So, it’s little surprise Indian officials responded sharply to claims this week that one of these platforms — the vaccination database CoWIN — had been hacked. Apparently, a Telegram bot, when queried with any Indian’s phone number, would respond with various personal details including their date of birth, their unique ID number, and the location where they were vaccinated. A senior minister called these reports “mischievous” but only added to the confusion when he said that the data had been “previously stolen.”
Most Indians got tediously familiar with CoWIN in the first months of our vaccine rollout in 2021, when we had to keep refreshing its slightly buggy interface in hopes that an appointment would open up somewhere. In the end, it became a crucial part of the nation’s vaccination effort, producing uniform, machine-readable certificates, reminding us about booster shots, and so on. The government was rightly proud of this — sufficiently so that all Indian CoWIN certificates had Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s face on them.
A real data breach would therefore be a setback to India’s efforts to create a “third way” for technology governance that would privilege neither the state, as in China, nor Big Tech, as in the US. It will be hard to convince other countries to adopt our systems if they leak user data.
Currently, it’s falling short. For example, we don’t even know for certain how and by whom CoWIN was developed. In response to past freedom of information requests, the federal ministry in charge claimed it had no idea. That’s not exactly reassuring.
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