 Even in one of our worst imaginations, we hadn't imagined that you could pay somebody on WhatsApp 500 rupees and get access to a database of a billion people. Tribune story is not the first story and it's not going to be the last story about security leaks by Aadhar. Bharti Airtel is one of the ASAs. And Bharti Airtel was charged with taking your Aadhar information and opening payment bank accounts in your name and diverting subsidies to those bank accounts. So the fraud is at the core. And these guys have no idea about security or no conception of security, right? And they were just putting out people's information along with bank information out in the open. So you go to what is called a point of sale terminal, right? So you go to your Kenara store, you go to an Airtel shop, a Vodafone shop to give your Aadhar, to give you fingerprints and your Aadhar number. Now what is to say that the fingerprint scanner or the iris scanner they have, that there is not a skimmer, right? Which is making a copy of your biometrics. They already have your Aadhar number. So if that guy is a criminal, your Kenara store is a criminal, he can easily take a copy of your biometrics. He has your Aadhar number and he can impersoninate you. But even assuming that that guy is honest, but let's say the laptop or the PC to which the scanner is connected to, let's say that has a virus. That has a malware, right? And that malware intercepts the biometrics and skims it off. So they have stolen your biometrics. So you can talk about scammers, about phishing gangs, about... It's also a national security threat, right? So people from abroad can get intimate information about every citizen and the government seems to be callous about that. If you look at it, you cannot cancel Aadhar number. It's for life. So if your Aadhar gets compromised, you are done for life. You cannot change the password because your biometrics can't be changed, right? And there is no limit, right? The Aadhar is linked to your every bank account, supposedly, right? The government is forcing you to do that. It is linked to your phone. It is linked to every... Now they are saying that to get admitted to school, you need an Aadhar card to go to a hospital, you need an Aadhar card. Even when you are dying, you need an Aadhar card. Even after your death, you need an Aadhar card for your relatives to get your death certificate. And so everything is linked to this one number, which cannot be revoked, whose pin you can't change. It is... by design, it's a security nightmare. The biometric database has never been audited by anybody. You know, it was interesting to hear Mr. Pandey's explanation of what this is. First, he says that this is a 16-digit number. You don't have to give your number then to everybody. But if there are some people where you are mandated to give it, then you have to give your UID number there. So there are places where you are going to display your UID number. Then they say that there are... he says there are, you know, large numbers of people in this country who won't be able to operate the system of getting, you know, of generating a 16-digit number. They can continue using the UID number. So it is not... it's optional in the sense that if you are a geek and you know how to keep, you know, playing the system where you can, like he said, every second you can generate a 16-digit number, that's fine. But for most people, they are not going to have this choice. They are not going to know how to exercise this choice.