We just have no precise idea how it was/is going to be affected.
The details appearing, on a voters' list, are in no way comparable with
those on the PAN cards - much smaller in number.
Even then, linking the PAN with the Aadhaar becomes is, pretty often,
somewhat tricky because of mismatch.
In case of electoral rolls, the data size is incomparably larger, quality
far lower.
And, matching is to be done by a body, other than the individuals affected
and without any reference to them, which, in the first place, had drawn up
the (significantly flawed) roll, via an algorithm or whatever.
So, the outcome, one may only guess.

Now, the Supreme Court order clearly prohibits the use of the Aadhaar for
any such purpose.
But, how to ensure the deletion of already collected data (pertaining to
350 million?) in a secure and certain manner?
That's a big question mark.
The inability of the ECI even to indicate the number of persons whose data
have been collected provides us with a pointer to the enormity of the task.
Nevertheless, it's too important to be winked at.

It's also quite amazing that despite the SC order, the ECI has, reportedly,
decided not to oppose the subject petition in the Madras High Court.
That's, again, a matter of serious concern.
Calls for active interventions by the civil society.

《On 27 November this year, the Madras High Court will hear a petition
asking for the ECI to link voter cards to Aadhaar numbers. The poll body
has indicated that it will not oppose the petition, paving the way for the
revival of the project.
...
The ECI has not responded to repeated emailed inquiries sent by HuffPost
India. The Commission has also declined to disclose how many voter ids have
been linked to Aadhaar numbers, claiming it does not know, in response to a
Right to Information request filed by Medianama.》

Pls. visit the site for a number of screenshot/facsimile.]

https://www.huffingtonpost.in/2018/11/08/election-commission-uidai-plan-to-link-aadhaar-to-voter-ids-may-have-robbed-millions-of-their-vote_a_23584297/

09/11/2018 8:34 AM IST | Updated 3 hours ago

UIDAI's Voter ID-Aadhaar Linking Plans May Have Cost Millions Their Vote
Joint Plan by Election Commission and UIDAI compromised privacy of millions
of Indians.

By Rachna Khaira
Aman Sethi

Representative image of polling in Rajnandgaon Chhattisgarh.
ASSOCIATED PRESS

JALANDHAR, Punjab — In Godrej almirahs, on shelves in forgotten storerooms,
and in kitchen cabinets in private homes of government school teachers, are
dusty electoral lists of millions of voter identity cards with their
corresponding Aadhaar numbers carefully scribbled down by hand.

These printouts, linking two extremely sensitive personal identity numbers,
are the remnants of the 2015 National Electoral Roll Purification and
Authentication Programme (NERPAP), the Election Commission of India's
(ECI's) controversial drive to use Aadhaar-related software developed by
the Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI) to ostensibly weed out
so-called duplicate entries in India's voter rolls by flagging these names
for deletion.

The project ran till August 2015, when it was curtailed by the Supreme
Court as it was still adjudicating the constitutional validity of Aadhaar.

Interviews with serving and retired election officials in Punjab, Andhra
Pradesh, Rajasthan and Delhi, and a review of hundreds of pages of internal
documentation reveal how the ECI and UIDAI sought to use Aadhaar-linked
biometric authentication, and unproved algorithms, to toy with the most
fundamental right of any citizen in a democracy — the right to vote.

The documents show how Aadhaar-related technology, particularly
data-sorting algorithms, have permeated some of the most fundamental
aspects of civic life in India without any public discussion about its
efficacy, or the risks involved. Rather than create transparency and
accountability, the UIDAI's software has had the opposite effect — where
senior government officers defer their judgement to software which they
barely understand.

In Andhra Pradesh and Telangana, two states that served as a template for a
wider, national roll-out in February 2015, election officials admit that
software could have played a role in the elimination of 2.2 million voters
from Telangana's electoral rolls.

"A new software has been put in place as well and there could be other
reasons also behind the deletion of names," Telangana chief electoral
officer Rajat Kumar told a press conference, as reported by Mint, in
September this year. "There are people living here who have chosen to
exercise their voting rights in the neighbouring state of Andhra Pradesh.
There could be multiple reasons."

The issue of so-called missing voters has since animated political parties,
with Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal going as far as to suggest that
the Bharatiya Janta Party has deliberately sought to suppress voting of
those opposed to the BJP.

On 27 November this year, the Madras High Court will hear a petition asking
for the ECI to link voter cards to Aadhaar numbers. The poll body has
indicated that it will not oppose the petition, paving the way for the
revival of the project.

Yet the roll-out of electoral roll purification programme, and its
aftermath, raise questions of whether such an exercise should be attempted
at all. If the ECI's launch of the programme in February 2015 was poorly
conceived, its conduct when the project was halted in August 2015 was
marked by rank incompetence.

Rather than secure the private and confidential data of the 350 million
Indians it had already collected, the Commission left it to individual
officers and departments to do what they saw fit with the information.

In Punjab, HuffPost India found that many booth-level officers simply
locked the printouts and Aadhaar numbers in the safest place they could
think of— their office almirahs and their homes. In at least one case,
HuffPost India found the Aadhaar numbers stored in the kitchen cabinet of a
government school teacher, deputed to the election commission, who was
worried that the files might get lost at her office.

In another case, a teacher handed over his data to the office of the
sub-divisional magistrate, but kept a copy for himself. HuffPost India has
reviewed these aadhaar-linked voter rolls, but is not reproducing them here
to protect the privacy and sanctity of the electoral rolls.

"You never know when the file gets lost," the official told HuffPost India.
"The ECI may ask for it again. Since the process was so tedious, we cannot
afford to repeat it again."

The ad hocism of the exercise was so extreme that when the Supreme Court
asked all seeding projects to be halted, the ECI was confronted with having
printed millions of voter-enrollment forms that asked for Aadhaar numbers
to complete the voter registration process.

On 17 August 2015, the ECI came up with a high-tech solution to the problem.

"To avoid wastage of paper, existing stocks of the forms and BLO registers
with Aadhaar numbers shall be used by removing Aadhaar field by hand or by
blackening it with black sketch pen," the ECI circular read.


ELECTION COMMISSION OF INDIA
An Election Commission of India (ECI) circular asking that forms asking for
Aadhaar numbers be blackened by hand using sketch pens.
Needless to say, very few officers took up the arduous task of manually
blacking out the Aadhaar field. As a consequence, enrollment officers told
HuffPost India, Aadhaar numbers of voters continued to be collected well
after the project was halted.

The ECI has not responded to repeated emailed inquiries sent by HuffPost
India. The Commission has also declined to disclose how many voter ids have
been linked to Aadhaar numbers, claiming it does not know, in response to a
Right to Information request filed by Medianama.

AN IRRESPONSIBLE EXERCISE
The UIDAI, two former Chief Election Commissioners told HuffPost India, had
long lobbied to link voter IDs and Aadhaar cards as a means to illustrate
the value of the controversial project.

"They said we should integrate Aadhaar with electoral rolls to eliminate
duplicates," said a former Chief Election Commissioner, seeking anonymity
to speak freely. "The Commission held the view that we should hold off
until we fully understand the implications."

"It was during a meeting with (Nandan) Nilekani , we agreed to link voters
card with the Aadhaar numbers," SY Quraishi, another former election
commissioner, agreed. Nilekani is the architect and a vocal cheerleader of
the Aadhaar project.

Quraishi insisted that the decision was taken by the ECI, but it is
pertinent to note that such a significant decision, with the potential to
strip disenfranchise millions of voters, was taken with little public
deliberation,

HuffPost India has reached out to Nilekani for comment, and will update the
if he responds.

The ECI's reluctance, the former Commissioner who sought anonymity
revealed, stemmed from the fact that there is no one official unified
national electoral roll of India. Rather, each state keeps its own voter
rolls.

"Each state Election Commission is the custodian of the rolls for that
particular state," he said, admitted that this allowed for voters to have
more than one voter card, "but removing duplicates is a sensitive exercise
to be done with caution."

The ECI cannot share voter data—in a manipulable form—with any other body.
Hence, Commission officials worried that seeding voter ids would mean
sharing the data with the UIDAI.

In 2015, HS Brahma became the Chief Election Commissioner. Brahma was the
CEC for barely three months, but made it a priority to push through the
seeding process.

"Brahma wanted to leave a mark, he pushed very hard for the process," the
former Chief Election Commissioner said.

"It was always meant to be voluntary," Brahma told Scroll.in in a recent
interview. "Campaigns were organised across the country and state election
commissions were roped in for the purpose. The message had to be delivered
to common people about how the initiative would help weed out bogus voters
and strengthen democracy."


ELECTION COMMISSION OF INDIA
A February 2015 Election Commission of India (ECI) presentation on linking
of voter identity numbers and Aadhaar numbers.
On 23 February 2015, the ECI held a conference to discuss seeding their
rolls with Aadhaar numbers at its headquarters on Ashoka Road in New Delhi.

"Year 2015 is the golden year available to the Electoral Machinery to
utilise for improving the quality of roll and linking with Biometric data,"
stated a powerpoint presentation made by the commission's IT team. HuffPost
India has reviewed a copy of the presentation.

By 1 October 2015, the presentation said, the ECI hoped to build a unified
electoral roll with "100% linked and authenticated by Biometric data of
Adhaar and in absence of non-coverage, by one of the 5 documents namely
Passport, Driving License, PAN Card, TIN No. or by Bank Account."

Also at the conference were election officials from Andhra Pradesh and
Telangana who shared the results of a pilot project in their states.

"We worked with the regional office of the UIDAI in Hyderabad," said a
senior former election officer involved in the Andhra Pradesh project.
"They developed a software that allowed us to seed voter ids with aadhaar
numbers."

INORGANIC SEEDING
The software, documents reviewed by HuffPost India reveal, allowed the ECI
to seed voter IDs with Aadhaar numbers in bulk using a tool provided by the
UIDAI — a process known as "inorganic seeding" of voter ids with Aadhaar
numbers.

As a first step, the UIDAI shared the names, addresses, dates of birth, and
Aadhaar numbers of citizens—gathered under the Aadhaar project—with the
State Resident Data Hub(SRDH), essentially a giant storage server
containing the personal details of all the residents of a state.

The software then scanned the electoral rolls and the Aadhaar databases,
comparing names, dates of birth and address pin codes to find matching
entries in the two databases, and assigned a particular score to the
exactness of the match.

The matching as not an exact science: a voter recorded as S.Shiva in the
ECI database for example, could be registered as Siva Srinivas in the
Aadhaar database. So the UIDAI used a set of algorithms to come up with a
score to evaluate these matches.


CHIEF ELECTORAL OFFICER, ANDHRA PRADESH
Presentation by Chief Electoral Officer Andhra Pradesh, listing the
algorithms used in the bulk seeding of voter ids and Aadhaar numbers.
For matches above 50%, the software linked the Aadhaar number and the voter
id, those below 50% were flagged as needing verification.

Once the software had run its matches, the Commission embarked on a
door-to-door household survey to verify these matches. If a house was
locked, the election official was supposed to visit the house two more
times, paste a sticker asking the voter to reach out to the ECI on the
door, and then recommend that the voter be struck off the rolls.

In interviews with HuffPost India, officers involved in the exercise
recalled several instances where names were recommended for deletion
because residents were not at home when the verification officer visited.

"The problem with inorganic seeding is that if you have wrong data about an
individual, and you use that information, you will cause harm to the
individual," said Srinivas Kodali, a cyber security researcher. "The
individual has no idea that this data has been used against him because he
doesn't know."

In Andhra Pradesh, a pilot exercise limited to about 20,000 voters in 15
polling stations resulted in claims that 42% of electors had either shifted
residences or did not answer their door.

A much larger exercise in Nizamabad district, with a sample size of
18,88,348 voters, claimed 22% had shifted residences.

This might seem like an impressive number of duplicates, but a similar
exercise to 'verify' ration cards, food rights activists said, simply
excluded genuine, vulnerable, beneficiaries in the guise of weeding out
'duplicates'.

"Aadhaar linking has been the source of exclusion of a large number of
people," said economist Reetika Khera, who has critically examined the
impact of linking Aadhaar to welfare services. "Those who did not, or could
not, link Aadhaar numbers were suspected to be "ghosts" or "fake", and
without ever giving them notice or warning them, their names were struck
off the rolls."

Aadhaar-linking to voter IDs, Khera said, would curtail democracy's most
fundamental right—the right to vote.

"Our experience with welfare programmes suggests that if Aadhaar and
biometrics are brought in — in any manner— it will lead to exclusion of the
most vulnerable," she said. "Bedridden elderly who cannot authenticate
themselves, migrants who may miss the government's deadlines, those whose
biometrics do not work due to age or the nature of their work."

The deletion of 2.2 million voters in Andhra Pradesh and Telangana—two
states that have become laboratories for all things Aadhaar— and the
admission by Telangana chief electoral officer Rajat Kumar, that a "new
software" could have played a role, suggests Khera's concerns are not
unfounded.

PRIVACY, WHAT'S THAT?
Serious constitutional matters apart, HuffPost India's reporting in Punjab
reveals how such a massive data-gathering exercise presents its own
problems. Aadhaar's defenders have long argued that privacy is an elite
concern of little interest to most Indians.

Yet in Punjab, the election officials—mainly school teachers deputed to
record Aadhaar numbers by data—encountered vigorous, occasionally violent,
resistance from residents concerned about how the data would would be used.

"We faced protests, threats and even physical and verbal abuse in areas
especially sensitive for communal violence as the information sought by ECI
was 'too personal'," said an election official who went from door to door
collecting the data. "We took local leaders along to prevent any
resistance."

>From February 2015 to August that year, the teachers spent long hours
knocking on doors and recording Aadhaar numbers by hand in bulky paper
ledgers. But when it was time to submit these ledgers to district offices,
they were told that the ECI had suspended the drive.

So these ledgers, with sensitive personal information that residents had
fought hard to keep private, were stored by officials who had an innate
sense that the information was valuable and sensitive, but no knowledge of
how to secure it.

"I kept the election roll safely in my kitchen cabinet," an earnest school
teacher in Jalandhar told HuffPost India, adding she feared the rolls might
have been misplaced had she stored them in the school where she worked.

The teacher insisted that the data was stored safely—just not in the way
that most cybersecurity experts would expect.

-- 
Peace Is Doable

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to greenyouth+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
To post to this group, send an email to greenyouth@googlegroups.com.
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to