Opposition to NUID is well taken. I too oppose it on many considerations.

But if we fail to raise the issue of selection of SW platforms and document
formats, will it not result in the entire e-governance data and network
unilaterally controlled by the software corporates in collaboration with the
corrupt politician-bureaucracy nexus ? Failure to intervene will lead to the
much needed administrative reforms to be utilised by the unscrupulous
elements to restructure the state machinery to their advantage.

Under the circumstances, I think any well meaning individual or organisation
is left with only two alternatives :

a) Oppose the NUID project tooth and nail and try to defeat it at any
cost       or

b) Start intervening on as many points as possible including the very much
valid question of selection of SW platforms, document formats, data
structure, network architecture and data flow etc which, especially the
network architecture and data flow, will decide whether it could be used as
a tool of oppresssion or democratic expansion.

One has to select between the two, I presume.

On Fri, Sep 25, 2009 at 9:45 AM, Nagarjuna G. <[email protected]>wrote:

> On Fri, Sep 25, 2009 at 8:26 AM, Vickram Crishna <[email protected]>
> wrote:
> > At the risk of repeating myself:
> >
> >
> > Not simply the proposed (despite the decision to spend goodish sums of
> > money, the allocation of an office and the - very slow - creation of a
> > secretariat to deal with the project, and all these are not surmises
> gained
> > from newspaper reports, but the result of RTI applications made in the
> past
> > few weeks) NUID project, but any expenditure of public money on the
> creation
> > of a public service instrument must be accompanied by full disclosure of
> the
> > systems used in its implementation. Up to and until this expense includes
> > the use of ICTs, I think FOSSCOMM should have a clear objective (within
> the
> > CMP, therefore) to demand the use of free software.
> > In practical terms, this may take the form of readymade documents to file
> > with concerned organs of government, and a public statement, preserved on
> > the website, for instance, expressing this position.
> > However, for the reasons stated above (and implicitly, in the quoted
> link),
> > I certainly object to treating the matter as fait accompli, so that
> > FOSSCOMM, by virtue of recommending the use of free software as an
> > alternative to proprietary systems, is seen as defending and being a
> party
> > to the imposition of NUID on our country's people.
> > --
>
> Thanks for repeating this.  NUID will be used by the powers/mega
> systems, and it is more advantageous for them rather than individual.
> Therefore I do not find that as a good use of ICT, infact it is a good
> abuse of ICT, whether it is free software or not.
>
> Using free software for NUID only makes it lesser evil, but evil is
> evil at the end of the day.
>
> When we dream of a free society we should dream of a society where
> each human being is identified for being a human (made of flesh and
> blood) and no other identities should matter.  All human beings should
> be given the dignity they deserve.  These NUID project is not intended
> for that, on the contrary it is an instrument for discrimination.
> Each one of us are endowed with a unique culturally transmitted
> ability to know if the other person is a human being or not.  What
> more do we need?  Why do we have to use ICT to determine whether a
> person is a person.
>
> Considering the ill-consequences of NUID, and handing over our
> information to unreliable and intransparent administrative systems, I
> personally oppose the very idea of NUID.  It is an ill-conceived
> solution to a manufactured problem that does not exist.
>
> Nagarjuna
> _______________________________________________
> network mailing list
> [email protected]
> http://lists.fosscom.in/listinfo.cgi/network-fosscom.in
>



-- 
With warm greetings.

               Joseph Thomas,
        [email protected],
       9447738369/9447738366
            Res : 04842792369

   Every public agency has a duty to maintain its control over its
computing, as a matter of sovereignty. Using a non-free program means giving
the program’s developer control over that computing. Thus, public agencies
must reject proprietary software and move to free software. ---- Richard M
Stallman
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