Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

India reassures confidence in Aadhaar after Moody's concern

The company questioned the reliability of biometric technologies, especially for manual labourers in hot, humid climates

India reassures confidence in Aadhaar after Moody's concern

THE Indian government has reassured confidence in its digital identification system, Aadhaar, after a Moody's report last week highlighted concerns about it like establishing authorisation and biometric reliability.

India's ministry of electronics & IT said on Monday (25) that the Moody's report "does not cite either primary or secondary data or research in support of the opinions presented in it".

The Aadhaar card, which is issued by the Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI), has a unique number tied to an individual's fingerprints, face and eye scan.

Moody's in its report had said that Aadhaar's system often results in service denials, and questioned the reliability of biometric technologies, especially for manual labourers in hot, humid climates.

The ministry, addressing the concerns, said that payments to workers under schemes like the country's Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (MGNREGS) is made by directly crediting money in their account and does not require the worker to authenticate using their biometrics.

The government also said that Moody's in its report ignores that biometric submission is also possible through contactless means like face authentication and iris authentication.

Retorting concerns made by the investors service on security and privacy vulnerabilities posed by Aadhaar, the government said that till date no breach has been reported from the Aadhaar database.

India's Supreme Court in 2018 upheld the validity of Aadhaar, but flagged privacy concerns and reined in a government push to make it mandatory for everything from banking to telecom services.

(Reuters)

More For You

Oil supply

Saudi Aramco and Shell say around one billion barrels of oil supply have been lost

iStock

Saudi Aramco chief warns oil market disruption may last until 2027

  • Saudi Aramco and Shell say around one billion barrels of oil supply have been lost.
  • Shipping through the Strait of Hormuz has plunged since the Iran war began.
  • Analysts warn prolonged disruption could trigger wider fuel shortages globally.

The global oil market is facing the prospect of a prolonged supply crisis as disruption in the Strait of Hormuz continues to choke one of the world’s most important energy routes. Saudi Aramco and Shell have both warned that unless shipping through the narrow waterway resumes soon, pressure on global fuel supplies could stretch well into 2027.

The Strait of Hormuz crisis, triggered by the ongoing Iran war and the US-led blockade around Iranian waters, has already removed an estimated one billion barrels of oil from global markets over the past two months, according to executives from the world’s biggest oil companies. The warning is likely to deepen concerns over rising oil prices, fuel shortages and further instability across global energy markets.

Keep ReadingShow less