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NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden, known for his stand on government spying, tweeted on 21 January, with the link of an article criticising Aadhaar. Published in The Wire, the article written by former RAW Chief KC Verma hit out at Aadhaar and its misuse by banks and telecom companies.
In another tweet on Sunday, Snowden replied to the official handle of UIDAI (Unique Identification Authority of India) which claimed “Aadhaar is an identifier, not a profiling tool.”
The NSA whistleblower’s wrote: “That might be true if banks, landlords, hospitals, schools, telephone & internet companies were prohibited by law from asking for your #Aadhaar number.”
Earlier on 9 January, Snowden had tweeted about an FIR being filed against The Tribune reporter following an exposé on the leaks in the Aadhaar database.
Snowden wrote that journalists exposing such breaches should be given an award, instead of being probed. He further said that the one who actually deserves to be arrested is the UIDAI.
Whistleblower Edward Snowden, famous for his NSA document leaks in 2013, had on 5 January weighed in on the Aadhaar data breach debates, calling it any government’s “natural tendency.”
Retweeting a post by ZDnet’s Security Editor Zack Whittaker on the Aadhaar breach reports, Snowden had said when governments get personal information about citizens’ private lives “the result is abuse.”
Snowden commented on Whittaker’s tweet that linked to a news report on the Aadhaar data breach.
Snowden has been known for his stand on private security and the extent of governments spying on their people. Two years ago, in an online interaction on social media site Reddit on the right to privacy, Snowden had said:
Snowden, a former CIA employee and NSA contractor, made international headlines in 2013 when he revealed secret US surveillance programme details. He is now living at an undisclosed location in Russia, fearing persecution by his home country.
After Snowden’s NSA documents leak, it became commonplace for media houses to document the existence and functions of classified surveillance programs and their scope.
Snowden continues to seek asylum elsewhere in the world to escape prosecution by the US.
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