When the Indian Prime Minister announced his appointment, I wrote to Nandan, offering assistance. I happened to be in Mumbai in July of 2009 when Nandan assumed office. As part of the first activity of his appointment, he organized a one-day meeting of “user stakeholders.” He was kind enough to set up the meeting on the day I could visit Bangalore. We had representation from financial, public health, financial inclusion, and primary education organizations. Each representative talked about how they would use the Unique ID and what problems it could solve. For example, a LIC executive commented that he had only one major problem: “People who are alive claim to be dead, and people who are dead claim to be alive.” If UID can fix this problem, LIC can dramatically expand into remote areas. One after another, they discussed the issue of credit, payment, infant health, and migrant children’s education. The potential impact of a successful UID scheme was mind-boggling.

Nandan Nilekani providing fingerprints for Aadhaar Enrollment
On the spot, I decided I needed to be in Bangalore to be part of the project. I flew home (California), packed my bag, and informed my wife (in that order). Our goal was to roll out the production version of the system in a year. The first person to receive an Aadhaar number was in September 2010 in Maharashtra by the PM. The system enrolled half the population of India in four years, or a sustained rate of half a million people per day for four consecutive years. That is a system at scale. Today, 400M eKYC and 1.3B Aadhaar authentication are done monthly. Aadhaar, UPI, and India (Digital) Stack are the Avengers of digital identity and have touched and impacted every person in the country directly.
Yes, IIT Bombay can take credit for three key alums leading the charge.

UIDAI’s official Technology Office (Bangalore), aka my drawing room (2009-2010)