Aadhaar authentication by pvt entities for delivering govt schemes proposed
At present, only government ministries and departments are allowed to undertake Aadhaar authentication in the interest of good governance, preventing leakage of public funds, enablement of innovation, and the spread of knowledge. They can do so if they are legally permitted and the Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI) is satisfied that the requesting entity is compliant with the standards of privacy and security specified by regulations.
The proposed amendments may allow private businesses to carry out Aadhaar authentication for purposes such as the usage of digital platforms to ensure good governance, prevention of dissipation of social welfare benefits, enablement of innovation, and the spread of knowledge.
The new draft rule has reignited the long-running debate about Aadhaar-based eKYC (know-your-customer) procedures in the country. According to the Supreme Court’s judgment on Aadhaar of September 2018, private companies were effectively banned from using the biometric authentication system of Aadhaar.
Although the government has extended the ambit of Aadhaar authentication for ease of living and innovation, policy advocacy groups have raised concerns about the possibility of misuse. The amendment may allow authentication by independent entities without the oversight of a sectoral regulator if they comply with the conditions.
“There are concerns with this amendment because the country does not have a law on data privacy. There are also concerns with respect to entities making authentication mandatory in practicality, even as the rule is limited to authentication on a voluntary basis,” said Amol Kulkarni, director (research), CUTS (Consumer Unity & Trust Society) International — a public advocacy group.
He added that terms like ease of living and good governance are very wide and vague and so it could create scope for misuse by private entities.
The Aadhaar (Targeted Delivery of Financial and Other Subsidies, Benefits, and Services) Act, 2016, provides that entities may seek to perform Aadhaar authentication for a prescribed purpose.
According to official data, UIDAI records 70-80 million Aadhaar authentications every day. Over 1,000 direct benefit schemes — 720 from state governments and 318 from central government — use Aadhaar authentication services to avoid re-duplication and removal of ghost beneficiaries.
The public distribution system accounts for 20 per cent of the total authentications; the telecommunications sector has a share of 6 per cent of it, while MGNREGS forms 2 per cent of authentications.
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Currently, only government ministries and departments are permitted to undertake Aadhaar authentication for various central and state government schemes -
The proposed amendment to the rules will allow private entities to build platforms to facilitate Aadhaar authentication for beneficiaries -
The proposal aims to promote ease of living for all beneficiaries and enable better access to services for the people -
Allowing private entities to undertake Aadhaar authentication will lead to good governance, prevent leakage of public funds, and enable innovation and knowledge
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