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Apart from being technically bogus, access to the entire database is/was available for 500 rupees. The quality of the bureaucrats running it, the opaque way the government pushing it, the lack of actual data to support the IDs, the deaths of people due to denial of life sustaining rations, and the lack of recourse to hold people responsible for life, monetary, and ID theft related losses makes it punishing for people who aren't connected to people in power. Aadhaar cannot be sued for anything!

To add insult to the injury, Aadhaar officially allows people in the upper crust and political class to avoid it entirely insulating them from the potential damages of an experimental system. To add even more insult to injury, the UIDAI goes after people who point out the flaws in their "scheme."

The only winners seem to be tech providers, contractors, some bureaucrats, and the IT contractors who seem to be making loads of good money on this.




> access to the entire database is/was available for 500 rupees

Not the biometrics. And the leaked information doesn't allow one to impersonate someone.

Is the alternative of relying on passports/birth certificate better? Are you against any universal id scheme in general?

All the criticism of adhaar seems shallow. If your home address is leaked somehow, say by a customer service representative in a bank, would you say that is the failure of the post office? It is a privacy risk to have one's address out in the public, but is that a reason to oppose post offices, or stop living in houses?


>Not the biometrics.

What use is biometrics when I can update the actual record itself?

>And the leaked information doesn't allow one to impersonate someone.

Thats because the biometrics doesnt work for anyone 60-70% of the time.




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