Massive Biometric Project Gives Millions of Indians an ID
Released on 04/19/2013
(upbeat techno music)
The idea that the government is scanning
the fingerprints and irises of every single
person in the country.
You tell that to people in America
and they're horrified.
To us it sounds like 1984
meets Minority Report.
But no one was worried about that in any
of the enrollment centers that I went to.
The thing is, so many people there are invisible
in a way that's hard to imagine
in the first world.
There's literally no record of their existence.
They can't prove when they were born,
who their parents are, whether they're citizens.
To those people there's a tremendous upside
to getting an official ID.
Part of why they're so accepting too
is that a lot of them barely understand
what's going on.
These are slum dwellers,
rural farmers, people who have zero experience
with this kind of technology.
Of course there are plenty of educated,
urban types in India who are concerned about
the civil liberties implications of all this,
as they should be.
The Aadaar program
could do a lot of good for India,
but it could also be very bad news
for the rights of individual Indians.
(upbeat techno music)
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