‘Crooks Exploiting Tech Vulnerabilities in Aadhaar System,’ Delhi Police Writes to UIDAI

In an instance cited by Delhi Police, it notes that as many as 12 bank accounts were opened under the names of different persons, even though the photographs on the Aadhaar cards were all of the same individual’s.

New Delhi: The Delhi Police has flagged several alleged vulnerabilities in the Aadhaar system that are being exploited by crooks, Times of India has reported.

Police investigation into recent cases, including a bank fraud, has allegedly led it to discover vulnerabilities like the fact that the Unique Identification Authority of India system was not matching facial biometrics while generating IDs.

As many as 12 bank accounts had been opened under the names of different persons, even though the photographs on the Aadhaar cards were all of the same individual’s, police told the UIDAI in a note, accessed by the paper.

Miscreants are also allegedly using credentials of authorised Aadhaar agents, who can log in only from a government institution. To bypass GPS tagging, miscreants reconfigured their laptops repeatedly to sync them with designated government institutions.

The Aadhaar system is also, notably, unable to differentiate between a silicone fingerprint and live fingerprint. This led miscreants to use silicone prints of pliant authorised agents, cops said. The same goes for iris scans, which are supposed to figure out if a live person has appeared. However, this check can be fooled with the use of colour print outs of people.

Among discoveries was also the fact that the Aadhaar system considered the 10 fingers of an individual as one single identity and not as 10 different identities. Thus, several cards were issued to individuals who switched up their finger prints, eg. placed their index at the ring finger slot.

In 2018, the UIDAI itself had submitted to the Supreme Court that authentication failure rates are as high as 6% for fingerprints and 8.5% for iris.

Among Aadhaar’s various critiques is its technical inadequacy.

The Wire, among other news outlets, has covered Aadhaar fraud, including the crime of faking cards or mass producing them.

Debates have been rife on how the system impinges on people’s privacy while at once having large data security gaps.

Aadhaar Link Threatens Sanctity of Electoral Rolls

While the government’s goal of digitising electoral rolls sounds laudable in principle, it should first address how the rights of the people would be protected and how it would control the Aadhaar database’s potential for fraud.

This piece was first published on The India Cable – a premium newsletter from The Wire & Galileo Ideas – and has been republished here. To subscribe to The India Cable, click here.

Last year ended with a startling policy change as the Election Laws (Amendment) Bill was passed in both houses of Parliament. The Aadhaar database was linked with the Election Commission database to remove duplicates and fake entries from electoral rolls. Such a move can improve the sanctity of the electoral rolls and strengthen the functioning of democracy. But for it to do that, two prominent concerns need to be addressed first.

In a note for the Data Governance Network, in January 2021, we argued that linking the two databases has more negatives than positives. A year later, our key critique stands: we need to strengthen laws that protect the rights of individuals before passing this measure. Aadhaar has shown much promise but equally, it has been dangerous. Linkage should have been done after two conditions were met. Since the amendment has been passed, the government can reduce the fallout by addressing the following concerns.

Also read: Book Review: Why Collection of Information From Law-Abiding Citizens Is Still Problematic

First, India needs a data protection bill regulating the use and sharing of personal data between citizens and the government, and between government agencies. We lack a framework for safeguarding individual rights, which is worrying for multiple reasons. There have been examples of targeted surveillance using Aadhaar information and demographic data. In Andhra Pradesh, 5.167 million families’ locations could be tracked on a website run by the state government, using religion and caste as search criteria.

Similarly, there are a range of instances where the lack of such an Act has hampered privacy rights. For example, the Delhi Police had sought the electoral rolls of Northeast Delhi to compare names and faces of possible rioters while investigating the 2020 riots. The Election Commission of India explicitly stated that sharing names and photos of voters from its electoral rolls is against its own policies, but they still did so. While the ECI argued that it only allowed a physical inspection of voter rolls, voters’ privacy was still violated without a legal mandate. A recent Joint Parliamentary Committee on the Personal Data Protection Bill, too, raises serious concerns about the latitude government agencies have, essentially exempt from data protection standards, which is an ancillary issue that still needs to be addressed.

Second, there is scope for fraud within the Aadhaar database. In multiple court cases, the UIDAI has admitted that it has no information about enrolment operators, agencies or even their location while enrolling someone in Aadhaar. There is, thus, no way to correct for dubious enrolment practices. In the past, the UIDAI has admitted that duplicate Aadhaar cards are an issue. This will affect electoral rolls.

Also read: Aadhaar Fraud is Not Only Real, But is Worth More Closely Examining

Consider the mandatory linking of Aadhaar and PAN cards, where Aadhaar cards are used to verify the identity of the PAN holder. The authenticity of the Aadhaar card determines the authenticity of the PAN card. In a court case in 2018, the UIDAI has earlier accepted the scope of fraud in Aadhaar, and thus this could extend to fraud in PAN. It has broader implications such as legitimising benami financial transactions by those who obtained a PAN card with a fake Aadhaar. The scope for such wide-scale fraud can result in the proliferation of fake voter IDs, undermining the main purpose of the entire exercise: to eliminate duplicate voters.

By not addressing these questions, the stated intention of the legislation is undermined since it threatens the sanctity of the electoral roll. The haste with which the amendment is passed, and the lack of public debate despite the presence of an informed and vocal civil society, already undermines the view that databases should be integrated to reduce fraud and increase efficiency. More harm should not be done on this front.

While the modalities of integration would be seen when the government publishes rules, it should clarify how people’s rights will be protected. Digitising the electoral rolls, in principle, sounds laudable. Nonetheless, the government cannot dodge its responsibility to the people it claims to be protecting. Democracy demands accountability, and a move that could deprive citizens of their fundamental rights must be addressed to alleviate concerns.

Vibhav Mariwala studied History and Anthropology at Stanford University and is based in New York City.

Prakhar Misra is an independent researcher in Mumbai.

Are People Who Sign up for Aadhaar Actually Who They Say They Are? UIDAI May Not Know

With the Aadhaar agency noting that there is a significant gap between enrolments done and documents handed over by operators, what does this mean for e-KYC and fraud?

The Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI) has for six years quietly struggled with a problem that has consequences for its ability to detect fraudulent enrolments and implications for its utility as a sprawling and integrated identification system.

The problem: Are the people who sign up for an Aadhaar number actually who they say they are?  Or, to be more precise,  are all of UIDAI’s enrolment agencies  actually collecting and verifying the ID proof of people who sign up for Aadhaar?

Internal UIDAI documentation shows that for a substantial chunk of enrolments, it just may not be sure.

According to the agency’s internal correspondence with its regional offices, this is mainly because a large number of enrolment agencies and registrars have dragged their feet over a crucial part of the sign-up process: handing over to UIDAI the physical documents that are part of each Aadhaar enrolment they handle.

While these prolonged delays have multiple explanations, some of which are mundane, they nevertheless raise troubling questions over the issue of fraudulent enrolment.

One internal UIDAI estimate – which was part of a set of documents sent by a whistleblower to nine Supreme Court justices in late 2017, a couple of months before the Aadhaar hearings – indicates that the agency allegedly does not have access to identification documents (proof of identity, proof of address) for up to 38% of total Aadhaar enrolments. While parts of these documents could be corroborated, The Wire could not independently verify the final estimate.

How does this work?

Aadhaar identity, to put it simply, consists of two parts: body (biometrics) and biography (demographics).

When enrolment agencies sign up people for Aadhaar, they take their biometrics through scanning and record their demographic information by asking them to submit a number of documents. This includes documentation that verifies a person’s proof of identity (PoI), proof of address (PoA) and date of birth (DoB). These documents can be photocopies of anything from a driver’s licence to a ration card.

The UIDAI’s document management policy – which was written along with Hewlett Packard (HP) – outlines the process that all enrolment agencies and registrars must follow in collecting and collating physical documents submitted during enrolment.

A crucial part of process involves handing over these physical documents to HP, which is what UIDAI calls the the document management system (DMS) agency. HP will then store those documents and digitise them for future access by UIDAI.

An Aadhaar enrollment generates an enrollment ID (EID) and documents are typically attached with an EID, digitised and stored for later retrieval in the CIDR.

Why is this important? Namely because the process of digitising the physical documents allows UIDAI to audit the values entered by the operator at the time of enrolment, if the need arises. It is an important check to ensure the trustworthiness of the Aadhaar database for eKYC.

‘Significant gap’

In December 2015, in an office memorandum circulated to all of its regional offices, the UIDAI noted sternly that there was a “significant gap in enrollments done and documents submitted by Registrars/EAs to the DMS agency for Phase 1 as well as Phase II”.

The note then goes lay out a new process to be followed for the “reconstruction of missing DMS” whereby the DMS agency would share a list of all enrolment IDs for which accompanying documents are “missing”.

Using this information, the UIDAI stressed, all enrolment agencies and registrars were supposed to hurry up and hand over the physical documents (photocopies of PAN cards, ration cards, passports, driver’s licenses etc) they took during the enrolment process.

Screenshot of UIDAI's office memorandum in December 2015. Credit: The Wire

Screenshot of UIDAI’s office memorandum in December 2015. Credit: The Wire

These instructions came after a slew of show-cause notices issued to non-state registrars in October 2015 over “non-submission of documents” and plans to schedule “reconciliation meetings” that would track the process of reconstruction in the months ahead.

Despite this increased push, the UIDAI, it appears, wasn’t satisfied with fidelity of the process. In April 2016, it quietly rolled out a feature that allowed enrolment agencies (EAs) to scan the identification documents themselves. In a notice titled “Mandatory Scanning of Documents Through Enrolment Clients”, it announced that individual EAs no longer had to hand over documents to the DMS agency but could scan it themselves.

The only catch? This system was rolled out only for states where Aadhaar saturation was greater than 80%. There are two broad implications of this decision:

1) Firstly, UIDAI knew that the existing offline document management system had problems, both security and logistical in nature, and yet introduced it anyway.

2) It appears as if the agency initially preferred the quicker, and less secure, method of using a flawed document management strategy to increase Aadhaar penetration.

Stemming the dam

Nearly nine months later, the UIDAI issued a set of guidelines in January 2017 that appeared to allow “offline scanning of ADMS documents” to all enrolment agencies and registrars across the country.

In the accompanying office memorandum, the Aadhaar authority once again acknowledges the problem that it faced, stating that a “large number of documents” had not been handed over by enrolment centres.

“It is understood that there are a large number of documents lying at enrolment centres, for which the EA [enrolment agency] is responsible for safe-keeping. Thus, to mitigate Registrar and EAs liability in case of loss of documents, the UIDAI is providing an opportunity for EAs to scan the pending documents at their end and upload to CIDR,” the notice states.

How big is the problem?

In November 2017, a person who only identifies himself as a “qualified and responsible citizen” sent a series of documents to nine Supreme Court justices. At least two judges confirmed to The Wire receipt of the papers.

These documents, which The Wire has reviewed, contain a list of Aadhaar enrolment agencies and a corresponding number of enrolments that are allegedly missing accompanying documentation.

It estimates that 38% of total Aadhaar enrolments (45 crore out of 115 crore successful enrolments) have “missing documents”. That is, enrolment agencies and registrars have not transferred the accompanying PoI (proof of identity) or PoA (proof of address) documentation of 45 crore enrolments to UIDAI.

To what extent can we trust these figures? The Wire corroborated a number of things including the enrolment agency codes (publicly available with UIDAI) and successful total enrolments by operator, but could not independently verify the final estimate of 38%.

A detailed questionnaire asking about the extent of missing documents was sent to UIDAI CEO Ajay Bhushan Pandey and Vikash Shukla, Head of Media Outreach and Publicity, last week. This story will be updated if and when a reply is received.

It is noteworthy that right to information (RTI) queries on this issue have been stonewalled. An RTI request filed by Anupam Saraph, had asked UIDAI to provide the breakup of PoI/PoA for every Aadhaar generated; what methods of identification (passport, ration card etc) were used.

The request was met with the response “the information is not compiled/available”, even though as per the office memorandum, we know that the UIDAI has that information broken down to the enrolment agency level.

A more official source of missing documents, however, comes from UIDAI itself (archive).  A tucked away corner of its website gives details of “DMS pendency” for over 600 enrolment agencies for four months in 2016: a significant 7.8 crore Aadhaar enrolments were missing accompanying physical documentation between February 2016 and June 2016.

Why is this a threat?  

There could be multiple explanations for why these documents are missing.

Some of the reasons are mundane. For instance, logistical problems between enrolment agencies, registrars and the DMS agency could delay in the handing over of documents. A senior executive of one large enrolment agency confirmed that delays in picking up documents are natural, especially in less-connected and rural parts of the country, as it involves multiple levels of coordination.

Other reasons include physical documentation getting lost or destroyed by accident – a terrible nuisance for Aadhaar holders, who are forced to re-submit their documents or re-apply all over again.

There is another reason, however, whose implications are more troubling and sinister: namely that some of these documents are ‘missing’ because they simply don’t exist and that they are representative of fraudulent enrolments.

In 2012, the ‘missing documents’ problem translating into fraud came back to haunt the UIDAI and prove this last point. The Wire has it in its possession the FIR details of the ILF&S- Hyderabad scam, which while reported in 2012, did not nearly get the attention it deserved.

The scam involved  two different modus operandi:

1) The criminals enrolled ‘people’ through the biometric exception route to bypass the UIDAI’s deduplication system.

2) They also enrolled ‘people’ using their ration cards as proof of identity/proof of address with the document management system.

As per initial media reports, the operator enrolled 30,000 people in 2 months of which 870 were biometric exceptions. The kicker? Most of these enrolments were fraudulent.

When the investigators tried to locate the proof of identity/proof of address documentation, they found that the DMS agency did not have a copy of the identity documents and hence all of them were fraudulent.

When the whole enrolment system was audited for biometric exception misuse, the UIDAI discovered that operators all over the country had fraudulently enrolled 3.84 lakh people through the biometric exemption route.

It is puzzling therefore that the UIDAI not conduct an audit or launch an investigation into the issue of missing documents to determine how many potentially fraudulent PoI/PoA-based enrolments there could be out there.

The UIDAI may believe that the answer is zero – but that clearly isn’t the case. Would such an exercise have raised uncomfortable questions over the rapid speed of Aadhaar enrolment over the last six years?

National security issues

Over the last six years, missing documents have been a continuously-repeating story.

The following publicly-reported incidents prove that Aadhaar generation  without PoI/PoA documentation or verification are quite common. What makes this situation worse is that the government has implicitly encouraged the usage of ‘Aadhaar cards’ as a commonly accepted method of identification, even thought it was never meant for that purpose.

–> Zeebo Asalina, an Uzbek national was caught with a “real” Aadhaar that identified her as Duniya Khan, residing in Delhi. –

–> Pakistani, Bangladeshi and Rohingya refugees have been arrested with Aadhaar.

–> A Chinese national was arrested with Aadhaar (June 2018).

–> Only 188 of the 418 consumers were traceable in Delhi, after Aadhaar based PDS was introduced (55% were untraceable in their current address)

Aadhaar as a society-wide identification method

The basis for using Aadhaar as eKYC is the assumed sanctity of the database. When a significant percentage of the database has missing PoI/PoA documents and the UIDAI refuses to provide straight answers to these questions, it is obvious that the problem is indeed large, as the above checks show.

The biggest problem with  ‘missing documents’  – if a single Aadhaar is repurposed or one person gets two Aadhaar numbers – becomes less of an issue if the UIDAI’s system of ‘deduplication’ and authentication works as advertised. However, there is enough public data available to show that at least 5.32 lakh Aadhaar duplicates do exist and these are acknowledged duplicates, till August 2017.

As acknowledged by Triveni Singh, the IPS officer who investigated the UP Aadhaar hack scam, one of the operators arrested did have two Aadhaar numbers (7:18). Even if one of them had a missing PoI/PoA, then that Aadhaar is a “pure ghost”. Thus missing identity documents create scope for fraud, when biometric deduplication itself is not deterministic and is probabilistic.

Besides this, the UIDAI’s behavior does not leave its users with a sense of confidence. While it did ban enrollment agencies with questionable or fraudulent behaviour temporarily, they are allowed to come back to the ecosystem, as it would impact metrics (enrollment coverage). This is very similar to how it allowed Airtel Payment bank to restart operations – in what some believe as an attempt to shore up falling authentication attempts – after banning it from using e-KYC services.

In this aspect, the system of Aadhaar enrolment resembles a poorly-run ponzi scheme, where any fall in expansion brings the curtains down. So agents delegated to run the enrolment scheme may get banned for cheating too much, but are always brought back quietly when the storm dies down.

Aadhaar Fraud is Not Only Real, But is Worth More Closely Examining

An online examination of publicly reported incidents shows that contrary to its proponents’ claims, Aadhaar has indeed facilitated a range of frauds.

Aadhaar, India’s biometric authentication number, is often touted to be the ‘most trusted ID’ in the country. One of the arguments made in favour of Aadhaar is that it is more reliable compared to other IDs which can be easily faked or forged.

In the ongoing Supreme Court hearings, the Indian government and the Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI), the agency implementing the Aadhaar project, have repeatedly argued that Aadhaar will help curb ills like terrorism and banking fraud by ensuring that only “genuine” persons get access to mobiles, and banking services.

Keeping aside the fact that such arguments suggest a complete misunderstanding (or perhaps intentional misrepresentation) of what causes terrorism and banking frauds, a question remains: is Aadhaar as reliable and infallible as it is claimed to be? Contrary to the claims of curbing fraud, there have been various news reports which suggest that fake and forged Aadhaar details have facilitated frauds and unscrupulous activities. That Aadhaar could open the door to identity fraud and identity theft is something that has not been fully understood yet.

In the absence of any official data on this issue, a Google search was done for four sets of keywords – ‘fake Aadhaar’, ‘forged Aadhaar’, ‘Aadhaar fraud’ and ‘Aadhaar scam’ – to explore this vulnerability further.

The aim of the search was to get a better sense of the extent to which Aadhaar was being used for frauds and what made such use possible.

About 100 different cases (31 of which are from 2018) from all over the country were found where fake or forged Aadhaar was used. The full list can be accessed here.

A snippet of the online search for Aadhaar fraud. Credit: The Wire

A snippet of the online search for Aadhaar fraud. Credit: The Wire

Even this number is quite likely to be an underestimate as the search was restricted to only English media outlets. It is important to note that these cases are not meant to be exhaustive nor representative, but instead, seek to bring to light an issue that has not received much attention.

A long list of frauds

The search reveals that Aadhaar has been used for a wide range of purposes – carrying out land transfers, procuring passports, getting loans, casting votes, obtaining other IDs, siphoning off ration grains, etc. These include cases of ‘identity theft’ – Aadhaar details of persons have been altered, or Aadhaar details have been forged by changing the photographs and names and taking scans. The genuine holders of Aadhaar have subsequently found themselves in a soup when they were told that loans in their name were not honoured or land transfers in their name were carried out without consent. Such instances are especially striking given that identity theft is precisely what Aadhaar was supposed to fix.

While most of the cases involved a single or few persons indulging in petty frauds, a third of the cases were related to rackets where fake or forged Aadhaar were being mass-produced. The methods involved in these cases varied – the two most common were Aadhaar numbers being issued based on fake or forged documents, and details like name, photographs being forged using rudimentary editing techniques and printers. There have also been instances of biometric and/or demographic details (fingerprints, photographs, names and addresses) being altered at the stage of enrollment. In a few cases, sophisticated methods were used to exploit loopholes in the enrollment process to generate fake Aadhaar numbers. The most prominent of these was the case of a gang in Uttar Pradesh that was caught generating Aadhaar for fictitious persons by cloning the fingerprints of Aadhaar enrollment operators.

A man goes through the process of eye scanning for the Unique Identification database system, also known as Aadhaar, at a registration centre in New Delhi, India, January 17, 2018. Picture taken January 17, 2018. Credit: Reuters/Saumya Khandelwal – RC1F67907F80

The usual official response has been to discredit such reports by stating that no authentic Aadhaar numbers were generated in these cases – that they were simply instances of forgery. Going by the various methods of fraud employed, this justification is only partly correct. In 45 cases, either valid Aadhaar numbers were generated (for instance using fake/forged documents) or the Aadhaar details in the database altered (for instance, using the online detail updating facility).

Moreover, this UIDAI argument misses a key point: irrespective of the method involved, Aadhaar seems to have become extremely easy to fake or forge in paper form and use as ID for a range of services including to obtain SIM cards, open bank accounts, obtain loans, book hotel rooms, get married in court, prove identity for air and train travel, etc. That many of these instances did not involve UIDAI issuing an authentic Aadhaar number does not change the fact that fake or forged Aadhaar details have been used to carry out fraud. 

In addition to the cases of forgery and fakes, 17 cases of Aadhaar-enabled banking frauds were compiled by Vipul Paikra, an independent researcher (also available here). In a country with low financial and technological literacy, it is easy for people to fall prey to various types of frauds, especially phishing scams.

A member of parliament recently lost Rs 27,000 after revealing an Aadhaar one-time-password (OTP) to fraudsters over the phone. In another instance, con-men tricked persons on the pretext of linking their Aadhaar to their PAN (issued by the income-tax department for tracking financial transactions) into revealing an OTP which was then used to change the linked-mobile number in the Aadhaar database. Such instances highlight the need for authorities to raise awareness about how to use Aadhaar and clarify what information is not supposed to be shared.

On the latter, unfortunately, the UIDAI has itself spoken with a forked tongue – they have claimed that Aadhaar numbers are not supposed to be confidential every time data leaks have been identified, while at the same time issuing notices urging people to be careful when sharing Aadhaar numbers.

It is worth recalling that Aadhaar is designed to be a number, not a card. In fact, the word ‘card’ does not figure even once in the Aadhaar Act. Aadhaar is supposed to be an identification number to establish the identity of a person using their biometrics. Since Aadhaar cards are often simply Aadhaar details printed on normal paper using standard printers, the ‘card’ does not come with any security features. While the QR code allows checking for authenticity, these checks are rarely ever performed. Further, a recent press release by the UIDAI cautioned persons against getting their Aadhaar laminated or obtaining Aadhaar ‘smart cards’, stating that the QR code on them often cannot be used. Despite this serious lack of credibility, the paper-based Aadhaar ‘card’ continues to be accepted as a valid proof of identity for a range of services.

Neither Aadhaar ‘card’ reliable, nor Aadhaar-based biometric authentication

As its scale and use has expanded, several aspects of Aadhaar have created cause for worry. Regular reports of data leaks have raised doubts about the reliability of the data-security infrastructure. Most recently, a security researcher identified an online dashboard of the Andhra Pradesh government that was publicly displaying Aadhaar numbers linked to large amounts of personal information including addresses and bank details which were compiled through Aadhaar. Moreover, the fact that the dashboard allowed households to be precisely geo-located by caste and religion highlights the grave implications of Aadhaar on privacy.

Importantly, recent evidence has raised serious concerns about the reliability of Aadhaar even for biometric authentication – the feature that makes Aadhaar more reliable than other identification documents. Mandatory biometric authentication to receive welfare benefits has led to increased transaction costs and serious exclusion problems. According to a recent submission to the Supreme Court by the UIDAI itself, authentication failure rates are as high as 6% for fingerprints and 8.5% for iris. A related Supreme Court presentation by the CEO of UIDAI suggests that recent failures are even higher (about 12%) for ‘government services’. It is worrying that biometric authentication remains mandatory for welfare programmes in various states despite evidence of such high failure rates.  

To add to these serious concerns, the results from the online search suggest that contrary to its proponents’ claims, Aadhaar has facilitated a range of frauds. They also highlight the urgent need for closely monitoring the rapidly expanding use of Aadhaar ‘cards’ and increasing awareness about Aadhaar usage and vulnerabilities.

Further research is however needed to better understand both, the role of Aadhaar in curbing fraud, and the extent to which it enables fraud.  

Anmol Somanchi (anmol.somanchi94@gmail.com) is a graduate of Development Studies from TISS, Mumbai and is currently with a development consultancy based in New Delhi. Views expressed here are personal.