me @ ur help

Showing posts with label hackers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hackers. Show all posts

Friday, August 12, 2011

Fears misuse of UID numbers

Fears misuse of UID numbers
The Aadhaar Number, or the Unique Identification Card (UID) that will create a database for 1.2 billion people in India, may go out of hand, leading cybersecurity expert R. Bhaskar says.

"The facility is ambitious and is sure to make functioning easy from the governance perspective. But at the moment, it is not clear how the government's plan for UID will work out," Bhaskar told IANS.

"There is some kind of certification or guarantee needed from companies that are pooling the database or will be handling it," he said on the sidelines of a seminar on cyberspace and democracy at the India International Centre here.UIDs, the UPA government's flagship programme chaired by Nandan Nilekani, seeks to accord each Indian a unique identification number.The Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI) is the nodal agency which has appointed registrars across the country to facilitate the enrolment process. Registrars, typically government departments and public sector organisations, have in turn appointed the agency to collect data.

Over 200 such agencies, including Wipro, Comat Technologies, Alankit and Virgo Softech, are involved in enrollment and will issue a 12-digit number.Within the proposed process, it is to be delivered in 20-30 days at the person's address by speed post, after verification of biometrics and demographic data. Data verification is done by the authority under a centralised system.

"The immediate threat may not be realised now. But in a span of next five years, when the cards will be rolled out completely, we may also witness cases of cyber mischief such as hacking," Bhaskar said.

He further warned that cybermischief may also evolve into cybercrime that poses serious threat to country's national security.

While the UID guarantees uniqueness and a universal identity through a centralised online identity verification process, experts point out that biometric information such as iris scan and fingerprinting lead to a misuse of an individual's personal information.Experts have also raised concerns on the number getting misused by anti-socials such as terrorists, since they can get it issued through fake identities during large-scale enrolments.

"If the key to the database is owned by non-sovereign entities, then we really need certification and stronger laws that sort the issue of licensing of the UIDs," Bhaskar concluded.

The UID cards are expected to ease the administrative pathway for citizens, as one card will serve all purposes related with identification.Currently, on average, 150,000 enrolments are done each day. The number of enrolments is expected to reach six million per day by October. The task, therefore, is daunting, since the latest data places the country's population at 1.21 billion.

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

Will shutting down WikiLeaks be an easy task?


Democratic countries are allegedly trying to shut down the whistleblower site WikiLeaks. But first, they have a legal tangle to solve.
“Julian Assange is an Australian citizen. And he's based his servers in Sweden. Sweden supports freedom of speech and is not beholden to American law,” said www.thebiggeek.com Technology Writer Gagandeep Singh Sapra.
Non-state hackers could, illegally, digitally attack the servers that contain the site's content. Or find weaknesses in the site's programming code. But when CNN-IBN tried to just find where the WikiLeaks servers are located, we got addresses from the US to Paris to Sweden.
“WikiLeaks is hosted on thousands of servers worldwide. If you disable one, another takes up the load. They are all ex-hackers themselves, so their code is very, very strong. Then again, they use mirroring sites, so if one website is shut down, it automatically points to another, still functioning location,” said Gagandeep.
China throttles all sensitive websites, at the physical node where internet cables enter their country. But proxy servers based in other countries can fool those censors. Sites like Gopher turn hot pages into innocent emails, letting even the Chinese read the WikiLeaks files.
But instead of shutting down WikiLeaks, shouldn't we try to save it? The Radia tapes, the Commonwealth Games, the Adarsh housing scam, think of the dirt an Indian version of WikiLeaks could unveil and the good that would do for all of us.