In
2016, during regular inspections at the Jawaharlal Nehru Technological
University, authorities found 903 fake faculty members. There were 903 fake ID
cards with names of faculty members appearing in more than one engineering
college.
In
certain cases, a faculty member was found to be working in nearly ten colleges
at once.
And
not just in JNTU, the problem of fake faculty and fake teachers is a widespread
issue across the country.
Teacher
absenteeism in schools, especially in some government schools in rural areas
has been an issue for a while. There are several instances where teachers do
not show up to work or send someone on their behalf.
Some
states such as Uttar Pradesh have even gone to the extent of putting up pictures of "real" teachers on walls in an
attempt to check the problem of fake teachers.
Over
the years, the attendance system has been evolving. Today, biometric attendance
system is quite popular where every teacher, faculty or even an employee
punches in his fingerprint to register his attendance. Nearly every
organization and institution has a biometric attendance system today.
But
this method isn’t fool-proof either. Anyone’s fingerprint, such as the peon,
can be registered in the system under one’s name.
One
solution that is being considered to keep attendance in check is an Aadhaar-based
attendance system.
The
central government has already implemented this for all its employees.
National
Informatics Centre (NIC) Department of Electronics & Information Technology
Government of India has implemented what is called the Aadhaar-enabled
biometric attendance system (AEBAS). Every central government official today
has to give his or her attendance on the AEBAS.
State
governments too, are looking at adopting this system and several states are
running proof of concepts.
This
is a concept that can be adopted not just by the government but across schools,
colleges and corporate offices.
And
for startups working in the Aadhaar space, this is an opportunity to cash in
on.
JNTU,
for example, has now adopted an Aadhaar-based attendance system to weed out
fake faculty and improve faculty attendance in its colleges.
And
this system for JNTU has been built by a Hyderabad-based T-Hub startup
Syntizen.
Syntizen
is an Aadhaar-based service provider. Right from authenticating identity, eKYC
to an attendance system, it has a host of services based on Aadhaar.
“A
simple biometric system for attendance can be tampered with. There are many
instances where an employee puts one of his fingerprint and one of the office
boy. In such cases, while he skips work, the office boy marks attendance for
him. Many universities face this problem too. For this, we have developed a
real-time Aadhaar-based authentication to mark attendance,” says Vamsi Kotte,
CEO, Syntizen.
When
a teacher, faculty puts their fingerprint on the sensor, his Aadhaar details
are generated real-time.
These
devices are even GPS enabled. The system has the PAN and Aadhaar services
integrated into the system which ensure there is no duplication.
There
is a central dashboard where the employer can monitor the system.
Syntizen’s
first client for this was JNTU where it has helped identify several fake
employees and has improved attendance.
It
has so far implemented this for 83,000 faculty members in JNTU and has done
around 15 lakh authentications as on date.
“Since
we implemented this Aadhaar-based attendance, there has been a tremendous
increase in regularity of faculty of JNTU. In fact, we are in the phase on
implementing this for Osmania University and are talking to several of our
existing clients, corporates to implement this,” says K Siddharth, CFO.
Syntizen
has recently won a tender from the Telangana government to build, operate and
manage the government’s Aadhaar Server Agency (ASA) to cater to all of the
government’s Aadhaar requirements. Telangana wants to integrate Aadhaar into
all its departments and start rolling out Aadhaar-based services, for example
buying from ration shops using Aadhaar-based authentication.
As
part of this contract, Syntizen will also be managing the attendance of all
Telangana government employees.
When
it comes to Aadhaar, the biggest debate has always been the security aspect of
it, given that recently, personal data of over one million Aadhaar card holders
was leaked.
“If
the security practies in a company aren’t up to the mark, there are risks of
people’s thumb impressions being accessed by third parties. Another part to
this is that with the government already using Aadhaar substantially
for a host of services, when authentication is done data is made available to
third parties, which gives them a high degree of insight and leads to data
profiling of each person. You are not in control of your identity,” says
Supreme Court Lawyer Apar Gupta.
And
soon, the data generated by these things could be the basis for one’s insurance
premium or even to get a credit card. Apar says that with Aadhaar being linked
across databases, it gives any company building database a huge insight on your
daily activity.
However,
according to Syntizen, the company’s systems and technology is completely
secure. It has gone through seven different security compliance levels and has
even passed Computer Emergency Response Team (CertIn) audits.
“We
have passed seven audits in the past three years. Since we deal highly
sensitive information, we regularly conduct audits and ensure there are no
vulnerabilities in its systems,” says Vamsi.
For
every company or institution that employs this system, it costs about Rs 90 per
user per year. Additionally, they have to procure biometric scanners costing
between Rs 3000 to Rs 30,000.
With
nearly every company today having a biometric attendance system, the
opportunity out there is quite huge for Syntizen.
The
T-Hub startup is in talks with other universities, colleges and even corporates
to provide this service. It is also hoping to build it for other ASAs as a
value added service to give them an edge over others.
However,
the Aadhaar-based attendance system is just one of Syntizen’s array of
services.
It
has the Aadhaar-based authentication service, which is also the core of its
attendance system.
To
address the problem of compliance when opening a bank account, or obtaining a
sim card, it has digitized the entire system. With just one’s Aadhaar number,
fingerprint or Iris, it attempts to make these processes simple and quick.
It
is running this currently in most banking and non-banking institutions.
Syntizen also offers eKYC services. This helps in making the entire process of
obtaining a loan, or opening an account paperless.
To
add to this, it has a e-sign engine which gives instant electronic signatures
valid in the court of law.
It
has clients like Mannapuram Finance, Muthooth Fincorp, Indiabulls home loans,
Angel Broking and more.
Syntizen
has grand plans for the future as well. It is building India’s first KYC
Gateway, which lets organisations get KYC of its customers from anywhere across
the country, while meeting all regulators compliance.
While
it says that it is already receiving interest from several parties on this,
Syntizen is on the lookout of strategic partners and investors to roll out this
futuristic plan.
Source
: http://www.thenewsminute.com/
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