Japanese Cry Foul on New ID System 50
Gudlyf writes: "As an update to the previous story on Japan's governmental ID system, the AP is reporting that many Japanese have organized into protest groups that have popped up and are planning a rally at which demonstrators will show their outrage by ripping up the papers being sent out by the government to assign every citizen an 11-digit number."
00000000001 (Score:1, Funny)
I wonder... (Score:1)
Re:I wonder... (Score:4, Insightful)
When the Social Security system, everyone received a social security number that we were assured [cpsr.org] that it would not be used as a personal ID number. But, there was never a law passed to keep it from being an ID number.
Then, of course, we got used to it... everyone has a social security number. It became a defacto ID number. At my school [wcupa.edu], each student is given an id number, but rarely does anyone know it, because you can use your SS# anywhere you need your id#.
Now, with the war on terrorism, I'm sure someone will get the bright idea of changing the SS# into an identification number, and across the country, millions of people will scratch their heads and say, "What was it before?"
Re:I wonder... (Score:2)
You're free to keep your privacy by remaining a hermit. You're not free to engage in society while remaining anonymous. If you don't like it, move. If you can find somewhere to move where you have the right to anonymity, let the rest of us know!
Re:I wonder... (Score:1, Insightful)
I love all of you conspiracy theorists out there. I really do.
However, the US government is overwhelmingly incompentent. You can ask my drunk mailman neighbor, who's claim to fame was nearly dying at work from an alcohol-related seizure. The best part, they can't fire him! I want that job!
I'll paraphrase Bill Maher to finish this post: "The government can't even deliver the mail!" Trust me, they're not smart enough to run some global spy network on all 280 million plus people in this country, cataloging their every word and move.
Re:I wonder... (Score:1)
Despite the government lacking ambition and rescources currently, I still think it sets a bad precident to give them the right to do it. After the second we dearm ourselves against oppression, it's only a matter of time before someone executes the previously unthinkable.
Re:I wonder... (Score:2)
Re:I wonder... (Score:1)
Re:I wonder... (Score:1)
-binky.
What can I say but... (Score:1)
Some insight into the Japanese situation: (Score:3, Insightful)
Many Japanese do not see any reason for the 11 digit number. They feel that this level of monitoring and tracking goes against their traditional values, and feel detached from the events that have lead to higher security levels all over the world.
Despite the Sarin gas attacks by Aum [crimelibrary.com], the Japanese remain very confident in their society's moral standing and place privacy and discretion on a high pedestal.
Re:Some insight into the Japanese situation: (Score:3, Interesting)
-A culture where people willingly register their personal information with the local police officers (for "emergency use only")
-Where privacy is referred to as "puraibashii" because the language has no native term for the concept?
-Where people have commonly faced discrimination in housing, employment, and marriage based on information the government-listed family register?
Must be a different Japan than the one I lived in
Re:Some insight into the Japanese situation: (Score:1)
- There are lots of words like "puraibashii" that have no Japanese equivalent but that's not to say the concept is unknown. The culture relies to a certain extent on "unsaid" rules which go deeper than language itself.
- Housing and employment do not require "family register" information. However, you raise a good point when it comes to marriage. Sometimes, it's been known that the parents of the bride- or husband-to-be will quietly hire a detective firm to check up on the other party's family past.
Japan's a fast changing society and there is a definite generation gap. In "traditional" Japan - the Japan portrayed by the original poster - people would have actually been more likely accept such an ID system without protest, to keep the "wa" (peace, harmony). It is precisely because Japan is changing that we are now starting to see people protest about these and other things. It's good to see people starting to give a sh*t at last.
Re:Some insight into the Japanese situation: (Score:2)
Public outings of support or disgust... (Score:1)
Jumping the Gun (Score:1)
Re:Jumping the Gun (Score:2, Funny)
Then it would be backslashdot.org
Re:Jumping the Gun (Score:1)
Re:Jumping the Gun (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:Jumping the Gun (Score:3, Insightful)
I wonder... (Score:2)
Now where have I heard of this concept before...
--trb
9-11 (Score:1)
Re:9-11 (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:9-11 (Score:2)
SSN that start with a 5 are from a certian local, for example.
There was a case of a wallet maker who put a fake SSN card in the wallet to show everybody where to put there card. unfortunatly the fake card had his secretaries SSN on it. A l0ot of people who bought thatr wallet thouth the fake SSN number was their SSN number and started using it. obvously this caused some concern at some gov't agency
They where meant to be a tax ID. How can you have a federal tax ID for all adults if they aren't unique?
Irony of the day (Score:2, Funny)
Banner ad connected to a story about the Big Brother aspects of Japan's national ID system: A closeup of an Asian woman's eyes, and the text "See all. Know all."
Re:Irony of the day (Score:2)
here's the link [slashdot.org] for those of you who don't believe us
We've been shown up. Again. (Score:1)
The Japanese have shown the world they have the brains and the guts to get their arses in gear and DO SOMETHING when their government steps out of line.
And no, whining on /. does not count.
I'll be HERE [stopwar.org.uk]. You dont have to take action as direct as that but voting does not count for shit. If something your government does pisses you off, say so!
Ali
Re:We've been shown up. Again. (Score:1)
Referencing some pinko website is apparently more important than legitimate forms of electing representation and participating in one's democracy.
Right.
Re:We've been shown up. Again. (Score:1)
I never said I don't vote, but in the face of the mass media and the public that it has in the palm of it's hand, The Big Three will be the only partys to get any real coverage and thus any chance of coming to power.
Direct action from writing letters to MP's up to, for example, events promoted on these so-called "pinko websites" [hey, that must mean linux is a "pinko" OS, yeah?] gets public opinion noticed. When has the Blair government ever cared shit for public opinion in order to serve public interest? Fuel protest, privatisations [tube / air traffic], healthcare, "war on terror", blah blah...
In my opinion it's preciseley because most people think that a vote [usually based soleley on "info" from the mass media] once every few years is all the maintainance their democracy needs, that there is so much corruption and expectations of governments have nosedived.
How many people not only giving a shit but actually doing something about it will it take for standards of government, and thus quality of life, to actually improve?
Ali
give them money... (Score:1)
So? (Score:1)
Seriously, beyond THEORETICAL problems, has anyone actually experienced something truly wrong by SSNs? I mean, so what if you can have your credit tracked? Most people trying to hide it shouldn't be dealt with in business anyway.
Yeah, the entire system works on corporate greed in wanting to get the most out of the smallest investment by any means whatsoever, but isn't that what capitalism is in the first place -- a system built on greed? So why shouldn't anybody for a capitalist society want it?
Just curious. I'm just a brainwashed American, so I don't see the problem.
Re:So? (Score:1)
Re:So? (Score:1)
Anyway, with any convenience comes its inherant security problems. On a Win9x machine, if you leave your pass on Outlook Express and don't password it (or Hotmail), then anyone who has access to your machine can look through your mail or "verify" things or reset your Paypal password and have all the money in your account cashed out and mailed to a Swiss bank account. If someone has your Paypal pass, as long as you have a credit card or bank account on it, they can spend away and it'd be a pain in the ass to get those charges reversed.
Okay, that was just one example. But I think a bank account number would cause more damage than an SSN; if someone's going to forge ID cards with your name on them, they're going to do that anyway, whereas you can lose all your money immediately with your bank account number...although you'd need the SSN there, too.
Anyway, I hold my SSN with a death grip, and so far I've had no identity theft problems. So, until that happens, I'm content to sit on my lazy American ass and keep my SSN.
Re:So? (Score:2)
Lucky you. Unfortunately, my college used my SSN as my student number, with which my grades and such were publicly posted. Any one of a few thousand students and any clever con artists who come on campus looking for numbers could have my SSN and name right now, just waiting to exploit it.
Re:So? (Score:1)
Well said.
Question: Are you for capitalism, or would you switch to a (truly) better system? [Sure, I've got a better system in mind, but it'd require "phenominal cosmic power" to implement.
(And no, I'm not suggesting communism or any other hippy crap, nor do I think that ostracizing everyone else and forming polticial cults can work.)
surprising only because they have no privacy (Score:1)
-Your local police will visit your house as soon as you move to collect information on who lives there, 2 emergency contact numbers, where you work, what you do, etc.
-The state run television network (NHK) has your name and address and will keep tabs on whether you pay them or not and send people to your house to collect fee
-Buying anything by credit card often requires your telephone number (written in write after your signature)
-Think your safeway/vonsclub card is bad? Every store here has a "pointcard" most of which are electronic to track your purchases. And if you're a geek that shops regularly at one of the major electronics stores (bic camera, yodobashi, etc.) expect to pay 15% more on everything if you don't sign up for one of these cards
-You can buy phones with GPS built in. And most non-gps phones can already be tracked by the phone company based on cell-site (since the cell coverage is quite good, the location info is accurate)
-People can send you spam to your cell phone which you have to pay for (at maybe $.05 each) and it's not illegal
-National health insurance requires health checks every year with results reported to your employer
-Renting an apartment requires you to have character references and financial guarantees. You also need to sign provisions that limit the number of friends you can have over, require you to put a parking sticker on your bicycle, etc.
-Signing up for recreational activities (like bike races, or just buying tickets from a travel agency) they often ask for information like your blood type, birthdate,etc.
-None of the mailing lists, etc. ever offer the option to 'opt out'
The big difference between this 11 digit number and all these other bits and pieces is that the new number is nationwide and owned by the government. Oddly, they seem to distrust their central government more than all the shops, conglomerates, local governments, and other establishments that they give their information out to. The people are too naive to realize that it's pretty doable to relate information from one database to another.
Re:surprising only because they have no privacy (Score:1)
As for trusting the government here, it governs in spite of its efforts to muck things up. The people are so very right not to want the right hand to know what the left hand is doing because it effects a sort of damage control. As doable as it might be to relate info from database to database here, no sector wants to give up its autonomy. No matter how technically feasible, nobody here wants to share the information.
It will be interesting to see how life changes for the average Japanese once all government agencies will have access to a unified data source.