India's IT ministry has rejected a proposal from the Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI) to mandate pre-installation of the Aadhaar biometric ID app on smartphones sold by Apple, Samsung, and others. The ministry reached its decision after consulting electronics industry representatives, though it offered no formal rationale. UIDAI confirmed the reversal in a statement to Reuters on Friday. Aadhaar assigns a 12-digit identity number linked to fingerprints and iris scans to nearly 1.34 billion residents, and is embedded across banking, telecom, and airport verification infrastructure. Smartphone makers had opposed the proposal on device security, compatibility, and cost grounds, mandatory preloading would have required separate manufacturing lines for India versus export markets, raising unit production costs. This marks the sixth consecutive rejection of a government app-preload request in two years, with all six attempts blocked by industry opposition. A senior Indian official said the IT ministry opposes preloading unless an app is deemed "very essential." The pattern signals a structural friction point for Modi's digital-push agenda as India simultaneously courts Apple and others to deepen smartphone manufacturing investment in the country. The Aadhaar app itself carries residual risk: privacy advocates have documented repeated data leaks exposing personal details of millions of holders on the dark web, a liability that mandatory device-level distribution would have amplified.
The Supreme Court blocked Trump from firing Federal Reserve board member Lisa Cook, preserving the Fed's independence from presidential removal power. A separate ruling the same day gave Trump broader authority to dismiss leaders of other independent federal agencies.
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The US Supreme Court, splitting along ideological lines, has allowed the Trump administration to end Temporary Protected Status for Haitian and Syrian immigrants.
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