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On Thursday, 4 January, The Tribune published a report on how it was able to access the Aadhaar details for over 1 billion people for a measly sum of Rs 500. As the story was picked up by most other mainstream news outlets, both the BJP and UIDAI issued statements claiming that no breach had in fact taken place and that the report was entirely false.
The paper then issued a point-by-point rebuttal to the claims made by UIDAI.
The Tribune stuck to it’s report of a massive breach for just Rs 500, against the UIDAI’s assertion that no such breach occurred.
With this claim, the publication states it’s an assertion that misuse has occurred. The personal details like name, email id, phone numbers, addresses and photos are accessible to the unauthorised persons for all Aadhaar numbers.
Lodging of FIRs also show that something is amiss, The Tribune wrote.
This assertion makes it seem that access to a person’s identfication is of no consequence, as long as the biometrics weren’t taken.
The UIDAI had also asked 210 central and state governments to remove from public domain the private details of people which had been mistakenly displayed.
Revealing data to “authorised agencies” is safe but there are several people with unauthorised access, The Tribune said.
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