The Digital Divide: Why Government-Issued Birth Certificates are Being Rejected for Aadhaar Updates

In an era of “Digital India,” citizens expect seamless integration between government departments. However, a recent grievance filed by Yogi M. P. Singh (Registration No: UIDAI/E/2025/0002346) highlights a critical failure in inter-departmental coordination: the rejection of birth certificates issued by a government-managed portal.

1. The Core Conflict: A Tale of Two Portals

The crux of the issue lies in the web address used to generate birth certificates. The complainant obtained certificates for children (Anchal Tiwari and Jaya Prakash) via the portal:

https://dc.crsorgi.gov.in.web.index.dobview.in/crs

While this portal appears to be a functional interface of the Office of the Registrar General & Census Commissioner, the UIDAI Regional Office in Lucknow has explicitly rejected these documents. According to the UIDAI’s response, only certificates verifiable through the primary domain https://dc.crsorgi.gov.in/ are considered valid.

2. The Verification Gap: Authenticity vs. Accessibility

The UIDAI’s technical team reported that upon scanning the QR code of the submitted certificates, the data did not link back to the “authorized” CRS backend. This creates a baffling paradox for the citizen:

  • The Citizen’s Perspective: The certificate was generated from a government-labeled portal and contains a valid registration number (e.g., B-2024: 9-58984-009641).
  • The UIDAI’s Perspective: If the QR code does not resolve to the specific, whitelisted domain (dc.crsorgi.gov.in), the document is flagged as “Invalid Date of Birth Document.”

3. Transparency and the Charge of Corruption

The complainant has raised serious allegations regarding the conduct of the Regional Office in Lucknow. The grievance suggests that:

  • Inconsistent Reporting: While the applicant can see the results on one portal, UIDAI staff claim “no results found.
  • Lack of Accountability: The closure of the grievance by Deputy Director Vipin Verma has been labeled as “arbitrary,” with the applicant alleging that technical excuses are being used to mask a lack of transparency or potential corruption at the ground level.

4. The Human Cost of “Shadow Portals”

Whether the portal in question is a regional mirror, an outdated interface, or a testing environment, the burden of this technical discrepancy falls entirely on the resident.

  • Educational Hurdles: Without an updated Aadhaar, children face difficulties in school admissions and availing of government subsidies.
  • Governance Failure: If a government department hosts a website that generates official-looking documents that another department refuses to recognize, it undermines the credibility of the entire e-governance ecosystem.

5. Summary of the Grievance Status

DetailInformation
Grievance NumberUIDAI/E/2025/0002346
ComplainantYogi M. P. Singh
Concerned OfficeUIDAI Regional Office, Lucknow
StatusClosed (Resolved by UIDAI with a rejection notice)
Reason for DissatisfactionCertificates issued by a GoI portal are not being honored.

Conclusion: A Call for Uniformity

The government must ensure that any portal bearing the gov.in tag is either fully integrated into the national verification backend or decommissioned to prevent citizen confusion. Public offices must move beyond “closing” tickets and toward “resolving” the underlying systemic gaps that force citizens to run from pillar to post.

To understand why the UIDAI is rejecting your certificate, it is essential to look at the technical structure of the two website addresses. While they may appear similar to a regular user, there is a fundamental difference in their authenticity, ownership, and security.

Here is the differentiation between the two websites:

1. The Official Portal: dc.crsorgi.gov.in

This is the only authorized URL for the Civil Registration System (CRS) managed by the Office of the Registrar General of India (ORGI).

  • Domain Ownership: The domain ends in .gov.in. In India, this suffix is strictly reserved for official government entities and is managed by the National Informatics Centre (NIC).
  • Database Integration: This site is directly linked to the central database of births and deaths. When a registrar enters data here, it is instantly recognized by other government departments like UIDAI.
  • Security: It uses government-grade encryption. When the UIDAI scans a QR code from a certificate issued here, their system recognizes the digital signature as “Trusted.
  • Verifiability: You can verify any certificate issued here by visiting the “Verify Certificate” section of the site.

2. The Problematic Portal: dc.crsorgi.gov.in.web.index.dobview.in/crs/

This is the URL where your current certificate was issued. Despite its name, it is not an official government portal.

  • Deceptive Domain Name: This is a classic “Subdomain Trick.”
    • The real domain of this website is actually dobview.in.
    • Everything before that (dc.crsorgi.gov.in.web.index) is just a long name created by the website owner to make it look like a government site.
  • Ownership: The suffix is .in, which anyone—including private individuals or unauthorized agencies—can buy for a few hundred rupees. It is not an official .gov.in domain.1
  • The “Shadow” Database: This site likely acts as a “mirror” or a “fake front.” While it may show you your data, that data is not part of the official Government of India central registry.
  • Why UIDAI Rejects It: When UIDAI scans the QR code from this site, the code points to dobview.in instead of the official gov.in database. UIDAI’s security protocols automatically flag this as a “Non-Government/Invalid” source to prevent fraud.

Comparison Table

FeatureOfficial PortalPortal Used by You
URL Addressdc.crsorgi.gov.in...dobview.in/crs/
Domain Type.gov.in (Restricted/Official).in (Public/Commercial)
AuthorityRegistrar General of IndiaUnauthorized/Private Mirror
UIDAI StatusAcceptedRejected
QR Code LinkLinks to National DatabaseLinks to Private Server

The Root Cause

The reason you are seeing your data on the second site but UIDAI is not finding it is that the second site is a unauthorized print portal. These portals often scrape data or allow local operators to bypass official channels. Because the data isn’t sitting on the official NIC server, the UIDAI’s verification tool (which only “talks” to official servers) returns a “No Result Found” error.

Your Next Step

To resolve this, you must not use the dobview.in link. You need to:

  1. Visit the official registrar’s office in person.
  2. Request them to issue/re-issue the certificate specifically through the official dc.crsorgi.gov.in portal.
  3. Once issued, verify it yourself on the official site before submitting it to Aadhaar again.

To answer your question directly: No, the second portal is not an official government portal.

The address https://dc.crsorgi.gov.in.web.index.dobview.in/crs/ is a private website designed to look like a government portal. While it uses official-looking terms in the name, it is technically and legally unauthorized.

Here is the breakdown of why that website is not what it claims to be:

1. The “Subdomain” Trick

In a website address, the most important part is the very last two words before the first slash.

  • Official Site: dc.crsorgi.gov.in — The domain is gov.in, which is strictly reserved for the Government of India and managed by the National Informatics Centre (NIC).
  • The Second Site: ...index.dobview.in — The real domain is dobview.in. The owner of this site has simply named their “subdomain” dc.crsorgi.gov.in.web.index to trick people into thinking they are on a government site.

2. Lack of Official Verification

Because dobview.in is a private domain, it does not have access to the secure, internal servers of the Ministry of Home Affairs.

  • Official certificates have a digital signature that can be verified by UIDAI.
  • Certificates from “dobview.in” are often generated by “scraping” (copying) data from official sites or using unauthorized access points. When UIDAI scans the QR code on these, the link takes them to a private server (dobview.in) rather than the official government database. This is why UIDAI rejected it.

3. Government Guidelines on .gov.in

Under the Guidelines for Indian Government Websites (GIGW), all official union and state departments are mandated to use the .gov.in or .nic.in domain exclusively. Any site claiming to be the “Office of the Registrar General” that ends in just .in (like dobview.in, jhgrow.org, or lndex.co.in) is considered a fake or unauthorized mirror.

Summary Table: Real vs. Fake

FeatureOfficial Government PortalThe Portal You Used
Domain Ending.gov.in (Restricted to Govt).in (Can be bought by anyone)
Primary Domaincrsorgi.gov.indobview.in
Data SourceCentral Birth/Death RegistryMirror/Copied Database
UIDAI StatusValid & VerifiableInvalid & Rejected

Why this looks like a government site:

These sites are often called “Birth Print Portals.” They are frequently used by cyber cafe operators or unauthorized agents because they provide a “cleaner” printout or bypass the technical glitches of the official site. However, because they are not the official source, the documents they produce have no legal standing for Aadhaar updates.

The UIDAI staff is correct in this instance: your certificate was issued by an unauthorized third-party site. To fix this, you must obtain a fresh printout from the official registrar’s office or the official portal: https://dc.crsorgi.gov.in/.

It is understandably frustrating to see a website operating so openly that it tricks citizens and interferes with essential services like Aadhaar updates. You are correct that this portal is operating “against the law” by impersonating a government service.

The reason these websites continue to exist is often due to the “Whack-a-Mole” effect: as soon as the government shuts one down, the creators buy a new, slightly different domain name (like changing dobview.in to dobcheck.in) and start again.

Here is an analysis of the legal situation and how you can take action to force the government’s hand.

1. Why the Government hasn’t “Stopped” it yet

  • Domain Jurisdictions: Many of these private domains are registered through international registrars. While the Indian government can block the site within India, the site owners often use VPNs and proxy servers to stay active.
  • The “Service” Loophole: These sites often claim they are simply “printing services” for data that already exists. They use this as a legal shield, even though they are deceiving the public by mimicking the official CRS interface.
  • Inter-Departmental Lag: As you noted in your grievance, the UIDAI knows the site is fake, but the UIDAI does not have the authority to shut down websites—that power lies with the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY) and CERT-In.

2. Legal Violations Being Committed

This parallel website is likely violating several Indian laws:

  • Information Technology Act, 2000 (Section 66D): Punishment for cheating by personation using computer resources.
  • State Emblem of India (Prohibition of Improper Use) Act, 2005: If the site uses the National Emblem (the Ashoka Lions) without authority.
  • The Registration of Births and Deaths Act, 1969: Issuing certificates through unauthorized channels is a direct violation of this Act.

3. How to Force Action (Beyond the UIDAI)

Since your grievance with the UIDAI was closed because they simply “rejected the document,” you need to file a different kind of complaint that focuses on the illegal website itself.

A. Report to CERT-In (The National Cyber Agency)

CERT-In is the body responsible for taking down fraudulent websites in India.

  • Email: incident@cert-in.org.in
  • Action: Send an email with the subject: “Reporting of Phishing/Fraudulent Government Portal Impersonating CRS ORGI.” Include the URL dobview.in and explain that it is issuing unauthorized birth certificates.

B. Use the “Chakshu” Portal (Sanchar Saathi)

The Department of Telecommunications (DoT) recently launched Chakshu to report fraudulent websites and communications.

C. File a Grievance with MeitY

Instead of complaining to UIDAI (who are just “users” of the data), file a grievance on the CPGRAMS portal against the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY).

  • Core Complaint: State that a fake portal (dobview.in) is operating under a .gov.in subdomain structure to defraud the public and that the government must block this domain nationwide.

Summary of the Situation

The UIDAI is a verification agency, not a law enforcement agency. They will continue to reject your certificate because their job is only to check if the document is official. To get the website shut down, you must report it to the cyber-security authorities mentioned above.

When a parallel, fraudulent website operates openly, it is indeed a serious systemic failure of the regulatory and oversight ecosystem. You are raising a valid point: if a citizen can find and use these portals, the government’s own vigilance and anti-corruption agencies should have identified and shut them down much earlier.

Here is an objective breakdown of why this is considered a failure of the state’s vigilance machinery and which specific gaps are being exploited:

1. Failure of “Preventive Vigilance”

Vigilance in India is divided into two parts: Punitive (punishing after the crime) and Preventive (stopping the crime before it happens).

  • The Failure: Agencies like the Central Vigilance Commission (CVC) and the vigilance wings of the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) are responsible for ensuring that the systems for issuing documents like birth certificates are tamper-proof.
  • The Gap: The existence of “Birth Print Portals” (like the one you encountered) suggests that there is a leak in the data pipeline or that unauthorized actors have gained access to the backend API of the Registration system. Vigilance agencies have failed to plug these technical leaks.

2. Lack of Real-Time Monitoring by Cyber Agencies

The Indian Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT-In) and the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY) are tasked with monitoring the Indian internet for “Phishing” or “Impersonation” websites.

  • The Failure: A portal using a domain like dc.crsorgi.gov.in.web.index.dobview.in is a clear attempt to impersonate the Government of India.
  • The Gap: That this site remains active and searchable on Google shows a failure in proactive web-crawling and domain-blocking by IT enforcement agencies.

3. Corruption at the Local Registrar Level

As noted in recent reports (e.g., Aligarh and Mumbai cases in 2025), many of these fake certificates are generated because:

  • Hacked/Shared IDs: Local clerks or Panchayat Secretaries often share their official login passwords with private cyber cafe operators for a commission.
  • The Failure: This is a direct failure of Administrative Vigilance. The “Anti-Corruption” units should be auditing the login patterns of these IDs. If one ID is being used to issue 500 certificates in a single day from a different city, it should trigger an automatic red flag.

4. Inter-Departmental “Silo” Problem

The UIDAI knows these portals are fake (which is why they reject the documents), but they often don’t report these specific URLs to the Police or Cyber Cell for decommissioning.

  • The Failure: Each department operates in its own “silo.” UIDAI protects its own database but doesn’t necessarily take responsibility for cleaning up the Registrar’s (CRS) ecosystem. This lack of coordinated governance is what causes “undue hardship” to citizens like yourself.

What You Can Do to Hold These Agencies Accountable

Since your grievance with UIDAI was closed on technical grounds, you should now target the agencies responsible for vigilance and corruption:

  1. File a Complaint with the CVC: Use the Central Vigilance Commission portal to report “Systemic Failure in the Civil Registration System (CRS) allowing unauthorized portals to issue documents.”
  2. Report the “Impersonation” to the Cyber Crime Portal: Visit cybercrime.gov.in and report the website URL. State that it is “Impersonating the Registrar General of India to defraud citizens.”
  3. Lodge a Grievance against the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA): Since the CRS falls under the MHA, file a complaint on CPGRAMS specifically asking why the MHA has not shut down the dobview.in subdomains that are mimicking their official dc.crsorgi.gov.in portal.

The Allahabad High Court recently (Nov 2025) called this situation “a mess” and “dishonesty at all levels.” Your case is part of a larger legal battle for better digital governance in India.

Would you like me to draft a strong formal letter to the Chief Vigilance Officer (CVO) of the Ministry of Home Affairs regarding this “Parallel System” failure?

3 responses to “Aadhar update made by dept. of post”

  1. Mahesh Pratap Singh avatar
    Mahesh Pratap Singh

    This is wrong decision of the staff of the Government of India belonging to the unique identification authority of India concerning with the update of Aadhar card.

  2. Beerbhadra Singh avatar
    Beerbhadra Singh

    How can it be justified to deny the update arbitrarily of the Aadhar card submitted by the parents of the children due to corruption? Arbitrariness and tyranny always open the gate of corruption in the government departments and such practices must be curbed by the government.

  3. Preeti Singh avatar
    Preeti Singh

    Think about the gravity of situation when the Aadhar card scheme was brought up by the government for the citizens in the country then it was claimed that it will control the corruption in the government machinery but the factual position is different. Now update of Aadhar card has been hub of the corruption by the government staff.

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