http://www.hindu.com/2010/11/02/stories/2010110252270900.htm

Aadhaar software locked in with ‘Windows'

The drivers for biometric devices are locked in with the Windows
operating system platform.
BANGALORE: In its technology statement, Aadhaar, the massive
Government of India project that seeks to enrol citizens, puts on
record its commitment to using open technological standards. However,
the government of Kerala — the only State that mandates the use of
Free and Open Source Software (FOSS) in governance — recently found
that the client enrolment software used is only compatible with
Windows, the proprietary operating system owned by Microsoft.

The Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI) mandates that all
‘middleware' used in Aaadhaar must be vendor neutral. However, by
using software that is only Windows-compliant, UID applications have
already established a clear vendor lock-in. In Kerala, which has
embraced open platforms, this is a vexatious issue because Virtual
Device Managers – that provide an interface for applications to
devices such as biometric devices – are not Linux-compatible.

Speaking to The Hindu, Ashok Dalwai, Deputy Director-General, UIDAI,
said this is a “Kerala-specific issue.” He confirmed that all
enrolment software is “purely for the Windows platform.” “For now, we
have asked Kerala to go ahead with laptops with Windows. Our
developers will work towards Linux compliance later.”

However, public agencies implementing Aadhaar in Kerala find this
unacceptable because it violates the State's FOSS policy. Kerala is
slated to implement the project in November. The three enrolment
agencies — i...@schools, Keltron and the Akshaya project are all
government agencies — use only Linux operating systems. Prior to the
first training session conducted in Bangalore mid-October, the
agencies wrote to the UIDAI regional office in Bangalore pointing out
difficulties in complying with a Windows-only regime.

“It is highly embarrassing and disappointing to see that proprietary
applications are necessary, at least to start with,” says Anvar
Sadath, executive director, i...@schools. He emphasises that this is not
a debate that pits Kerala versus UIDAI. “It has larger implications
for a ‘knowledge society.' Can we imagine a situation where we revert
to proprietary vendors to provide necessary upgradation/support to the
data repository of over one billion people?” he asks. Besides, FOSS
operating systems/applications offer huge cost-advantages, thereby
saving precious public money (by using FOSS, i...@schools alone saves up
to Rs. 11 crore per year). Mr. Sadath insists that vendors be forced
to develop/manage the necessary plug-ins or drivers for Linux support.

“This must be included in all tenders floated by the agency.”

FOSS activists find the proposal to “migrate to Linux later”
unacceptable. Says Prabir Purkayastha of the Delhi Science Forum:
“This is doubly problematic as it would drive an organisation [in
Kerala] which is on an open platform to a closed platform, harming
their own work. It also violates the UIDAI's declared policy.”

He believes that in the hurry to politically show results, UIDAI
should not land up on closed platforms at the cost of policy and long-
term goals.

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"MyLUG" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected].
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/mylug?hl=en.

Reply via email to