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Tag: UID

December 4, 2013

Big Democracy : Big Surveillance talk by Maria Xynou

by viggy — Categories: Uncategorized — Tags: , , , , , , , Leave a comment

I attended this talk today at CIS-India office. Maria as part of her research was able to point out very well on how the Indian government is investing heavily in various kinds of surveillance and how all of this is getting centralized under one big umbrella project called ICMS(Indian Central Monitoring System). This along with the UID project is going to be totally catastrophic with respect to an individual’s privacy in our country. We already know with SnoopGate case at Gujarat how privacy of individuals are easily violated for petty reasons and how the whole state machinery is put in use without any checks and balances just on the will of few people at the top of the state machinery.
The talk also covered part of her research where she went through different private companies who have developed various products specializing in mass and targetted surveillance through Telecommunication, Internet and biometric data. What is scary is that the customers of majority of these companies are Law Enforcement Agencies(LEAs) and Telecommunications and Internet Service Providers which they actively brag about on their websites. Moreover, most of these companies are not even ISO:27001 complaint and hardly any of them follow any privacy policies.
Hence Surveillance is becoming a big profitable industry in india where most of the profits are coming from tax payers money.
I will be sharing the link to the recorded video of the talk which will definitely give you a much detailed idea of the various surveillance projects run by Indian government and various companies involved sharing the profit and benefitting from the same.

In the blog, I would like to mention two issues that mainly stuck me during the discussion after the talk.

1) Privacy of meta data is equally important if not more than the actual content data.
One of the most common excuse that we heard from various NSA agencies after the Snowden leaks were that they are mainly storing the MetaData and not the content data in itself and hence it is not as bad as it seems. However Maria during the discussion pointed out very well why we should be more concerned if this is actually the case. Content data may not always be true. Many times it can just be garbage information or totally false information being exchanged between people. Also just due to its enormity, it becomes very difficult to actually do data mining on the content data itself. However MetaData in itself is true and cannot be contested upon. Suppose you sent an email from a particular location to your friend, the content in the data itself can be false and can be something which is not much useful. However the very fact that you were at a particular location and used a particular IP Address and communicated to a particular person with a specific email ID itself cannot be contested and this metadata of your converstaion can be used against you. This gets worse as these metadata over a period of time can draw a picture of you which is completely different than your actual personality but since the information in metadata cannot be contested, it becomes very difficult to prove otherwise.

2) Privacy awareness an cultural issue in India
Often whenever we try to create awareness about the growing surveillance in India and across the world, there is a complete indifference amongst people about it. ‘Why should I worry when I have nothing to hide’ and ‘It is for our own safety’ are the most common reply. Maria attributed two main reasons behind this lack of concern with respect to privacy amongst people.
a) Asian culture is more collective and less of individualistic as compared to western culture. Privacy in itself is a very individualistic right and since the asian cultures are more about the society in general than individuals, we are often happy to give up our privacy for better of the society.
b) Since large part of the society in India still depends in various aspects on government support, they are ok to let government have a kind of parental surveillance over their privacy. However the fact that such a surveillance leads to control over the people is mainly ignored or unknown to people. One of the biggest reason given behind UID/Aadhar Project is that since there are so many different projects of the government, there needs to be some kind of centralized system which will ensure that the support from government reaches the right people. However with no one way of currently identifying people, there is lot of leakages in the projects and hence unique identification method will help. People have actually bought this argument for the project and have enrolled enthusiastically. However the implications of such a huge database of all the people across the country will only be known in time. We know how such databases of people were used in Germany under a dictatorial regime. There is also some information of how Voter’s list were used during the 1984 and 2002 riots to identify people.

Over all the picture of surveillance in India is very grim. Another point what Maria pointed out is that though surveillance in itself is very scary, what examplifies it is the acceptance of it by people as a normal state affiar. In a dictatorial authoratative regime, surveillance would have been contested as something being pushed from the top and hence infringing people’s right. However what we now see is that most successful surveillance states are some of the biggest democratic societies.

January 7, 2012

Technology to the rescue

by viggy — Categories: experience, Fun, social, Uncategorized — Tags: , , , , , 1 Comment

Nagaraj sir, who is an active member and holds some important position at Democratic Yoth Federation of India (DYFI), had asked me to come to his area with my laptop. Since Karnataka government had opened a portal, http://web1.kar.nic.in/rconline/ to apply for a ration card online, many cyber cafes had started charging hefty amount from poor people who were not able to apply for it themselves. Hence he wanted me to apply online for the people in his area. So at around 11:00, we set up a table outside his house. His neighbor had kindly agreed to give access to internet through his broadband and since he had a wireless router, it was easy for us to access it from where we were sitting.

Since I myself did not have a ration card and my mom had been pestering me for applying it online since last two months, I had applied for it last night and understood all the fields required to fill the form very well. Unfortunately in my case, it had not accepted my LPG gas connection number and due to this I had to say that I did not own a gas connection while applying for the ration card.

At around 11:30, few people started coming along with their electric bill. And I started applying for each one of them. I observed many interesting points.

Almost all these people had their own houses. This was not strange to me because I knew from my previous interaction at another slum that state government provides funds to people to build pakka cement houses. The agreement is that the family has to have its own land and they need to put the foundation themselves. The amount for the building the walls and roof will be given by the government. This was a good scheme because it ensured to some extent that the people do not misuse the money provided by the government.

In many cases, the R.R. No. of the electricity bill had already been used by someone else to apply for the ration card. Due to this the portal was not allowing anyone else to apply for a new card  for that particular electricity bill. In many cases, it turned out that the tenant of the house had applied for the ration card using the electricity bill due to which the owner themselves were not able to apply for a card.

By around 4:00, I had applied for 22 families. Since I was using Ubuntu, after completion of every application, I was able to store the complete application in a pdf format which Nagaraj sir had decided to give a hard copy to each applicants for their future use. Also the wonderful feature that the portal had was that after successful submission of the application, it was sending a sms to the applicant’s mobile number with an acknowledgement number.

In all, it was a great experience for me. I found a family where the husband was 5 years younger to his wife. We had to make sure that the birthday was actually correct. In another case, for one applicant there were 8 dependents and somehow while adding 5th dependent, the portal removed all the previously added dependents. At the end, we only applied for 4 dependents for the particular applicant.

Another interesting thing I saw was that most of the people were applying for a BPL(Below poverty line) card, which meant that they had to mention that their annual income was less than Rs. 36,000(I am not sure of this rule). However, only one person asked to mention his correct annual income saying that it wouldnt be right to mention less just for benefits.

There was another interesting applicant. She was a muslim lady who had come in Burkha. After waiting for around 30 mins and since she was way behind in queue, she asked me if I can apply for her next as there were all males in the queue now. I politely disagreed as all of them also had been waiting and few of them had already raised concerns that they had to go to work. Somehow she was not happy with this and before her turn came, she started pointing to my mistakes in other’s application forms and started talking in English to me. Also for her application, she had written all the details that was required and gave it to me. She felt proud to have done this and started bragging to her friend that since she had written it down and given to me, I shouldnt have any confusion in application process. However, I had failed to realize that she was actually applying with her husband’s name and hence I had by mistake marked it as a female applicant. So I had to go back to the initial webform and correct it. I felt that she was very angry that I had made such a silly mistake.

However, the biggest satisfaction that I got during the day was that how the technology had helped these people apply for the ration card without which they would have atleast had to spend their one full day going to the government office and standing in long queues and then running around with documents or in the best case, pay around Rs. 1000 to a broker to get it done for them. Infact I remember my cousin brother had paid around 2500 to an agent for both ration card and gas connection for his family. It was only because of my laziness that I had also not gone through an agent to apply for the ration card.

Also at around 4:00, since I had some other personal work, I decided to leave. However the neighbor who also about my age and who had been kind enough to allow us to use his internet connection had also started applying for others and this way I was satisfied that now the area will not need me to come again for applying as the neighbor would do it for them.

Nagaraj sir has already suggested another locality where we can go next time whenever I am free. I certainly feel very proud of having done a small contribution to so many families. Of course, we have only applied for the ration card for them and still the process of verification by the food officer remains and it is only after this that the families will get a ration card.

This experience also gave me lot of food for thought regarding the controversial project, UID. I will try to summarize those thoughts in a separate post soon.