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Aadhaar data secure, those without unique number won't suffer: UIDAI

IANS  |  New Delhi 

The Unique Identification Authority of (UIDAI) on Thursday told the that the biometric and demographic information of people who have enrolled for was secure, while no one will suffer loss of benefits for its lack.

In a first-ever power point presentation in the open court, the constitution bench of Dipak Misra, and Justice A.K. Sikri, Justice A.M. Khanwilkar, Justice and Justice was told that the data in encrypted form was "very very secure".

UIDAI said they start collecting data from the birth of a child which is twice updated at the age of five and later at 15 years and that 1.2 billion people have already enrolled.

He also said that a number once given to an enrolled person would not be repeated even after their death.

Pointing to the "exception handling mechanism" in the UIDAI system, Pandey said that "no one will suffer the loss of benefits for the lack of Aadhaar" as the bench pointed to illiterate, the poor and tribals who may not be aware that over time their have undergone changes and must be updated.

In the post-lunch presentation that lasted for an hour and a half, he said that every five years, there may be changes in the and that they are updating information of 25 crore holders annually.

However, the said UIDAI could not handle every problem as Justice Sikri asked him what happens if a person goes to a ration shop and even though his biometric details match, he is refused goods which are later drawn by the shop owner in an unauthorised manner.

"It has to be handled at a different level," Pandey told the court as it asked if UIDAI has the means to know whether the benefit was denied or what is the extent of denials of services based on

Stressing the entire system for storing the biometric data and demographic information is safe and free from any kind of intrusion, Pandey said that it would "require the age of the universe to crack the data stored in encrypted form".

Fielding questions, largely from Justice Sikri and Justice Chandrachud, Pandey said that people like leprosy patients or others who don't have biometric details would get on the basis of their facial scan or their registered mobile number, which would operate on OTP (One Time Password) system.

Stressing that there was no intrusion in the privacy of users, he said "we are ignorant about the purpose and details of the transactions being undertaken by the people" whose is linked to various services.

Noting that data matching software has been bought from the world's three best companies and stored on UIDAI's 6,000 servers, Pandey said that these are not linked to internet to eliminate possibility of any backdoor access to the data.

Pandey will continue with his presentation on Tuesday.

Meanwhile, told the bench that tremendous efforts by various agencies and experts had gone into erecting the architecture of at an expenditure of Rs 9,000 crore.

He said 61 committees went into the issue threadbare before the present edifice was put in place, adding all the committees were unanimous on creating a legal framework for unique identity.

Continuing his arguments, the on the second day of his submission took the court through the list of the dates starting from March 3, 2006 till 2016 when the law was enacted to demonstrate the exercises undertaken by the present and the previous

To this, Justice Sikri said: "These are all dates, right now we are examining the constitutional validity of Act."

As Justice Chandrachud observed "it took you seven years to enact a law", Venugopal said that the legislation was of 2010 and it took time to do ground work.

--IANS

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(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Thu, March 22 2018. 20:22 IST
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