This is a shocker of a report published in the Economic Times on 3 December 2013, at http://articles.economictimes.indiatimes.com/2013-12-03/news/44710564_1_uidai-chairman-nandan-nilekani-uid-data-in-q-tel
I reproduce it here:
MongoDB startup hired by Aadhaar got funds from CIA VC arm
BANGALORE : Two weeks ago, Max Schireson, chief
executive of MongoDB, a New York-based technology startup, was in New Delhi to sew up a
very important contract for his company — with the Unique Identification
Authority of India (UIDAI).
I reproduce it here:
MongoDB startup hired by Aadhaar got funds from CIA VC arm
Lison
Joseph, ET Bureau Dec 3, 2013, 08.04AM IST
The contract is yet to
be announced but what could raise eyebrows is the fact that MongoDB is part-funded by the US ' Central Intelligence Agency.
The company is expected to help in capturing and analysing data related to the
ambitious plan to issue a unique identity number — Aadhaar — to over a billion
citizens.
MongoDB, which makes software that helps
manage large databases, especially unstructured data, has raised $231 million
(Rs1,400 crore) since being founded in 2007. Some of its funding is from
In-Q-Tel, the not-for-profit venture capital arm of CIA.
While MongoDB lists In-Q-Tel as one of its
investors on its website, the company has not disclosed the quantum of funding
received from it. The fund's stated mission is to identify, adapt and deliver
innovative technology solutions to support the missions of CIA and the broader US intelligence
community.
Besides CIA, In-Q-Tel works with National Geospatial-Intelligence
Agency, Defense Intelligence Agency and Department of Homeland Security Science
and Technology Directorate.
"Once an investment is made, IQT (the
fund) works with the company and the intelligence community partner agency to
complete a work program and facilitate solution delivery," the fund's
website said. The quote describes IQT's relationship with any company in which
it invests in and is not specific to MongoDB.
Neither UIDAI nor MongoDB responded to queries from
ET on whether the CIA link was considered before entering into a partnership.
UIDAI Chairman Nandan Nilekani did
not respond to emails, messages and phone calls.
A senior UIDAI official confirmed the agency
has entered into an agreement with MongoDB and that the company's database
software is already being used for analysing the pace at which registration of
new beneficiaries is taking place.
It is not clear if
MongoDB's vendor relationship would be with UID directly or with one of the
system integrators that UID works with. Schireson, the CEO, was also one of the
national co-chairs for Technology for Obama, an interest group that campaigned
for the reelection of President Barack Obama after
his first term.
There is no evidence in the public domain that
the firm is controlled or significantly influenced by the CIA in any manner.
But the revelations of Edward Snowden, a former
NSA contractor-turned-whistleblower that US intelligence agencies routinely
intercepted communication in Europe and Asia, including in India has raised
concerns. Experts said the UID's centralised design could pose a risk, where
even a single mistake can make the whole system disproportionately vulnerable.
"The risk exposure because of CIA
involvement (could be that) if MongoDB is a data controller, then secret courts
and secret court orders could be used to get access to the UID data," said
Sunil Abraham, executive director at the Centre for Internet and Society.
He added that even if UIDAI is only using the source code without getting into
a commercial relationship with MongoDB, they should audit the source code to
check if CIA has introduced any back doors. "This is because Snowden has
told us that the army of mathematicians working for the US government has compromised some
standards even though they were developed in an open, participatory and
transparent fashion." MongoDB, whose name is a play on the word humongous,
competes with Oracle, IBM and Microsoft. It has around
320 employees and some 600 customers. At its latest round of $150 million in
fund-raising in October, the company was valued at about $1.2 billion,
according to Bloomberg. Other investors include Intel Capital,Salesforce-.com, Red Hat and
Sequoia.
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