Hyderabad police have Orwellian plans for you; they’re building a surveillance hub

Something strange and worrisome is happening in Hyderabad. The police there want to collect records of every resident, regardless of whether or not the person is a suspect of any crime. And it doesn’t end there. They want to collect very specific details including phone numbers, relationships, voter identification numbers and Aadhaar numbers.

Almost like how the National Security Agency (NSA) in the US used the “collect it all" approach to surveillance. We found that out only when Edward Snowden leaked top secret NSA files.

The profile data collected will include the individual’s name, their father’s, mother’s and spouses names, date of birth, mobile number and contact number, apart from driving license, voter identification, Aadhaar, FIR numbers and case diaries

This approach to collecting citizens’ data poses a huge threat to an individual's privacy and is prone to abuse.

According to a tender floated by the Hyderabad City Police in 2016, the law enforcement agency wants to create what it calls the Integrated Information Hub (IIH), which will collect, tag and analyse user data from various internal and external sources.

The Architecture of 360 degree profiling under IIH platform

The Architecture of 360 degree profiling under IIH platform

The profile data collected will include the individual’s name, their father’s and mother’s names, spouse’s name and address, date of birth, mobile number and contact number apart from driving license, voter identification, Aadhaar and FIR numbers. The government will also gather other details to help identity a person along with records defining relationships and crime records, if any.

The proposal also includes mining of external data sources, the details of which are not mentioned in the tender document. But one can imagine this will include the user’s social media accounts, relationship information, camera footage and so on. All in all, it looks like the system collects everything that a regular citizen would like to protect.

Aadhaar is the key to matching profiles with external data sources

The system should have the ability to make request to the external databases on the basis of data fields (e.g. Aadhaar, Driving License No) and capture the response from the external database sources. - Quote from the tender

The tender document makes it clear that the Aadhaar number, along with other identifiers like passport number and voter ID, form what they call “unique identifiers” to match the external sources. Given the biggest unique identifier in India is Aadhaar, it is going to be used primarily for matching the external data sources.

Intelligence agencies around the world collect such information about people. What makes the IIH move unique is the ability to aggregate the data from different sources on the basis of unique identity. It’s for similar reasons countries like UK have abandoned their identity schemes.

There have always been concerns a about Aadhaar being used outside The Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI) for aggregating data for surveillance on citizens. Though the UIDAI has resisted sharing data with investigative agencies, it can’t stop third parties, both government and private, from aggregating the user data and building user profiles based on Aadhaar as the linking key. We have already seen police departments collecting Aadhaar information for innocuous acts like buying IPL tickets in the name of security.

Why should you be worried

But, just like in the real world government representatives are not allowed to enter our houses and collect items without a warrant, they shouldn’t be allowed collect information on us digitally either. Because, just like in the real world, there is good chance it will get abused.

While the intent of the system seems to be effective policing, it’s not just criminals or suspects that the IIH is trying to profile. It profiles everyone.

Governments across india are virtually making it impossible to access any kind of service without Aadhaar, despite the Supreme court ruling against it. Even private companies are making it impossible to conduct business with them. The Indian government’s argument that “Privacy is not a fundamental right” gives a boost to organisations across the country to collect and use personal details of citizens without consent or accountability measures in place.

What can be done

Aadhaar has become so big that it’s almost impossible to scrap it. It’s time that we ask for a full-fledged and widely discussed Aadhaar Bill instead of half baked money bill to evade Supreme Court ruling and reveal user data in the name of national security. We need to start working on the bill that is focused on protecting the overall user data not just within UIDAI but also the ones linked using it as it’s more obvious than ever that Aadhaar will be used as a surveillance primary key.


This post first appeared on FactorDaily as Hyderabad police have Orwellian plans for you; they’re building a surveillance hub. Edited by Prakriti.

1 Response

  1. andy says:

    looks like u r a novice. why do u fear when u have nothing to hide. thing aadhar like ssn. you will need it to get treatement @ doc office or getting cell phone or any kind of social services.
    stop opposing for the sake of opposition.