Aadhaar: The 12-Digit Conundrum
“Aadhaar: The 12-Digit Conundrum” is a The Hindu Business Line report by Richa Mishra published on 13 March 2017. The article examines growing concerns over the safety of Aadhaar’s centralised biometric database, with Sunil Abraham of the Centre for Internet and Society arguing that biometric identification makes citizens transparent to the state without offering equivalent transparency in return, and that the legislation carries almost no data protection guarantees.
Contents
Article Details
- 📰 Published in:
- The Hindu Business Line
- 📅 Date:
- 13 March 2017
- 👤 Author:
- Richa Mishra
- 📄 Type:
- News Report
- 📄 PDF:
- Download PDF
- 📰 Newspaper Link:
- Read Online (Subscription needed)
Full Text
The developments of last few weeks seem to have made real some of the worst fears about Aadhaar. In February, UIDAI (Unique Identification Authority of India) filed a police complaint alleging attempts of unauthorised authentication and impersonation of data related to Aadhaar. Since then, each and every machinery within the government has been trying to convince otherwise, that Aadhaar database is safe and secure, and that the data is protected both by the best available advanced technology as well as by the stringent legal provisions in the Aadhaar Act.
Not everyone is convinced. Critics say, biometrics only make the citizen transparent to the State, it does not make the State transparent to citizens. "We warned the government six years ago, but they ignored us," said Sunil Abraham, Executive Director of Bengaluru-based research organisation, Centre for Internet and Society. According to him, the legislation implementing Aadhaar has almost no data protection guarantees for citizens. He also believes that by opting for biometrics instead of smart cards the government is using surveillance technology instead of e-governance technology.
"Biometrics is remote, covert and non-consensual identification technology. It is totally inappropriate for authentication. This has only increased the fragility of Indian cyber security," he stresses.
However, officials associated with UIDAI dismiss these arguments. Collecting biometrics does not pose any threat to the right to privacy because people have been giving their thumb impression for ages, they say. "The biometrics are encrypted at source and kept safe and secure. Unauthorised sharing and leakage of the data does not happen. Fears related to collection of biometrics are not justified," an official at the helm of affairs said. He requested anonymity.
"However, as and when we find that some suspicious activity or misuse is happening, we will strike at the very beginning itself. UIDAI has full authentication regulation under the Aadhaar Act that has to be followed. It specifies in what manner authorities can use Aadhaar," the official pointed out.
On the ground
Even as the debate over data security rages, the aam aadmi seem to be little perturbed about the alleged risks involved. For Padmini, who works as a domestic help in East Delhi and is the sole bread earner for her family of four, the Aadhaar card meant access to all government benefits.
"Koi farak nahi padta, kaun dekhta hai mera card. Mujhko LPG cylinder ka paisa bank mein mil jata hai," (It doesn't matter to me who sees my card. The subsidy for LPG gets transferred to my account) she says. "Baccho ke school admission mein bhi zaroorat pada," (I needed it to get my children's admission in school), she added. Sukh, a cab driver also uses it to get the LPG subsidy.
While everyone BusinessLine talked to were convinced that Aadhaar was not a citizenship card, the more aware ones saw it as a door that gave access to government schemes.
While they had a point, government officials are careful to make it clear that Aadhaar is not mandatory. But the popular perception increasingly points to the opposite view, especially after it emerged that Aadhaar might be made mandatory for children to receive midday meals at schools.
Another senior government official said, "Aadhaar is not mandatory under any welfare scheme of the government and no one is being deprived of a service or benefit for the want of Aadhaar…it's required for availing a service/subsidy/benefit that accrues through the Consolidated Fund of India." He added that those who do not have the 12-digit number would be provided with the facility to enrol by the Requiring Agency. "And till the time Aadhaar is assigned, alternative IDs would be allowed," he said.
If a school which has to get Aadhaar enrolment done for its students puts the Aadhaar numbers of its students on its site and the same is used by someone, you can't blame us, the official argues. Then, who is accountable?
Pushing for Aadhaar, the UIDAI officials cite the example of Kerala's Department of General Education (DGE), which has integrated Aadhaar with the student databases and has thereby optimised the teacher-student ratio and identified the schools with excess teachers. In a single academic year, 3,892 excess teacher posts were identified.
"Due to this exercise, no new posts have been sanctioned for the last two years, resulting in notional savings of ₹540 crore per annum," said a UIDAI official. After student enrolment in the state was linked to Aadhaar since 2012-2013, the head count of pupils have fallen by 5 lakh. Similar trends have been reported in Haryana. Critics have also pointed out the possible security risk in using AadhaarPay, the Android-based app. Merchants can download the app in their phone and install a fingerprint scanner linked to the phone. Customers with Aadhaar numbers can use their fingerprints (like the secret PIN in case of debit cards) to do a transaction. While doubts have been raised about the safety of fingerprint data, officials in the know blame the controversy on the "card lobbies."
"Thirty crore Indians have no mobiles. They find it difficult to handle password, pin or card, this is where AadhaarPay will come handy," the official added. "They don't need a smart phone or feature phone. They don't need a debit card.
Today more than 112 crore people have the Aadhaar card. Approximately, 52.95 crore people have linked their Aadhaar numbers to their bank accounts. We already have a system of Aadhaar authentication in place," the official added.
Government officials are at pain to point out the larger benefits of Aadhaar, including savings of more than ₹49,000 crore by plugging leakages in government schemes like PDS. Government plans to increase the number of welfare schemes linked to Aadhaar from 36 to over 500. While the intent is good, concerns remain.
Context and Background
This report appeared shortly after UIDAI filed a police complaint in February 2017 over alleged unauthorised authentication and impersonation involving Axis Bank-linked entities, an incident that gave concrete shape to long-standing theoretical concerns about Aadhaar’s security architecture. The article’s structure places the government’s official reassurances directly against the views of critics, and also captures the perspective of ordinary users for whom the practical benefits of Aadhaar outweighed abstract security concerns.
The government’s position at the time rested on two claims: that biometric data was encrypted at source and that the Aadhaar Act provided adequate legal protection. Neither claim satisfied critics, who pointed to the absence of an independent privacy law, the restriction on citizen-initiated legal action in case of breaches, and the Act’s broadly drawn provisions allowing UIDAI to expand the scope of biometric data collection by regulation.
Sunil Abraham’s argument in this article is notably precise. He does not object to digital identification as such but to the specific choice of biometrics over smart cards, arguing that biometrics are inherently a surveillance technology because they enable remote, covert and non-consensual identification in a way that card-based authentication does not. This distinction between authentication and identification, and between citizen-controlled and state-controlled identity infrastructure, was central to CIS’s critique of the Aadhaar architecture from its early years.
External Link
- Read on The Hindu Business Line (Subscription needed)
📄 This page was created on 15 June 2026. You can view its history on GitHub, preview the fileTip: Press Alt+Shift+G, or inspect the .