A Look Into National ID Cards 315
mr.buddylee writes "Last month Slashdot reported a Popular Science story on your privacy. This month the magazine has a couple different articles about the future of security after the attacks on 9/11. Included is a very interesting read on National ID Cards which looks at possible technologies integrated into the card. For instance, how would you like a memory strip containing a digitized image of your fingerprints, your photo, your medical history and flight history stored in your wallet? All secured with what could be a less than secure Smart Card."
Lets see... (Score:2, Insightful)
<SARCASM>
Where do I sign up?
</SARCASM>
Re:Lets see... (Score:5, Funny)
Please email me your name address ssn bank acount numbers, mothers maiden name, a copy of your finger prints.
Not only will sending me this info get you signed up, it will also increase your penis size.
Nice name on the card... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Nice name on the card...[explanation] (Score:2, Informative)
Winston Smith is the lead character in George Orwell's novel Nineteen Eighty Four. A highly reccommended read.
If you keep your finger on the pulse of corporate media distortion then you'll see just how scarily close to Nineteen Eighty Four the world we live in really is. The Associated Press changes it's stories after publication to suit the suits. I need not explain the masses of new powers for those in power to snoop on us. Doublethink prevails, albeit in a more subtle form. And yes, "The proles have intellectual freedom, because they have no intellect."
Mods please note: The "Troll" moderation was doubleplusridiculous verging crackthink!
Ali
Re:Nice name on the card...[explanation] (Score:2, Insightful)
The book is about globalization, which I think is far more alive than oppressive government. The latter is only getting started. Meanwhile, we are very familiar with the former
as long (Score:5, Funny)
oh yeah, I also want a pony.
Re:as long (Score:2)
You don't have to use a Social Security card, either. . . but good luck living without one.
Incredible (Score:2, Funny)
Mr Computer. (Score:2, Funny)
Bzzzt! Flash.. smoke
-GiH
Homeland Security (Score:4, Insightful)
Your papers please.
Re:Homeland Security (Score:5, Insightful)
I find the following quote sadly ironic:
Two recent political leaders allegedly had this
nefarious habit (cocaine).
Both came to power after dubious elections, by
non-electorial and irregular methods.
Both nations immediately experienced attacks on famous
public buildings.
Both blamed an ethnic minority before forensics had
any evidence.
Both led "witch-hunts" against the accused minority.
Both suspended civil liberties "temporarily."
Both put the citizenry under surveillance.
Both maintained secret and clandestine governments.
Both created a new agency for domestic security - one
for the Fatherland and the other for the Homeland.
Both enlisted members of the citizenry to spy on their
neighbors. see http://citizencorps.gov/tips.html
Both launched wars against most of the world.
One had a funny mustache. Can you name the other one?
Re:Homeland Security (Score:4, Insightful)
Two recent political leaders allegedly had this nefarious habit (cocaine).
Allegedly is a key word here -- I'm glad you added it.
Both came to power after dubious elections, by non-electorial and irregular methods.
You call the Supreme Court of the United States, the final authority on law and order in this country "irregular means?" When something is as close as the election in Florida was, there's not much choice but to get the Supreme Court involved. Do you have a better solution? They made the right call, and many "recounts" since bear that fact out, whether you like the results of it or not.
Both nations immediately experienced attacks on famous public buildings.
So what?
Both blamed an ethnic minority before forensics had any evidence.
I suspect the NSA and CIA knew who did it within minutes - it wasn't a hard call. They had all the information, and when you know what you're looking for, it's very easy to find it. Their only failing was in not processing all that information prior to September 11th.
Both led "witch-hunts" against the accused minority.
No - looking for terrorists does not, in my book, qualify as a witch hunt.
Both suspended civil liberties "temporarily."
So did Abraham Lincoln and others. What's your point? It may not have always been the best thing to do -- but it is a power the executive branch has in war time. I know we don't have a "declared" war -- that's only because there's not a well defined entity to declare war on.
Both put the citizenry under surveillance.
We've been under surveillance for the last 60 years. The NSA was formed in the forties - you really think they've never spied on anyone before? Now you hear about it more - that's the only difference.
Both maintained secret and clandestine governments.
Sure... Right... The Illuminati are really in power in the US, right?
Both created a new agency for domestic security - one for the Fatherland and the other for the Homeland.
So?
Both enlisted members of the citizenry to spy on their neighbors. see http://citizencorps.gov/tips.html
You probably have a problem with Neighborhood Watch too, right?
Both launched wars against most of the world. One had a funny mustache. Can you name the other one?
Umm... Had to think about this for a bit - Does the Taliban rule "most of the world?" Maybe I missed a late breaking news flash or something....
I gather you must be talking about our President by the election bit, but I think you may want to check your facts -- they don't really jive.
Re:Homeland Security (Score:3, Insightful)
So, I find the comparison between our government and Nazi Germany offensive as well, but the point remains that the current administration has sacrificed liberty in favor of safety.
Instead of considering our system infallible and just saying "So?" all the time, we should be self-critical. Maybe detaining people (some of them citizens) for an indeterminate period of time is wrong. Maybe creating completely opaque governmental agencies is wrong. If you're too defensive, you'll never even consider these things.
Re:Homeland Security (Score:2)
Completely opaque, are you kidding me?? Not even the CIA or NSA is completely opaque, never mind the Administration. We know what is coming in. We know what is coming out. We can judge most of their actions and we can, and have, held them accountable for it. We even have a whole lot of insight into the day to day proceedings, probably too much. So it's a wild exxageration to say it's completely opaque. What more transparency can you _realistically_ ask for? I'm sure you have some (though I'd disagree with most of it), but be realstic. Those things are relatively minor on the scale from transparency to opacity.
Re:Homeland Security (Score:2)
As for liberty vs security, the burden of proof should be on the government institutions: exactly how do further restrictions on our current freedoms provide us with more security? If the previous laws weren't being properly enforced, how does adding new stricter laws help the situation? Confiscating nail clippers does not improve the safety of airline passengers. A terrorist armed with only a bowie knife could not hijack a plane that contains at least 10 unarmed yet able-bodied passengers. A suicidal terrorist with an explosive would have better odds, but then, explosives are already illegal on planes. See, it is easy to prove that the right to board a public plane with a souvenier hand grenade is worth sacrificing for the security of the passengers on the flight. Now, why exactly can't I have a plastic knife to cut my microwave chicken?
As for civil liberties, which should I sacrifice, and exactly how will that protect anybody's safety? The onus is on whosoever would violate the Bill of Rights to convince The People, otherwise The People can be as flippant as they like - though to be frank, I'm not sure which flip reamrks you refer to. "Don't tread on me", or maybe "Live free or die"? The defense of our most precious documents is not inaction, but rather our sacred duty as citizens of this great republic.
Re:Homeland Security (Score:2)
I pretty much agree with this. In fact, I would say it's more than just not helpful, it's hurtful. When we spend our resources trying to keep nail clippers out of the hands of 80 year old grandmothers, we're wasting resources that could be better spent on far more probable threats. That said, this is NOT what slashdot is attacking the Administration, for by and large, and these kinds of decisions (they often aren't any sort of policy) are generally quite far removed from the Bush or his direct reports.
Maybe... (Score:2)
Maybe I should reconsider renouncing my U.S. citizenship in favor of Iraqistan.
Sure, "They" are pretty backwards. That is no excuse for the U.S. to stoop, even slightly, to a behaivor that we proclaim to be above. There is a reason why the U.S. is better, lets not sully ourselves because others fight dirty. Without full authority of the Constitution to protect unpopular citizens, the U.S. might as well be an evil empire. We should have nothing to hide, we are the shining example of the world.
Oh, Auntie Em, you'll never believe the dream I had, you were all there...
Re:Homeland Security (Score:3, Insightful)
Last time I checked, the Supreme Court declaring the winner of the Presidential election was highly irregular. In fact, it has never happened before, and I hope it never happens again. Better solution? How about we all go to the poles again?
Umm... Had to think about this for a bit - Does the Taliban rule "most of the world?" Maybe I missed a late breaking news flash or something....
No, but we do have troops all over the world. We appear to be involved in some conflict around the world just about all the time, and America has been for last 20 years. Do you remember the "axis of evil" rhetoric? Gulf War, Bosnia, Somalia? Troops in the Phillipines?
Both maintained secret and clandestine governments.
Sure... Right... The Illuminati are really in power in the US, right?
Don't you remember the news reports about the shadow government that was revealed shortly after September 11th? From CNN [cnn.com]
Both led "witch-hunts" against the accused minority.
No - looking for terrorists does not, in my book, qualify as a witch hunt.
No, but arresting [9-11peace.org] thousands of people [cnn.com] does in most people's books. Don't forget many of these people were not charged with anyhting.
Re:Homeland Security (Score:2, Informative)
"Shadow Government" was a slipped up term that referred to the "Secure Location" that they send important officials during dangerous situations. If you've watched any movies or paid any attention during the Reagan administration, you'd have already known about the fact that there is and has been a secure location, in case the President was immobilized. Instead of reading the facts, they heard the name "Shadow Government", and suddenly concepts of conspiracy and evil men in black came to the minds of the crazed proles.
I'm surprised you don't bring up the Globalization movement as proof of a conspiracy, instead of some government spud's freudian slip.
No, but arresting [9-11peace.org] thousands of people [cnn.com] does in most people's books. Don't forget many of these people were not charged with anyhting
Not charged with anything except joining terrorist orgs, supporting tyrannical regimes, and attempting to kill American, Canadian, English, etc. troops. If I was in charge and there was no Geneva convention, I'd have hung half those m0f0's up by their balls until they die, and I'd take the other half, give 'em a Gauntlet and take $100 per head for anyone wanting to play the most realistic Quake 3 multiplayer. It'd give new F'N meaning to "LAN Party".
Re:Homeland Security (Score:2)
And as for being European, try somewhere a little closer to home.
Re:Homeland Security (Score:2)
I find very amusing that revolting against a dictatorship ruled by an "evil" master is ok (SW reference) and revolting against an "evil" nation that is funding dictatorships or civil wars, so that the oil can be explored easily, is the most evil that you can get.
The problem with the american people is that they don't even realize what the west-world is doing to that part of the globe. Shure I do belive that we should bane all guns, from the one in your drawer to the ones in the military personal. It is an utopia, and I know it, but I will suport every step in this direction. This don't mean that I will quickly jump into comclusions and say that all alfaganistan person with a gun is an "evil" person.
And to finish my rant, why do every thing has be "evil" or "good"? The world is not a dungeons and dragons game, what is evil to one person is not evil to others. The wolrd is not black and white, it isn't even a gray scale, the world is colored.
Re:Homeland Security (Score:4, Interesting)
I find it incredibly frightening that so many seemingly intelligent people can't tell the difference between TIPS and a Neighborhood Watch.
Re:Homeland Security (Score:2)
Without a well defined entity to declare war upon, there should be no war declared. War is a drastic and extreme measure to be reserved for a threat to our nation's sovereign existance.
Sure, it is noble to eradicate drug abuse and terrorism. While were at it, why not poverty? We should definitely use our military force against these evils, because a bloody battle is the best solution to these problems. Simply kill all citizens that live below the national poverty level, and we can finally declare victory. But then what do we do with the soldiers who are unemployed after the end of the skirmishes? Well, there was a WWII, after all.
These metaphysical enemies in our media wars cannot be feasibly defeated, as they are merely symptoms to deeper societal ills. We can protect our nation without persecuting our citizens, or even our non-agressive neighbors. There are plenty of criminal laws to deal with violent criminals without the need to resort to military exemptions, martial law or autocracy.
While I appreciate your rebutting the absurd parent, I must play devil's advocate for the last point (as odious as it was) just because it plays into my point. Did the Second Bush Administration declare "war" against the Taliban, or "terrorism?" Terrorism takes place throughout most of the world. "Terrorism" is poorly defined.
Could "terrorism" include histrionic rants comparing irrellevant or tenuously-related events in history between a Plutocratic-Republic
and a pseudo-Socialist Autocracy? Even if I don't agree with the crappy connections in the parent post, I should defend the posters right to express these insipid comparisons. So I must oppose the "War on Terrorism".
Re:Homeland Security (Score:2)
Good point -- but I have to disagree in this instance. I think the reason that we didn't declare war on the country of Afghanistan is primarily that we didn't have any beef with the regular people there. Their government had been taken over by terrorists, and I think we did the right thing by singling out terrorism as the target of our military actions instead of saying we were declaring war on a specific country. I know it's a semantic difference, but I think it's an important one in this case. We had no intention of taking over their country -- simply overthrowing a regime that was owned and controlled by a known terrorist.
You are correct, however that terrorism is poorly defined. I would not be surprised if congress moves at some time in the near future to correct this, as we have a de-facto declaration of war against a non-entity right now.
Re:Homeland Security (Score:2)
Re:Homeland Security (Score:4, Insightful)
In the Constitution v1.0 the United States was a federation of smaller contries (States) that United (United) for, amoung other reasons, mutual defense and to promote a common good. Several states (my home state Pennsylvania for instance) is actually a Commonwealth. Our state constitution and legal traditions trump the Federal system when the two do not dovetail.
The Federal Government was constructed to be weak and fragmented so that the States could decide how best to govern their citizenry. The system has worked, IMHO, quite well for 225 years.
When we speak of a Homeland, exactly whose home are we referring to? The culture of traditions of Texas are quite different from California, which in turn is radically different that Minnesota, and a far shot from Pennsylvania.
People complain about how little gets done in congress, and how little the president is actually allowed to do. That is by design.
Re:Homeland Security (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Homeland Security (Score:2, Interesting)
I think they were trying to appear all wholesome and homey, and I'm sure that the Heritage Foundation gave them all sorts of suggestions. What I don't like about the whole Homeland Security thing is that there's no provision for un-making a cabinet position.
The choice of Tom Ridge was interesting as well. Obviously G.W.'s way of saying, "Sorry, Tom, that Dick picked himself for VP, here's a brand-new cabinet-level position made just for you!"
I just have to wonder: Is it really necessary? Do we really need another government agency to oversee the other government agencies? I just think it's going to end up adding another layer of red tape to cut through. If the FBI couldn't get off the dime when presented with evidence that something funny was going on, what makes anyone think that adding another tier to the system will improve anything? What is Tom Ridge going to be able to do that the DCI and Director of the FBI can't? (Other than coming up with a worthless color-coding system)
Re:Homeland Security (Score:2)
(My apologies for invoking Godwin's Law, but that's been done often enough in this article anyway.)
Re:Homeland Security (Score:3, Insightful)
Just think about this, KGB stands for (translated to English) Committee for State Security. It's forerunner was the NKVD: People's Commissariat For Internal Affairs. In Nazi Germany you had the RSHA, Reich Main Security Office, which was the authority for the Gestapo, SicherHeitsDienst (Security Police), Criminal Police and Foreign Intelligence Service. It's not hard to imagine either of those countries having a Department of Homeland Security, especially when you consider that this Dept. will have authority over any Federal dept involved in protecting the mainland USA (FBI, NSA, Treasury, Justice, ATF, DEA, Border Patrol, Customs Service, US Marshals, Secret Service).
Re:Homeland Security (Score:2, Insightful)
Once upon a time we used to name organizations with a name that told us what the did. For example:
Ok ok, here is why I WANT a national ID card... (Score:2, Insightful)
Been with the scene since Dos 3.0 and ZModem, use and love Linux, programmed for 5 years in NYC... hate DRM and DMCA for the freedoms they take away, 2600 should have won their court case in regards to DeCSS...
So why do I want a National ID card? Because right now, show a NY cop an out-of-state ID that is HORRIBLY fake, and he will almost never be able to reconize it. Scores of states (like 50 or something, right?) and scores of ID's all different. It makes no sence. With a standard, everyone would be familiar with it, and security measures would be better. They would! I know I know... "better like SSL assh0le" I might hear... but I would say "better like US currency". Imagine if every state had it's own dollar bill like it used to? Sometimes standards make a good base. LSB comes to mind. If someone gets smart and included eyeball biomentric (cause every other can be easily faked) then the system might work.
And if you think that the "feds" might get at your pr0n or your precious hard drive with a national id, it's nothing they can't do anyway already. I could see only benefits. What would a national ID do in terms of taking away freedoms? Nothing I can see, though I'd love to learn something new.
Re:Ok ok, here is why I WANT a national ID card... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Ok ok, here is why I WANT a national ID card... (Score:2)
Try goin back to 300 baud and those good ol atari atasci 8 bit days
My only rebute to your statement is history has shown, anything that can be made can be cloned, humans included. I would hate for someone to use my ID to commit a crime.
Re:Ok ok, here is why I WANT a national ID card... (Score:4, Insightful)
But what happens when you have to show it everyplace you go? what happens if you change a pattern of behaviour and it sets of a red flag and suddenly your being investigated?
This sort of stuff happens in russia. Back during the cold war, the USSR would do this, and that was w/o computers.
eyeballs change with time. Plus the same way you would fake an eyeball, is the sameway you would fake a thumb print, by changing the data on the card.
We, are a country of Independent states, with, what is supposed to be, very specific guidlines on what the feder government can do. Are fore-fathers knew that a central government that controls everything is bad for personal freedom.
Re:Ok ok, here is why I WANT a national ID card... (Score:2)
And here I thought it was to chop of the guy's thumb or poke his eye out...
Re:Ok ok, here is why I WANT a national ID card... (Score:2, Funny)
Those abuses might happen in Russia, but that would never happen in the United States.
Re:Ok ok, here is why I WANT a national ID card... (Score:2)
Well, you be the judge...
Re:Ok ok, here is why I WANT a national ID card... (Score:2)
Re:Ok ok, here is why I WANT a national ID card... (Score:2)
The trouble comes when your identity is not linked to your personality and experience, but to an inhuman and distinct physical token. Human relations are the best judge of "behaivor patterns". Humans possess empathy or compassion, while machines, numbers, statistics distill the humanity out of "human rights". My citizenship is not embodied by a card, but by my person.
Re:Ok ok, here is why I WANT a national ID card... (Score:2)
I don't need to show my state ID "everyplace I go". If I change my behavior, it doesn't set off any flags in my state government, even though I am forced to carry a state-issued ID at (essentially) all times.
Why would having a federal ID change any of this?
Re:Ok ok, here is why I WANT a national ID card... (Score:2)
Owning and operating a motor vehicle, must like a gun, required licensing and registrations. Owning and operating feet, much like fists, does not.
Private establishments may require proof of age if they offer adult oriented "vices", but that is not the same situation either.
Having a federally uniform ID makes seemingly minor abuses of power too convienient. Consider the Social Security Number, which was explicity not intended as a national ID for non-employment purposes. Now the SSN is bandied about in public situations, and most Americans don't realize how unfortunate this can be regarding privacy or personal security. Yet try to function on a daily basis at banks, colleges, without ever using your SSN, and see how futile it is. Many institutions try to use it as your unique ID, even though it isn't "unique".
Upon acceptance of a federal ID, you come closer to experiencing the fascism of being forced to carry your ID while in public, or risk federal penalties. Freedom and privacy are worthy ideals.
Re:Ok ok, here is why I WANT a national ID card... (Score:3, Insightful)
What happens when you have to show it everyplace? What happened was that *something else* changed, not the existence of a national ID, but a more significant survillance.
In other words, you take what *may* be a perfectly reasonable measure for *personal security* (it might greatly reduce identity theft) and conflate it with police state behavior and then use that to condemn the technological measure.
Besides, we already have a national ID card in the US. It is called your drivers' license. Oops... it isn't national. BUT... that problem IMHO hurts the citizenry more than having a national one! It allows all sorts of fraud, because of its lack of standardization. And... it doesn't protect you one bit unless you are a criminal... because all of those drivers licenses are in the same database (or accessible through the same switch) just like a national ID owuld be.
Let's not get too knee-jerk about security measures. Some are important. Furthermore, we are in a new age - where a single individual, through technology, may be more dangerous than an entire military fleet or division was in the past. In a world like we now live in, we may need different security measures than we have had in the past.
The key to avoiding totalitarianism is not simply attacking every change in policing and security techniques. It is in fighting those which have no value, and more importantly, it is in fighting those who would actually engage in totalitarian practices.
The ID isn't the problem. Someone who would track innocent people for nefarious purposes is the problem. Prevent the latter, not the former. P
Drivers License isn't a national ID card... (Score:2)
What sort of fraud does a non-federalized ID enable? Anything that threatens personal or national security? Potential corruption of the citizenry's morals aren't life threatening, but they do make an excellent opportunity to excercise personal responsibility! Why should I submit my privacy for a national ID card?
A national ID in itself isn't a problem, just like technology isn't a problem. But the existence of a uniform national ID is an enabler to abuse, and it is worth fighting because it has no value. Technology is very valuable, but only with other resources can it enable an individual to become overly dangerous. These other resources (political, financial) were used in an old age with old technology, to amass a powerful military fleet. A single individual used these resources with varying levels of technology in the past, from Ghengis Khan and Julius Caesar to Napoleon and Hitler. One man was more dangerous than many military fleets.
The key to avoiding totalitarianism is to value individuality over national conformity, freedom over jingoism, and privacy over bureocracy. A national ID has no value. The FBI has tracked innocent people without just cause in the past. There is no way to know if their purposes were "nefarious". If you were offered dictatorship of the United States of America, would you refuse? I'd rather you didn't have the opportunity, I don't want to find out. Likewise, I'd rather not promote a national ID and any abuses it might engender. To prevent totalitarianism, preserve preedom; know your rights, and assert them fervently.
Re:Drivers License isn't a national ID card... (Score:2)
So, what makes you think you would have to show a national ID to an officer any more than a state one?
BTW, what database is a nationally comprehensive compilation of driver's licenses?
National Criminal Information System - NCIC. If you are ever stopped while driving and give you "state" ID, the officer can, and will, run what in most states is called a "10-27" which is a drivers license check. That will go against NCIC if it is an out of state license.
A national ID in itself isn't a problem, just like technology isn't a problem. But the existence of a uniform national ID is an enabler to abuse, and it is worth fighting because it has no value
If it had no value, I would agree that the government shouldn't issue it. But it does have value, done right. Oh, and because of the current existence of NCIC, it doesn't make you *any easier to track* than a state drivers licence.
The key to avoiding totalitarianism is to value individuality over national conformity, freedom over jingoism, and privacy over bureocracy.
I strongly disagree. The key to avoiding totalitarianism is citizen participation in an open government. Whether those citizens are individualists or not is immaterial.
If the nation is right, then national conformity is okay (not that it would ever happen). "Individualism" is a modern cult that started with the humanistic psychology revolution of the 20th century. Many posters on Slashdot seem to think it is individualism is a sacrament, but it is not. Freedom is the real political sacrament, and that includes the freedom to conform.
I suspect you confuse patriotism iwth jingoism, btw. And there is nothing wrong with patriotism - as long as the patriotic citizen is willing to disagree with political leaders and work, within the law, against those who they disagree with. It is true that dictators use real or imagined threats in order to consolidate their power, but that does not mean that every additional security measure is totalitarian. Nor does it mean that every threat is imagined.
And privacy, like any right (BTW, privacy is one right NOT specified in the constitution, except as imagined in "pneumbras"), is not absolute.
With regard to all rights, a nation must first be able to defend itself against external enemies, or it cannot defend your rights. And even those strongest libertarian would agree that protecting you against depradations of others is the first reason to have a government at all.
You are so worried about privacy, and yet I was once subject to the draft. Don't you think having yourself drafted into the military is a bit more severe than being spied upon? And I agreed with the draft, because I felt it was then (and might again be at some point) necessary to defend the rights of all of us. And, btw, I voluntarily joined the military and served my time - with no privacy or freedom of individuality or anything else, and considerable danger. So people whining about tiny losses of freedom in the name of national security seem pretty trivial to me! It is important to be vigilant but not to waste your time on the small stuff.
If I wanted to be a dictator I would do all sorts of minor stuff to get the privacy fanatics, etc, all discredited (and exposed). But more importantly, I would work to remove the people's respect for each other and their respect for democracy (which is *not* the same as freedom, btw).
The FBI has tracked innocent people without just cause in the past. There is no way to know if their purposes were "nefarious".
Yes, and Abraham Lincoln suspended habeas corpus. And innocent people have been executed. Guess what! Life isn't perfect. But National ID's are not the problem, nor do they make it significantly easier for the FBI to track you, but they make make it easier for them to track Mohammed Atta!
If you were offered dictatorship of the United States of America, would you refuse?
Yes. Dictatorship is wrong.
I'd rather you didn't have the opportunity, I don't want to find out.
And duh... I suppose you think I want anyone to have the opportunity.
Likewise, I'd rather not promote a national ID and any abuses it might engender. To prevent totalitarianism, preserve preedom; know your rights, and assert them fervently.
Just out of curiosity, do you seriously oppose environmental takings of private land? How about federal controls on public schools? How about gun control? How about laws preventing doctors from informing parents about the abortions of their thirteen year old children? How about laws which force children and governments to discriminate in favor of specific races? How about speech codes at federal schools that make it illegal for you to use derogatory or racist language?
Are you really for freedom?
Do you support the protection of the american people from terrorists? Which is more likely to lead to totalitarianism: open security measures such as national ID cards, or the reaction of the public after some bad guys get in and kill, through WMD, a few million americans?
What *is* the purpose of a government in your mind? In mine, the primary reason to give the authority to use lethal force to a common organization is so that they can protect me from others! Why else should I let them have atomic bombs, tanks, FBI, etc? And if I am to give them that force, why should I hobble them at the same time?
Re:Ok ok, here is why I WANT a national ID card... (Score:4, Insightful)
I have an idea (Score:2)
I'm not being rude, I mean it. They put the case better than I ever could.
If you're not a reader, find a friend who lived in the U.S.S.R.. Ask them about what it was like to have serial numbers [cbsnews.com] on typewriters and copy machines, and a national informant system [citizencorps.gov], or to have to show papers to go from one town to the next, or at any time for any reason. To walk down a quiet street at night with a girl, arm in arm, but not steal that kiss, because you are not really sure you're alone.
The psychological effects of these regimes are subtle and pervasive.
The thing you want to think about is that, often times, the government does things not quite for the reasons that it gives. And surveillance is one of those things that has a lot of purposes besides preventing terrorism.
Consider the fact that almost none of the security measures passed since 9/11 were related to published dificiencies in our previous security program's handling of the disaster. National IDs had nothing to do with Al Qaeda, and would not have prevented the attack - the attackers would have simply had their own. They were in the country legally.
The Soviets pulled out every stop. They did things the current pro-surveillance, pro-data-collection Americans would have nightmares about. I'll give you a hint. It didn't stop crime, let alone terrorism. But it did make a striking example that life in a totalitarian state is barely that.
Our history in this country is that of refugees from government. And we organized our society in perpetual conflict with its government as a result. If we trust government, why have a jury, since judges are better qualified? Why have courts? Don't you trust the police? Wouldn't they know best who'se guilty and who'se not? Why have elections? After all, as Lenin put it, some things are too important to put to a vote.
Instead we have checks and balances, and we have a sense that a life should not be lived in the shadow of government. That it should be in our lives as little as possible. That every time it intrudes, to collect a tax, to stamp a passport, to pull us over on the highway, it had better be giving us a hell of a bargain in return. Our country's resistance to ID's stems from a basic, visceral aspect of that conflict; I do not exist at the sufferance of my state. I do not need to be stamped and photographed to be legitimate. I am a free, "legal" person inherently - not because of my card. I am not, in other words, a number. But this sounds too much like rhetoric. The basic point is, let each agency who needs to know who I am ask each time it needs to. Let each give an ID if it must. Don't let government as a whole enumerate us; that's a bad bargain, because it doesn't need to. Only specific parts of it do. So let it do only as much as it needs.
Of course, it also stems from the basic necessities; a national ID system is expensive, and it has no clearly stated and important benefits that justify its expense. If you say that it helps provide "security," you'll have to say precisely how.
But I'd rather not preach at you. You should look at the works on the subject, read about the relevant history, and draw your own conclusions.
-David
Re:I have an idea (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:I have an idea (Score:2)
And the what brainwashing are you talking about with "duck and cover?"
The only brainwashing I have seen about that is from people who have convinced you and others that the whole idea was silly.
The american public WAS brainwashed. We were brainwashed by a media with an agenda - and the brainwashing was that nuclear was was not survivable, so duck and cover is silly. This tied in to the agenda of nuclear weapons ban movements, and the purpose for the disinformation was to exagerrate the (admittedly terrible) effects of nuclear war.
Duck and cover made sense. It would have saved many lives and prevent even more injuries in the vent of a nuclear war against US cities - especially with the quantity of weapons that would have been used in the '50s and '60s.
I lived through the cuban missile crises. My father had been a nuclear weapons designer, and we lived in the city that had (and still has, apparently) the largest stored number of nuclear weapons in the united states - Albuquerque, New Mexico (check out the mountain with the bunkers and the fences just as you leave town to the east on I-40). And my father one day showed the family *how* and *where* to duck and cover to maximize our chances of surviving the weapons he was an expert on. For some info on how deadly and not deadly the are, check out my site. [tinyvital.com]
Likewise, civil defense and fallout shelters made sense also, but they were also killed by the ban-the-nukes people. OF course, nukes haven't been banned, but rather have proliferated. Oh well...
Re:I have an idea (Score:2)
Re:Hah (Score:2)
The US was afraid of communist totalitarianism, whether it was imposed by the Soviets or anyone else. And history has proven that communist totalitarianism was indeed something to be very afraid of. Read "The Black Book of Communist" - written by a bunch of current and former *leftist* French intellectuals if you want to see how *every* communist government ever created was evil. Yes - evil. Not just because of their denial of economic rights, but because of their denial of *all rights.*
The western elite cared plenty about methods. And, the methods of the western "elite" in general did not use methods as evil as the Soviets. Certainly the western "elite" didn't use evil methods against their own people!
And the paranoid fantasy that our leaders are *nothing* more than a ruthless aristocracy is one that is surprisingly attractive to people. I guess it is just the nature of some people to imagine that those who have more power than themselves are naturally evil or ruthless or an aristocracy or whatever. It is indeed sad that people are so misinformed or deluded, because it provides fertile ground for those who would indeed cause trouble. Hitler used people with these sorts of fantasies, as an example.
There are ruthless people among our leaders - probably in greater percentage than among non leaders, but there are also honorable people - lots of them. Believe me, if we were lead by a "ruthless elite" you would feel that ruthlessness just by posting on this board the way you did!
Oh, and those in charge want to stay there. Duh! Could it be that achieving something that takes years of hard work might lead one to want ot continue to achieve that? I don't think it is good that our congress (as opposed to presidents) is almost immune from reelection defeat. But it is not a result of "aristocracy" and the effects of inherent ruthlessness is limited by the countervailing systems we have (the press, the courts, opposing parties, conservative talk radio, etc).
Re:Ok ok, here is why I WANT a national ID card... (Score:2)
There is actually a very interesting advantage to the scores of different ID cards--it gives counterfeiters 50 different things to counterfeit. Sure everyone is gonna take a crack at the kindergartner can do it New Jersey photo driver's license. That hardly matters. On the other hand, take a Pennsylvania. The PA license has a devilishly hard hologram to fake--and my understanding is no one is trying to do it. On the other hand, if all the licenses were the same, and had the same hologram, that means that every single counterfeiter in this country would be putting all their effort, resources, and be discussing how to counterfeit the National ID card.
Indeed, look at the poor bastards in California. Here we have a state that not significant changes to their licenses every two years (far more than any other state) and recently introduced a license that probably caused every counterfeiter in the nation to cream his pants. On the other hand, California has many times more counterfeiters than any other state, the license looks so good that people trust it without doubt, and the state issued a big challenge to counterfeiters everywhere, whether or not they are in California, to try it out. Somehow the less difficult Pennsylvania license goes right under the radar.
I would also like to point out that the state of California, as I said, changes their licenses every two years to thwart counterfeiters. Not only do they not exactly succeed--but they also cause differently looking CA licenses to exist. Ohio has issued the same (butt ugly) license since 1995. California has changed at least four times since 1992, with two significant changes (at least four of those types are still valid.) So not only does your NYC cop need to know what a CA license looks like--he also has to know what four of them look like--all in the attempt to prevent unpreventable counterfeiting.
Regrettably, few people realize this, and if they did, we wouldn't be in as stupid a situation as we are now.
Re:Ok ok, here is why I WANT a national ID card... (Score:2)
So, they changed to another kind of ID verification, and it reduced fraud. Assuming you meant in comparison to other states, this begs the question, why shouldn't other states drop the drivers license as ID, too.
> b.)
What is when you have a (valid) New Jersey drivers license. Just happen to be in different state.
A little exaggeration:
Family Johnson is "travelling" from Camden to Philadelphia. (A hop over a river)
"Honey, didn't you forget your passport?"
And what about money?
The dollar hasn't (drastically) changed for quite some time and is in every state the same.
There are only two printing facilities in the whole US, to guarantee a great similarity.
Following your argumentation, all this is actually detrimental to its forgery-proofness.
Let's cram it all in one card to simplify hacking? (Score:3, Interesting)
Including my medical, financial or other data seems to be exactly the WRONG thing to be doing. If I want money I'll use my credit card thank you. If I want health care, I'll use my insurance card.
If we have to have an National ID card, Uncle Sam should stick to 'identifying me as a citizen' and not be in the business of recording my medical records, my financial transactions, etc.
And yes, absolutely, my ID number SHOULDN'T be my SSN number. Identity theft is already too easy.
Information (Score:2)
If my ID card stores my medical information, it looks like I would be more perfect if I didn't go to the hospital.
If my ID card stores where I fly, it may appear I would be less of a suspect if I didn't go to the wrong places at the wrong time.
Why do I need my fingerprints stored on my card, when my fingerprints are all over them?
Re:Information (Score:2)
Or it may save you when you get into an accident, and they need exact medical info about you before they perform that emergency life-saving surgery on you.
Also, it's an AMERICAN Id card, chrissake, not the National ID card. Other people read
If people is OK with having an email account and a credit card, why make such a big deal about an ID card? People can ID you in a gazillion ways already anyway.
Re:Information (Score:4, Insightful)
So encrypt them using public key cryptography. It's a perfect application. Anyone can decode the encrypted version of the fingerprints to compare them with the actual article, but it's next to impossible to falsify the data on the card. Of course it's going to be very, very important to keep the private key private, or you'll invalidate the whole system.
...future of security after 9/11 (Score:4, Insightful)
Great Idea,,, but (Score:2, Insightful)
I think this card looks cool but there is a couple of issues.
Once this new standard is in place everywhere, image having a faulty card. With all the gadets on it, I'd say you would have to take better care of it than your PDA.
So a lot of places would require you to show this card, like taking a loan, getting a card to renting videos, etc. Would I like every shop be able to view all the data that the card could contain. I don't think so.
I would be good to get a single standard id, that is accepted and hard/impossible to fake and that everyone knows what look like.
It seems to me that the current databases of information has shown to be less than 100% correct, ahrm. So it would be needed to verify each and everyone from scratch so give the card any value. What use is it that you know that the card indeed belongs to the person who carries it, if that information was wrong to begin with.
Re:Great Idea,,, but (Score:2)
Well, as long as it looks cool! I'm all for it! What could possibly go wrong?
</SARCASIM>
Get used to the idea (Score:2)
It isn't a matter of if, simply a matter of when.
Biometric activation? (Score:3, Interesting)
Would it be possible to include a biometric in smart credit card so that it won't swipe correctly unless my thumbprint has been put on it recently? That would stop a pickpocket from buying $200 worth of gasoline before I notice it's missing.
You could also have a home bio-scanning device that would be needed (maybe in addition to a password) to contact your bank for skinning off disposable numbers from your credit account to shop online with. It would be worth it to people who do a lot of online purchasing, and partcularly for small home businesses.
Bio-metric based identification systems aren't going to solve national security problems any time soon, but some of them are close enough that they could have useful applications for individuals andprivate organizations. Or are they?
Re:Biometric activation? (Score:2)
To buy gas, you'd use your card and verify your identity using a retinal scanner (hey, ten years ago, gas pumps didn't have card readers, either). Since your ID number is derived from your retinal pattern, it'd warn if one or the other didn't match up.
Of course, this doesn't save you from having someone coldcock you and stuff your head up to the scanner Metal Gear Solid-style, but nothing's perfect.
Re:Biometric activation? (Score:2)
I don't know about you, but my thumb print is all over my id cards. When ever someone asks to see my id I pull it out of my wallet without first putting gloves on. So now we get a id card with my thumb print on. Now all the theif needs is to finish the job is to lift the print, and put it on a false print. (See some recient stories on this, though I don't have the link)
Biometric sounds good, and is a part of security, but it is fairly easy to fake if you want to. (Want a retnia scan, just scan the victums retna and past a picture on your forehead. Blood sample, no problem, they sample comes from a bag, not the theif, gathered earlier, until we figgure out how to create DNA.) Note that implimentation is left to the user, but a good thief will have no problem getting his own copy of the biometric data.
That isn't to say biometric is useless. However the best security relys on something you carry (your id card), something you are (biometrics), and something you know (a pin, password, or passphrase). All 3 should be stored in a trusted location that uses security to aduit the machine wanting to identify someone before accepting data. (This security is not easy to impliment correctly! For example the machine must destroy itself before allowing someone to access data, which means that you have to renew your id every few years so the new machines know your id)
However how much do you really need. My credit card is just one of the above: the card I carry, or the number if I memorise it. They use insurance and legal action to make sure fraud isn't a problem for the end user. My ATM card worries me more because if someone gets both my card and my pin they can get my money, and it is up to me to prove that I didn't withdraw all my cash. Even though it is more secure, I prefer not to use it because there isn't the other protections against fraud.
Is it Constitutional? (Score:5, Informative)
The background was California had a law requiring ID. A man was stopped by police while walking down the street and for no reason ordered to produce ID. He had none and was arrested. The subtext was that he was black and the neighborhood he was in was a rich white area.
Re:Is it Constitutional? (Score:4, Informative)
[sdsu.edu]
Re:Is it Constitutional? (Score:2)
I'm not sure how much this applies; prohibiting police from doing random ID checks is not the same as requiring ID at established security checkpoints. Who wants their every move to be in a database? Thank goodness there are not yet checkpoints at every state border crossing.
Re:Is it Constitutional? (Score:2)
Re:Is it Constitutional? (Score:2)
Not only that, but mention it to their lawyers too!
Seriously, anyone who has taken psycology101 knows that the power we give police officers is not only easially abused, but humans tend to abuse that power. The public needs to be constantly aware of what the police are doing.
That isn't to say that all police are bad. Most are trying to do what is right, however the nature of their job (and the bad people they have to work with) makes going over the line too tempting.
How does this help? (Score:2)
The US Gov't just wants people to feel safer so that they spend money and be a good consumer. They aren't fixing the root of the problem (which, ironically, would save us a fortune... see my sig...)
Necesary and Propper (Score:5, Interesting)
I strongly suspect that its nearing the time to invoke our moral right to alter or abolish a government when it has become destructive to the end for which it was created, a la the Declaration of Independence.
You are soo full of shit. (Score:2)
But, given the fact that we all NEED a Social Security card to WORK, a Drivers Licence to DRIVE, a ID to buy Cigerettes and Beer, why not have ONE ID?
I am a long standing Libertarian (As in lp.org [lp.org], not liberal), and I am very for the National ID. Your kidding yourself if you really think that the ID is the problem. The ever expanding government is the problem, not some piece of plastic that makes it hard to counterfit an easier on my wallet weight!
and for the record, I'm not a full Libertarian, ONLY because I am isolationist, very much a Jeffersonian, as our founding fathers intended. I think the government fell apart with "the great FDR" who made us the world's policeman ... which the LP's "open borders" doesn't transision well into given the world culture now days.
How the hell did THIS crap get moded to +5 on ./? I thought much better of the readers and mods....
Re:You are soo full of shit. (Score:2, Insightful)
In the current system, with separate IDs for every agency, there is no way for a cop who looks at your driver's license to also check out your employment history, credit rating, drug prescriptions, criminal records, religious affiliation, or anything else not associated with your driving records. The cop could not call up the AMA and find your drug prescriptions because there is no unique, persistent relationship between your driver's license and medical record. No, I hate to break it to you, but your name, birthdate, address, and phone number are not unique, persistent identifiers.
If there were a single national ID for every person, someone looking at your driver's licence could call your doctor and find out your medical history through this ID that you, and you alone, have which he now has access to. So could a bouncer that checked your age. With a national ID, everyone will be able to find out everything about everyone else.
It gets worse. What if someone steals your national ID? Now they have access to everything about you; they can withdraw all your money, take your drug prescriptions, sell your house, get your passport, enroll you in political parties or movements, take over your life.
To escape this you would have to get a new national ID. Consider the amount of grief you go through to cancel your credit cards. Now imagine you have to the the same thing for every form of personal identification you ever used in your entire life. It would be a nightmare, but that's only the start. The new ID would be that of a completely new person, there would be no way to revoke all the times you had used the ID in the past. The person who stole your card would become you, and you would be a different person.
A universal national ID would be a privacy and civil liberties disaster; the people opposing it are not idiots. I agree it's a nuisance to have separate driver's licences, blue cross, library cards, employee ID, and so on, but someone who would give up liberty for convenience deservers neither.
Re:You are soo full of shit. (Score:2, Insightful)
Really...good luck finding that law...it doesn't exist. (You are refering to De Facto practice)
a Drivers Licence to DRIVE,
The ability to travel freely is the essence of liberty; it is a natural, irrevokable, right. That right doesn't change because your personal property uses an engine. The requirment of a licence to travel in any fashion is an abomination of freedom.
I am a long standing Libertarian (As in lp.org [lp.org], not liberal), and I am very for the National ID.
You're what us principaled (real) libertarians and anarchists call a Republican in Drag . What you are is a very confused statist. It's a shame the Libertarian Party has been consumed by your type. The LP was the last hope, and now all hope is lost...
Re:Necesary and Propper (Score:2)
Re:I just can't let go ripping on this idiotic ran (Score:2)
btw, don't just install the UNIX keymap when your keyboard doesn't support it and expect to be productive. actyaly typing Ctrl+h in netscape is a bitch.
Re:I just can't let go ripping on this idiotic ran (Score:2)
Exactly where in the constitution does it say our congressmen should?
I vote, I know who votes on what... That's how it works, and the more people you vote for that actually do what they SAY, the more you should support them. The more they don't, the more you try to vote them out.
Back to Bush, if we could. You said you voted for him. Why? If it was to reduce the size of government, and insure people of this country more freedom, you choose the lesser of to evils, and didn't vote TRUELY for the best man (just the one that was slightly better than Gore).
Don't you think the CONSEPT of 1 agency is better than 20? Or at least something in there to do some checks on them?
My god, if they could get the BATF in line, I'd be happy (not that I believe the BATF is an agency of evil. I know BATF agents that are cool. But, the laws that created it are idiotic! Thus, back to the VOTE.
If you really want to make a diffrence, make careful note of WHO in congress waters down Bush's plan. Also, more importantly, note who want's to change the plan to be bigger and more expansive, and more red tape. It's been taken both ways, and THOSE are the people to blame, not Bush. Those are the people to vote out in 2-4 years....
and, BTW, my keymap is fine, I type ^H quite frequently, as do MANY PEOPLE, to indicate a strike-through that you really don't want to erase. It's an old USENET thing that happened before html was big and strike-through was possable. I don't know where exactly you saw it, but I sure as hell don't deny doing it, because I don't care to start doing EVERYTHING in html when I'm quite use to doing a ^H^H^H and most intelleget people know what it means.
aside from that, when was my productivity in question exactly?
cheers.
Exactly how would these prevent "9/11"? (Score:2, Interesting)
I'm getting a bit sick of "The War On Terrorism (tm)" being trotted out as an universal excuse. If they want to bill the cards as cutting down on bureaucracy and red tape, or catching convicted fraudsters/thieves/etc, so be it, but otherwise, it's a bit late for kneejerk reactions.
this is not new - Virtual National ID Cards (Score:2)
Our rights are already eroded. Blame the IT revolution.
Any law enforcement agency (or unscrupulous third party) has always been able to gather all the info you'd see on a national ID on a person from different sources and build a "virtual ID" file for them. Back when the whole world used paper records, the process was too impractical to be done wholesale (not that that stopped people from trying). With electronic records, it became quite doable (what do you think a background check or credit check is?). A national ID would simply make it easier to snoop on a person by setting up a "one stop shop."
America needs to wake up and be proactive on this issue. We need to protect civil liberties through establishment and enforcement of universal privacy standards rather than the patchwork of laws throughout our states. We're been living in a Fools Paradise for years, assuming that just because our data was scattered all over the place that it was protected (a twist on the "security through obscurity" belief). Fifty years ago it was only J. Edgar Hoover that had the resources to root out our secrets in all those paper records. All that computers (and now, a proposed national ID) have done is lower the bar for those with less manpower... if no less scruples.
obvious danger (Score:2)
Perfect, everything the identity thief needs to impersonate me, mess with my bank and credit-card accounts over the phone, and so on.
I'm generally not a paranoid privacy freak, but come on, this is just obviously stupid!
If they DO institute national ID cards ... (Score:2)
Voting.
To insure that any person who votes in any national election is ELIGIBLE to vote in a national election and ONLY VOTES ONCE.
Re:National elections are a fallacy (Score:2)
Because it isn't true. The Federal government has overriding authority in elections where federal officials or issues are voted on. (They used this authority to enforce the civil rights voting act, for example.)
The Constitution also mandates that the Fed insure that each state has a Republican form of government. (Meaning elections of representative officials, not the Republican Party. B-) ) This lets the Fed diddle in elections of state officials and the general form of the election - especially if the state(s) in question have a record of using procedures that deny representation to their residents or a subset of them.
The Constitution also gave the Fed a mandate (after a period - long since over - when the states could still make the decision) to decide who is a legal immigrant and thus eligible to vote.
Vote fraud and California. (Score:2)
Just so long as the name and address you provide match up with a registered voter, you are good to go.
Worse than that: You can register at the polls and vote immediately. (This proposal wouldn't keep them from doing that, by the way. They could just seal the votes of the newly-registered voters until the ID had been checked, then count such ballots later in the final tally.)
Of course thanks to the "motor-voter" law you can also register by mailing in postpaid bingo cards that you can pick up at most government offices (and at supermarkets, and
A guy down the street from us is not a US citizen, but brags about how he has over twenty registrations - and votes 'em all.
The girl next door has been trying for years to get her deceased mother off the voting rolls. Clerk keeps putting her back on "because she's still voting".
Vans stuffed with people go from polling place to polling place, with the people voting at EACH of them.
I have changed my party affiliation several times and found myself double-registered as a result twice - because the same form is used for add, change affiliation, and change address and the clerk typoed. (I made DAMNED sure nobody voted my extra registration until I got it canceled.)
Turnout in one district dropped over 80% when a (false) rumor went around that the INS would be checking voters for ID and deporting non-citizens.
I could go on.
But there's SO much corruption in the elections in California that I really wonder how much of the vote is the actual population and how much is the political machine.
This has got to stop!
Because when the elections become so corrupt that they don't actually represent the will of the people, and the people REALIZE it, they stop performing their real function. And that function is to convince the losers that they can't reverse the decision by force. Corrupt elections destabilize governments and lead to civil war.
Now there are two things I don't like:
- Corrupt elections.
- Government ID cards.
By tying them together I hope to get ONE of them stopped.
Maybe it will be the ID cards - because some of the politicions currently in power might think some of their votes were faked up by the party machine back home and the ID cards might cost them their seat. Or maybe we'll lose on the ID card issue but at least get improved elections out of it.
But I'll be DAMNED if I sit around silently while the machine-politicians ram through an ID card and still leave the machine intact.
Only truly reliable for those born afterward (Score:2)
For those born after such an ID was introduced, they could be verified and ID's essentially at birth, providing a factually verifiable ID.
Fear the database, not the card (Score:2)
The real problem is much more trivial -- universally machine-readable cards. Just having a standard on how IDs are stored in a bar-code form would be enough -- the ID numbers already exist (every state has a license ID, prepend the state code and you've got a national ID). This doesn't exclude the possibility of having more than one ID and number (I assume there's nothing exclusionary in having different state IDs), but that would be easy to fix too (just match up SSN during ID signup).
Once you have this reader possibility, big brother has nearly everything necessary. They're talking about swiping cards at every large building, every federal building, and with the new public-private "security initiatives", there's no reason this couldn't be matched up to all sorts of other systems. This could lead to a thorough record of certain activities -- many related to our fundamental rights and duties as a citizen. If the database was expanded further -- in particular, credit cards and other automated payment systems -- people's lives could be tracked quite closely. This wouldn't necessarily track any one activity, but would be a way of profiling. (Past experience shows that the FBI will use this to track any sort of dissident -- considering how often they've done it in the past, and that they have never been reformed, only slightly hobbled a couple times)
But don't worry, the card would be voluntary (haha -- as long as you consider interstate travel voluntary, internet commerce voluntary, etc).
People are too hung up on the physical card. (Score:4, Insightful)
For any effective system, the DB should be centrally managed. Both for revocation of ID's, and for security of the sensitive content.
The card has the person's private key, stored in a physically secure chip. That key can be authenticated against the government's issuing authority (as can the validity of the data on the card).
Then, data can be accessed from the central DB, according to the privileges allowed the requestor of the data, on the authority of the cardholder.
There are obvious security / privacy concerns. Particularly if the entity you fear abuse from the most is the government. But, it has the potential to offer a lot more privacy and security than current completely insecure systems.
Quick Predictions re National ID card debate (Score:2)
I'll condense the national ID card debate Slashdot style:
1. Some Americans (the smart ones) are concerned about the unconstitutional and immoral encroachment of the federal government and the State in general into private affairs,the cancellation of your civil liberties, and the abandonment of privacy as a fundamental notion of American identity. (Yes, I said immoral. And I meant it.)
2. Some Americans don't care, and won't care, until someone comes after them individually, by which time, it is already hopelessly too late.
3. Most Europeans will treat the Americans in (1) with disdain and in (2) with general disgust, and then go on at length about how the tradition in whatever country they're from permits a stronger *national* government and notion of the State while maintaining a firm but limited notion of civil liberties. They will then make a disparaging remark about American culture based on one of the following: Walmart, McDonalds, Britney Spears, Backstreet Boys, nuclear weapons, ballistic missile defense, or neo-colonialism.
4. Some Americans will then counter the culture argument with some remark based on one of the following: grooming habits, combined GDP, nuclear weapons, WWI and/or WWII.
5. People reading Slashdot from places that are not the US nor Europe will watch as the Americans get flustered at the European attitude, while the Europeans get flustered at the American attitude,
all the while wondering when they will start listening instead of just waiting for their turn to talk.
The real problem... (Score:2, Insightful)
Most proposed plans for a national ID have suggested that state DMV's should be the ones to hand these out -- but the last few decades have seen hundreds of cases of corrupt DMV employees giving out drivers licenses for cash. It's hard to imagine any other agency you might choose being much different.
And in a world where this card is believed to be `secure' for so many more purposes, such cases will do even more damage than they already do, because people will be even less likely to question the documents before their eyes.
So even if there were not serious privacy concerns with a national ID system, it is at best highly unlikely that it would buy any real security gains in return for the great cost and bureaucratic overhead it would introduce.
Put differently: you thought standing in line at the DMV sucked now-- just imagine what it would be like after the people who brought you the IRS and the INS got done with it.
Comment removed (Score:3, Insightful)
ok, i want one... (Score:2, Funny)
Atlantic Article (Score:2)
why are smart cards considered secure? (Score:2)
So, what do the "privacy" advocates want? (Score:2, Insightful)
We already have infringement on our privacy, of course. Cops stop your car and ask people for their driver's licenses all the time. This is okay, since we don't want people without licenses driving. The rest of it is okay to that is on the card, since its okay to make sure the car is not stolen and that the person is who they say they are.
We already produce our social security number when we apply for employment or enroll for college.
Are the privacy advocates against these forms of identification?
If not, then rather than attacking every incarnation of a national identification system, propose a solution. Make a position on how far is too far as far as identification goes. Come up with a compromise.
Do you want separate medical cards (for doctors and hospitals), security cards (for airports and bands, and general cards (for street police and any of the above) instead of one card with all the above information on it? Do you want laws written on who can legally ask for the information on the card? Do you want all the information stored on the card or available in an online database? If the later, then do you want the ability to say who has access to this up-to-date information (such as former employees)?
Regardless of what the radicals believe, we (at least in the US) still live in a constitutional system. We have a Bill of Rights that guarentees we'll never come close to the kind of dystopia in 1984. That would require a radical overthrowing of our government.
Just like the restrictions placed on software, we should not complain that a certain restriction is bad, but rather remind people when and where we step the line.
In otherwords, say what you want or don't complain when you don't get it.
(this is aimed a many of the comments posted here on slashdot, if there are real privacy organization doing the above, then I wish the best)
we need good national IDs; this isn't it (Score:2)
There should be no information on a national ID card about medical history, organ donation, marital status, driving history, or anything else. All information should be human readable, and there should be no writable content. Anybody with a right to know should keep their own database of such information and should be required to comply with strict privacy regulations.
Unfortunately, the hysteria about national ID cards on the one hand, and the incompetent efforts at designing them on the other hand, just keep degrading our privacy. Foes of national ID cards condemn us to continued reliance of indentification methods that both expose too much personal information (driver's license, social security) and are unreliable and highly susceptible to identity theft. And the folks now influential in the federal government seem to think that a national ID card system should satisfy every pipe dream of a neo-fascist world view in which the state controls and knows everything.
We need a solid national ID system, and we need strong privacy legislation. Anything less than both of those condemns Americans to continued invasions of privacy from crooks, companies, and the government.
I like it. (Score:2)
What I DO NOT want to see is this or any other ID card sceme being mandatory. I like being able to walk around at random at 2AM without any ID just because. But, this could be a useful tool as long as it is not required to access basic services, but is implemented as a voluntary way to streamline the process.
COINTELPRO lamers infesting slashdot (Score:3, Interesting)
Points awarded for every lie found in their rhetoric.
Oh btw, here's one to get you started.
joshki wrote:
"I don't agree with the patriot act either. It was an ill-considered, knee-jerk reaction to a horrible situation."
The Fact is that an act like the "Patriot Act"(sic) takes more than six(6) months to put together, even if you have a dreamteam of lawyers working around the clock.
So, a "knee-jerk reaction" is NOT the proper wording here.
The Fact is that the "Patriot Act" was introduced and clubbed through over night!
NOT A SINGLE ONE of the people in the Congress were allowed to read through it before they had to decide on it. Mighty democratic!
I suggest that some people go back to school since it will take a little more than that to fool people that everything that happened on 9/11 and afterwards has just been coincidents.
Finally, for those who don't believe that there are criminals in high places in the US. Just take a look at the "Operation Northwoods" docs. JFK happened to get wind of the operation and stopped it before he "coincidentally" got his brain splattered all over his wife. As an educational excercise into corruption, compare the people involved in the Warren Commision and the people involved in the "commision" that has been put together to "bring light" into what happend on 911.
Points awarded for every correct match.
Bonus awarded for every correct answer of who's dad's name appears in that investigation too.
Re:I like the idea. (Score:2, Insightful)
Then you're a dumbass.
n.b. This is not a troll, it's an observation.
Re:A national ID card is a good thing (Score:2)
Well, everyone except those people who made extra money in college by color-printing up fake IDs (not that I ever did this. And by the way, thanks for the easy format, New Jersey).
Seriously, though, I worry about the *amount* of data associated with the card. Here's my picture of a "good" way of using it: The card just has a basic biometric identifier (retina scan pattern? fingerprint?) that is used to both verify identity and provide data access. Individual entities can then use it to access very specific and tightly controlled bits of information (eg, prescription history from all health care plans I've ever been a part of is available to my current doctor and pharmacist, but not my bartender -- he only gets to see my age and something indicating that I tip well so he should give me good service).
Of course, I'm sure it won't come down this way, because it makes way too much sense.
Re:A national ID card is a good thing (Score:2, Insightful)
Give my your papers!
Who gave you permission to be here?
Where are you going?
Where are you comming from?
Meant you lived under an opressive police state... Perhaps they still do.
Re:Ok, what's with you people? (Score:4, Insightful)
It bears repeating AGAIN - those who crave security over liberty deserve neither - Ben Franklin.