This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Ravishyam Bangalore (talk | contribs) at 16:15, 17 November 2013 (→UIDAI operations). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.
Revision as of 16:15, 17 November 2013 by Ravishyam Bangalore (talk | contribs) (→UIDAI operations)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)UIDAI (Aadhaar UIDAI new logo) | |
Agency overview | |
---|---|
Formed | January 2009 |
Jurisdiction | Government of India (Union Government) |
Headquarters | New Delhi |
Agency executives |
|
Website | uidai.gov.in |
The Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI), is the government agency of India which is responsible for implementing the Aadhaar identification program. It operates the Unique Identification Number database and provides identification numbers to all residents of India on voluntary basis. The UIDAI was established in January 2009.
The Unique Identification Authority of India functions under the Planning Commission. The head of the agency, currently Nandan Nilekani, is ranked equally to a cabinet minister.
Overview
UIDAI is the Registrar of Identities i.e. it registers, assigns and verifies the unique identities. It is supposed to register two types of unique identities:
- Residents of India (called Aadhaar)
- Corporate entities (Corporate-UID) for company, bank, NGO, trust, political party etc.
So far UIDAI has made progress on Aadhaar Number (AN) only. Work on Corporate-UID is yet to be published.
However, Corporate-UID has been provisioned within 12-digit UID number system. Corporate-UID is supposed to produce the similar effect as Aadhaar for corporate entities i.e. identification and traceability of transactions. It is supposed to bring transparency on financial transactions, donations; and to prevent corruption, money laundering, benami transactions (i.e. under a fictitious name), allocation of natural resources like land, spectrum, mining of sand, iron-ore, coal-blocks, etc. Similar identifier ISO 9362 (Business Identifier Code - BIC) exists for international business transactions (financial and non-financial).
UIDAI owns and operates the main database server called the Central Identity Data Repository (CIDR). Aadhaar enrollment commenced in September 2010.
Aadhaar serves the purpose if Aadhaar-holder verbally tells the AN and it gets instantly verified online at the point of service, through KYC or E-KYC process in a paperless way; which provides high reliability of identity. Only show of paper Aadhaar letter provides low reliability of identity as it can be easily faked.
Aadhaar program has already crossed the critical-mass as of 15-Aug-2013 by assigning 400 million AN and linking over 30 million bank accounts for Direct Benefit Transfer for various social security benefits across many states.
Half-a-billion AN will be assigned by end of November-2013. Half the population of India (600 million) will be assigned AN by March-2014. By 01-Jan-2014, half the population of India (289 districts across various states) will be covered under Aadhaar-DBT for various benefits.
Aadhaar program is the largest biometric database in the world. Currently it has 500 million people (5 billion fingerprints, 1 billion iris image, 500 million face photo) with 6 peta byte of data. It will reach 1.25 billion people in few years, 15 PB of data and over 200 trillion biometric matches per day.
Properties of AN
Aadhaar Number (AN) is a 12-digit national identification number assigned to residents of India for lifetime. Its format is 1234-5678-9012 where the 11-digits are used as a sequence and the rightmost 1-digit as an error detection check-sum. It is not a proof of citizenship. It only guarantees identity; not rights, benefits or entitlements. AN is a digital identity, instantly verifiable online at the point of service (PoS), at anytime, anywhere, in a paperless way. It is assigned only to humans, not to corporate entities like companies or non-governmental organisations, unlike the PAN card. The government expects that it will enable under-privileged people to access basic rights and social security benefits, which they have been deprived so far due to lack of identity.
AN is designed to enable government agencies to deliver retail public services securely based on biometric data (fingerprint, iris scan and face photo), along with demographic data (name, age, gender, address, parent/ spouse name, mobile phone number) of a person. AN is portable, free from limitations of physical presence of a person at a given place. Thus is can be used for casting vote from anywhere using mobile phone or personal computer, availing social security benefits from anywhere e.g. drawing PDS ration from any shop etc.
AN also works as a financial address, i.e. it works as a bank account number. This is designed to help spread low cost, ubiquitous, branchless banking services in rural areas - called micro-ATM, as part of the Financial Inclusion initiative.
AN is valid all over India as a proof of identity, age and address. It is immensely helpful to migrant workers for employment and social security benefits. In case of change of personal information (mobile number, residence), the same can be updated with proof at Aadhaar Kendra, the permanent field-office.
AN is stored in a centralized database (CIDR) and linked to the basic demographics and biometric information – photograph, ten finger-prints and both iris – of each individual. It is verifiable online with the database server (CIDR) instantaneously, at a low cost. It is portable and robust enough to identify duplicate and fake identities from government and private databases. It is a randomly generated number, is sparsely populated in the database, designed not to be guessable, with no associated intelligence, and no profiling information such as caste, creed, religion or language. Since Aadhaar uses 11-digit for sequence, therefore it has an address space of 10 (100 billion). So AN can be assigned to 100 billion residents, and is designed not to get used up in the next 500 years. Upon the death of a person, the database record is marked as 'inactive', but is never deleted.
UIDAI operations
Website
The UIDAI website currently operates in five regional languages: Bengali, Gujarati, Kannada, Marathi, and Tamil, in addition to Hindi and English. It is planned to add five more languages at a later stage, Assamese, Malayalam, Oriya, Punjabi, and Telugu.
See also
External links
References
- http://uidai.gov.in/
- "About". UIDAI. Retrieved 2013-10-31.
- http://uidai.gov.in/images/commdoc/other_doc/A_UID_Numbering_Scheme.pdf
- ^ "'Aadhaar' is a number, not an ID card: Montek Singh Ahluwalia". NDTV.com. 2013-02-02. Retrieved 2013-10-31.
- http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/news-by-industry/banking/finance/banking/punch-in-recipients-aadhaar-number-to-transfer-funds/articleshow/23875312.cms
- http://www.thehindubusinessline.com/economy/subsidy-scheme-for-lpg-skids-on-apex-court-ruling-on-aadhaar/article5322416.ece
- https://funnel.hasgeek.com/5el/417-aadhaar-worlds-largest-biometric-identity-platform-200-trillion-biometric-matches-per-day-2-pb-of-data
- http://articles.economictimes.indiatimes.com/2012-02-07/news/31034068_1_aadhaar-project-unique-identification-authority-biometric-database
- http://uidai.gov.in/
- http://uidai.gov.in/UID_PDF/Working_Papers/UIDandNREGA.pdf
- http://uidai.gov.in/
- http://articles.economictimes.indiatimes.com/2013-09-20/news/42252490_1_uidai-website-new-delhi-five-regional-languages