UIDAI


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This is about preventing fraud at the source. If the Aadhaar number of a deceased person stays active, hackers or criminals can use that identity for unauthorized bank transactions, fraudulent welfare claims, or criminal activity. UIDAI’s message is clear: deactivated numbers are never reissued.

The Target: Ghost Identities

The agency’s strategy is two-fold:

  1. Mass Deactivation: They used multiple government data streams to identify and permanently deactivate over 20 million records. This is a crucial step in maintaining the integrity of the entire national database.

  2. Public Reporting Tool: Earlier this year, UIDAI launched a dedicated service on the myAadhaar portal where family members can report the death of a relative. The family member submits the Aadhaar number and the Death Registration Number, and UIDAI verifies it before deactivation. This is available in 25 states/UTs right now.

If you have a deceased family member whose Aadhaar is still active, you need to use that portal. It’s the official way to stop potential misuse.

Aadhar Card : Is your Aadhar Card being misused? Check with this trick
Aadhar Card : Is your Aadhar Card being misused? Check with this trick

New App, New Security

Alongside this massive cleanup, UIDAI launched a redesigned Aadhaar app to tighten up security for active users.

  • Biometric Lock: One-click lock/unlock for biometrics prevents unauthorized access.

  • Privacy Controls: Users can select exactly how much Aadhaar information they want to share.

  • Family Access: The app supports up to five family profiles on a single device.

This nationwide effort—the huge deactivation drive coupled with the high-security app—reflects a much larger strategy: making the Aadhaar ecosystem both clean and impenetrable.

Also Read:CS vs MBA: Which Degree Gets You Hired in India (2026)?

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Abhishek K

#UIDAI #Deactivates #Crore #Aadhaar #IDs #Prevent #Fraud #WhoWiki.org

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