The Hindu : Today's Paper / NATIONAL : Know how your UID is generated
BANGALORE, August 13, 2011 

Know how your UID is generated

DEEPA KURUP

Here's what happens behind the scenes of this gargantuan project

Eyes on you: Biometrics include capturing three sets of fingerprints and an 
image of the iris. - File photo
Eyes on you: Biometrics include capturing three sets of fingerprints and an 
image of the iris. - File photo 

At the Aadhaar technology centre in Marathahalli, a large team of technologists 
and software developers hack away at code that forms the backbone of India's
most ambitious citizen enrolment project seeking to create a biometric 
inventory of the second most populous country in the world.

Bangalore, which hosts both the Tech Centre and the Central Identities Data 
Repository, will now see the project go live with many more enrolment centres
and a steady ramp-up planned in coming weeks. The project, currently under way 
in select post offices here and in its final phase in Mysore and Tumkur
districts, has around 592 enrolment stations across the State, a number that 
will go up to over 800 in a month, top officials of the Unique Identification
Authority of India (UIDAI) told The Hindu .

An exercise that has drawn criticism primarily over privacy concerns and the 
lack of a cost-benefit analysis has courted ample controversy. But going by
the large number of people queuing up at Bangalore's General Post Office on any 
weekday, this 12-digit number has indeed drawn public interest. But how
is this number generated? What happens behind the scenes of this gargantuan 
project?

The process

Every citizen first goes through the step of document verification. Following 
this, demographic data on the citizen, classified under Know Your Resident
(KYR) and KYR+ (which are questions added on by the registrar) is entered into 
the Aadhaar client. A simple software client developed by the UIDAI, the
Aadhaar client stores demographic data before moving on to the more complicated 
process of recording and storing biometric data.

Biometrics include capturing three sets of fingerprints, four fingers on both 
hands and two thumbs, and an image of the iris. In the case of fingerprints,
a maximum of four tries are allowed; with agricultural workers or labourers or 
the elderly, when the lines are not clear enough, this is a problem.

The entire enrolment process is conducted offline. Once the enrolment is 
complete, the package is first encrypted using a 256-bit session encryption key.
Then, a 1,024-bit UIDAI public key is used to encrypt, the private key for 
which is stored within the application at the Aadhaar data centre, used by the
machine only during processing. 

After adding an additional layer of tamper-proofing, the packet is exported to 
the Aadhaar data centre in Marathahalli to be processed using external hard
disks or securely uploaded electronically. "This data can neither be tampered 
with nor opened," assures a senior UIDAI technology official, adding that
even data centre administrators do not have access to the data.

Securely stored

At the UIDAI Tech Centre, enrolment packets from across the country arrive to 
be processed daily. After the number is generated, after de-duplication, the
data is stored by the CIDR at its secure back-end. This data centre is the 
permanent abode for Aadhaar data, and houses servers and equipment that are
remotely managed from the tech centre.

A second such data centre, which will also serve as a back-up and a repository 
for enrolments in the north Indian States, is currently coming up in New
Delhi, officials said.
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Renuka E,
Section Officer,
ICT Centre for Visually Challlenged,
CHMK Library,
University ofCalicut,
Malappuram Dist.,
Kerala.
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