RFID License Plates in the UK 550
An anonymous reader writes "The UK Government is studying license plates with embedded RFID tags. The plates can be read from 300 feet away and in rapid succession by readers embedded in the road or by 'surveillance vehicles.'"
Just Great... (Score:4, Insightful)
They said that for DVD encryption too, but look where that got us. Eventually, someone, somewhere will find a way to tamper with it and the best the government will be able to do is, like always, use heavy fines to curb the spread, but it will be futile, just like it was with DVD encryption.
I bet I'll have the plate transmit "YHBT" within two years.
When will they learn?
Might as well paint your car 'Arrest me Red' (Score:4, Insightful)
Pass by a cop broadcasting l0s3r, and I'm sure he will not say, "Oh well, I guess we can't track him anymore.'
Re:Might as well paint your car 'Arrest me Red' (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Might as well paint your car 'Arrest me Red' (Score:5, Insightful)
But don't let me stop you from tampering with your plate.
Re:Might as well paint your car 'Arrest me Red' (Score:5, Interesting)
Disabling your own tag might single you out for persecution (and prosecution), but doing it to everyone's tag would create a gigantic mess for the perps of this scheme.
Re:Might as well paint your car 'Arrest me Red' (Score:5, Insightful)
That's what machines are for.
Re:Might as well paint your car 'Arrest me Red' (Score:3, Insightful)
How about (Score:5, Interesting)
You don't even need the RFID on your plates, in fact it might would better with a seperate RFID responder (RFID is fairly passive, can you send a boosted return signal?).
The safety/privacy concerns of this are staggering. Yes, I can always sit and watch for "license plate X" on the highway, but I'm sure that it wouldn't be hard for a non-governmental person/corp could actively scan plates with a homebrew scanner. Think advertisement, lots of advertisement (as they start to track your movements and where you frequently park your car), or perhaps even stalkers.
Re:Might as well paint your car 'Arrest me Red' (Score:5, Interesting)
As a matter of fact, I can't understand how these people are planning to read these things from 160 feet away. Maybe a directional antenna?
On the upside, perhaps these will soon be set up in an automated fashion at measured intervals in the United States. It will become impossible to speed over stretches of highway covered by these. Auto accidents still kill a tremendous number of people annually -- a lot more than "terrorists", whom we in the US have given up a lot more freedoms to combat (and spent more money on) than simply automated license plate reading.
Re:Might as well paint your car 'Arrest me Red' (Score:3, Insightful)
I do recognize that energy is a function of mass linearly and of velocity geometrically, but cars are
Re:Might as well paint your car 'Arrest me Red' (Score:3, Insightful)
Hahah...I live down here too!! I don't look at my speedo unless the radar detector goes off....and down here, the cops are back in the 'stone ages'...using X band.
On the other hand...it is hard to go fast in many places down here....as that the ENTIRE city is one big 'speed bump'. With all the taxes we pay down here...why can't we have nice roads, and a d
Re:Might as well paint your car 'Arrest me Red' (Score:3, Interesting)
Driving faster requires a larger following distance, but most people follow way too close at any speed. Simply reducing speed limits will not really make the roads any safer. I don't know what will, except for people taking a more
Re:Lucky is it? (Score:3, Insightful)
Of course, if you *did* kill yourself on a bridge at 85, there's also a good chance that you wouldn't be around saying "Speed *can* be fatal -- why I crashed going 85 and killed myself!"
I certainly do read about fatal car accidents where excessive speed is the major contributing factor, so it certainly *does* happen.
I also feel that people have a pretty strong tendency to misjudge their driving capabilities (nothing is more annoying than people that insi
Re:Just Great... (Score:3, Interesting)
Time to get one of these [theregister.co.uk] for my car...
Re:Just Great... (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Just Great... (Score:3, Interesting)
Anyone with the right equipment can and will read the tag on your car, though. If this anyone happens to be the police, they might also check to see if your hacked tag corresponds to the physical description of your car, or perhaps a license plate number (which it
Re:Just Great... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Just Great... (Score:3, Interesting)
You should watch Minority Report for a few examples of how this technology could be implemented.
Thinking about the whole personalised advertisements, it's something I doubt I'd be keen on. It's a little like the personalised emails companies send out to customers now based upon previous shopping habbits, and I always make sure they are sent to /dev/null.
One scenario I don't want is to be listening to music when th
Re:Just Great... (Score:3, Interesting)
It NEEDS a battery. Batteries WILL die. The Govt cannot make us verify that the RFID is working without opening it enough so that ANYONE can follow ANYONE ELSE around. See elsewhere why I think that this is a BAD IDEA!
Before (Score:5, Informative)
Here's a video and more info (Score:5, Informative)
More infor here [aiag.org].
Re:Here's a video and more info (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Here's a video and more info (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Here's a video and more info (Score:3, Funny)
Nah...there are about 10 people in my development that have the same car as me.
--trb
Facts about tire-mounting machines (Score:5, Funny)
FACT: Discarded auto tires contribute 1,243,918 tons of non-recyclable trash to US landfills every year.
FACT: In the United States and Canada in 2003, 87 children under the age of eighteen were seriously injured in accidents involving unregistered tire-swings 70% of which were suspended from unregistered trees.
FACT: In Europe, where private ownership of tire-mounting machines has long been prohibited, not one violent crime was committed with an unregistered tire-mounting machine in the last decade..
FACT: In 2003, 4,451 children below the age of 18 were killed or seriously wounded in accidents involving improperly-secured home tire-mounting machines.
FACT: In French Guiana, where the law forbids private ownership of radio frequencies, the wealth-gap between rich and poor is only 10% of that found in the United States, and studies have shown unequivocally that tires wear up to 40% longer.
FACT: In both Cuba and Canada, publicly-funded health care ensures that doctors can't afford large, heavy SUVs, resulting in significantly diminished levels of tire-related non-recyclable waste.
Re:Here's a video and more info (Score:3, Interesting)
You don't have to get your car inspected in every state....
Re:Before (Score:2, Interesting)
Yeah, but I can read a license plate without any special equipment, and therefore I know exactly what information is being given to anyone who sees my plate. If you start putting RFID tags in license plates, who's knows what "extra" information they might start encoding on them.
but... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:but... (Score:3, Insightful)
Where does it end..? at what point do you say.. "Wait a minute that's too much?" and will you even be able to do anything about it by the time it gets to that point..?
Re:but... (Score:5, Insightful)
Yes, a helo can follow you around and yes, toll booths can track you from one to the next. That's a completely different thing than the state being able to say "Who? Hacksaw? What date? Hold on, let me run this query. Yeah, here you go. Here's a time stamped map of everywhere his car went on that day, every where he stopped, and how long he was there. Anything else I can do for you?"
Re:Before (Score:4, Insightful)
Surely the problem is not the information that is transmitted, but how it can be related to other information?
If a policeman can scan your numberplate and from that tell who you are and access your medical records to see that you went to the doctors last week to have your piles examined, does it matter that they only thing that is transmitted is a number?
Re:Before (Score:4, Interesting)
Sometimes I think the British government completely missed the message in 1984. They seem to view that bleak future as a goal instead of as a warning.
As draconian as various US laws are, there is one country (these days) that I can always count on to out do us on the big brother front and that is England.
-sirket
Privacy? (Score:4, Interesting)
Government of course will respond in turn, DMCA laws in the US would prevent anyone there (assuming a similar thing was implemented) from determining what their code was (since it is 'encrypted'). The curious would be thrown in jail, or sued, and the major corporations would still enjoy the power.
Re:Privacy? (Score:3, Insightful)
why bother with plates when you already have cell phones?
Re:Privacy? (Score:2)
Maybe they already do... muuuuhahahahah
Re:Privacy? (Score:3, Informative)
What would one do with your tag number anyway? Would you expect someone to get a car that is your make and color, fake a plate with your number on it to commit a crime with it? Man that's way too much TV talking...
How 'bout this one... (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Privacy? (Score:4, Informative)
To get around the congestion charging fee in London, people having been using fake number plates. Saving five pounds a day is a good incentive to do so.
Re:Privacy? (Score:3, Informative)
Easy way to solve this problem, cover the back of your licence plate in refridgerator magnets. That'll throw off the scanners in a big way, and be completely impossible to notice with the naked eye.
Wear your tinfoil hat while driving as well, just to be sure.
Re:Privacy? (Score:3, Insightful)
No they are not. You do all those things in public view so they are not private. Anyone can observe you doing those things and not violate your privacy. The only difference between a computer tracking your driving with RFID and being observed by a private investigator, jealous spouse, deranged fan, etc., is that it is trivially easy for the computer so there is little bar
Re:Privacy? (Score:5, Interesting)
I live in some minor shitsville in the middle of the Netherlands and those goddamn speeding cameras are common around here. In fact, there are so many around here the provincial goverment has denied a request to place more cameras, due to the fact there are so many already. Heck, there's a 800m stretch of road with FOUR cameras. If you go 54 km/h for even a few dozen meters, you're bound to end up 28 euros poorer. Now before people will scream "safety" and "the law", I'd like to remind people this road could take 80km/h with ease, there are NO sidewalks adjacent to the road and no building for kids or disabled people.
This, coupled with the facts the dutch police has "prestation contracts" that state they will bring in a minimum amount of euros on fines and the fact the police only posts cameras and surveillance vehicles where profitable instead of logical really make me doubt wether the police is there for my security not for my money. I really don't want an RFID tag in my car so those greedy bastards can squeeze more money from me. What's next, are they going to tie the RFID tag into the onboard computers? A nice note reading "You were speeding, your front lights are too dim, you ran a traffic light three days ago and you're using the wrong diesel fuel.", along with a 150 euro bill? I just wish the goverment would stop lying to me and say "Yeah, we're doing it for the money." instead of this bullshit story about safety.
Re:Privacy? (Score:3, Insightful)
So you think the rules are wrong? Prestation contracts don't sound good to me, either. But stopping new technology which will most probably save them money (cameras with OCR, including the errors they make, are expensive) for it doesn't seem right to me. Remember that they can pay for schools and hospitals (and fighter jets and wars... sigh) with the money they save.
The RFID in your license plate doesn't hold any information that isn't on the plate already. It's only easier to read it with a computer.
This is a Good Thing... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:This is NOT a Good Thing... (Score:3)
Re:This is NOT a Good Thing... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:This is NOT a Good Thing... (Score:4, Insightful)
Let me put it this way:
My license plate number is public knowledge. You can come take a look at it without me complaining. For around 2 decades my Email address was also public knowledge (my first Email@ was on a Multics system connected to the Arpanet). With the abuse of Email through SPAM this is no longer possible. The proposed RFID system is apparently almost as easy to abuse as is SMTP. The widespread deployment of RFID, the extremely low barrier apparent and the absence of any penalty for the abuse of this system will make it possible for any organization with enough motivation & funding to spy out who goes where & when. The potential for abuse is boundless.
I can see how you may have difficulties comprehending my position. As a marxist you may place the purported greater good before that of the individual. As one who believes instead that society is only protected when individuals rights are protected, I do not.
Unless there are clear safeguards against the abuse of the system, I'll zap it.
For those of us not from the UK (Score:4, Informative)
http://www.cclondon.com/whatis.shtml [cclondon.com]
Suddenly, this RFID buisness doesn't seem so bad in comparison to what Londoners are already going through.
Re:This is a Good Thing... (Score:5, Funny)
I for one support measures that discourage people from driving inefficient polluting farm equipment hundreds of miles just to go shopping in the city. Attempting to maneuver a bulky tractor on cramped London streets was surely a safety menace to motorists and pedestrians alike. He should have considered taking some form of public transportation instead.
If RFID tags can help keep tractors and combine harvesters off of our city streets, then I support them 110%.
Privacy in the UK (Score:4, Interesting)
Is this just not considered important over there? Is a "greater good" mentatlity strong? Or, is it just a no one really cares so the government can get away with anything put on your tinfoil hat oh fuck I got a ticket for going 5mph over attitude?
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Its fuckwit Blunket (Score:2, Interesting)
The man is totally unfit as a home secretary, yet nobody here wants to tell the blind bastard to fuck off, its not politically correct.
I'm moving out of the UK soon and I won't look back.
Re:Privacy in the UK (Score:5, Insightful)
I think the truth is that people in the UK get upset about what the newspapers tell them to get upset about. There is very little about this kind of thing in the papers, so people don't get upset about it.
However, you can be sure that if the EU proposed RFID license plates, the newspapers would be all over it and there would be national outrage. People seem so concerned with opposing anything the EU does that they don't notice the things their own government is doing.
Re:Privacy in the UK (Score:5, Insightful)
Unfortunately, you're absolutely right. We have CCTV cameras covering most public places, we're about to get compulsory biometric ID cards, and now this.
Political debate on this has become monopolised by the law-and-order brigade. Any attempt to raise a protest about privacy and citizens' rights is met with one or more of the following responses:
1. If you've nothing to hide, you have nothing to fear
2. If you don't support us, you're helping terrorists/criminals/illegal immigrants
3. The "people" have no time for "bleeding heart liberals" like you (the favourite put-down of our beloved Home Secretary)
Funny thing is at the same time the government is taking away the last shreds of our privacy, they're talking about changing the freedom of information laws to prevent citizens from finding out what _they_ are up to.
Why don't the people react? I don't know. Maybe it's the incessant banging on from the press about the crime, immigration and terrorism. I'm starting to think it's because most British people couldn't care less about their rights so long as there's beer in the fridge and football on the telly.
Sensors in the roads... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Sensors in the roads... (Score:2)
Oh course, here we don't even have the money to fix the roads.
Much better... (Score:4, Funny)
Traffic flow counting? (Score:2)
ALRIGHT!!!!! (Score:5, Funny)
Now they'll know exactly how fast i was going! without using those arbitrary numbers those radar guns make.
Now all I need is a RFID tag stapled to my little buddy so the government can track how often i get it on with the wife. May come in handy for the future population controls and killing off all ppl over 30....
besides our cars are supposed to be just metaphorical extensions of our penises anyway right?
The future is so BRIGHT!
Re:ALRIGHT!!!!! (Score:5, Funny)
well, on the bright side.. you could also track how often I get it on with your wife too.
How DARE they invade our privacy! (Score:5, Funny)
We can't put up with this, people. Next thing you know, police will be able to take this "tag" number, run it though a "computer data base," and find out how many traffic violations you have committed! I, for one, fight tooth and nail to keep this from coming to pass.
Re:How DARE they invade our privacy! (Score:3, Insightful)
I don't understand why everybody in the US, UK and other powerfuel economies worries about this. Why not look at the good side of this tracking system? It could help law enforcement: got a ticket for speeding? Well, duh, that's written in traffic regulations. I find this good, coming from a city where everyone drives like crazy, causing fatal accidents (e.g. drunk drivers). Also, what about tracking stolen cars?
Re:How DARE they invade our privacy! (Score:3, Insightful)
One of the MAJOR factors in a "free government" is the fact that you need RESTRICTSIONS on what the government does, not more power to the government.
Yes, the government can do all the things you mentioned. The truth is they don't need the RFID to do di ti. Want to stop cars from being stolen? Let people put explosive car alarms in them. Set them off, the car explodes.
What you thought that was over-kill? Too many bad conseq
Re:How DARE they invade our privacy! (Score:3, Insightful)
With this system, you could get billed every time you go even 1 MPH over the speed limit, even my accident while coasting down a hill, or when you needed to speed up to avoid something, and there would be no human judgement involved.
Such a wasteful effort (Score:3, Funny)
By the way, I'm making all of this up. And you didn't read it anyway. So it never happened.
One has wonder (Score:2, Insightful)
The government would only invest in this with one motive and one motive alone, squeezing more money out of the motorist through draconian fines.
Re:One has wonder (Score:4, Interesting)
Public transport works, and works well. I don't need a car where I live (london), even though I work miles away from where I live. I just jump on a bus, then change for a train. That takes me clear across London in well under an hour.
You see people driving around on their own in cars, taking up as much room as half a bus (yet half of the bus carries over 30 people, as opposed to just one).
I see motorists as a large source of pollution and wasted space. I think it's absolutely fine to tax motorists. In london especially, there really is no need for a car. Got something to take home? Stick your hand out in the road and climb into the big, shiny black thing that's pulled up within a minute. The taxi driver will know his way to your house better than you will, and you don't have to drive all the way there yourself.
If someone can please explain to me why people feel the need to drive a large, wasteful, polluting machine around already congested roads and not get charged a penny for it, I'm all ears.
Re:One has wonder (Score:3, Informative)
don't even get me started on the shit holes that pass as buses!
i have
in gas pumps too (Score:3, Insightful)
Speeding tickets. (Score:2, Informative)
Tickets are a major source of income for many cities. Especially in areas where people commute across state lines, and police target people with out-of-state tags, whose owners don't pay local taxes.
In my area, there are cameras and speed detectors right along the borders. When out of state drivers go into the state and fail to follow the excessively low speed limits in and around the border area, they get fined
Similar technology (Score:2, Interesting)
Thank god! (Score:4, Insightful)
</Sarcasm>
Honestly, aren't the motorists here persecuted enough? We have speed cameras popping up in every lucrative "accident blackspot" in the UK (I have a number near me that appeared on roads where I can honestly never recall hearing of any accidents, but the local school curiously has none outside the gates), we're getting taxed off of the roads despite the fact the public transport system would be ridiculed by any visitor from afghanistan. So what does our "brilliant" government do? Find a new way to bring in the much needed revenue from those crazy car drivers....
I can't see this going live until after the next election though - it would be political suicide after everything else Blair and co have done.
Re:Thank god! (Score:3, Insightful)
My point in the speed c
Police chase (Score:3, Interesting)
Time For This? (Score:3, Insightful)
Ugh, can't you just feel Big Brother's breath on the back of your neck? In the end though, I have faith that the Britons won't take this lying down.
They also put them in PEOPLE (Barcelona) (Score:3, Interesting)
Which I submitted yesterday, but they rejected. Putting them into people seems FAR more interesting than into licencse plates.
Re:They also put them in PEOPLE (Barcelona) (Score:3, Insightful)
That's how it starts. Then it'll be sold to new parents as a way to "protect" their newborn children. Prisoners will be forced to accept the mark. Then the rest of the world.
thoughts (Score:3, Insightful)
The pranksters in the UK are going to LOVE this one.
My opinion..
Useful applications:
1) Easier to implement no-toll-booth toll roads
2) Police purposes
Drawbacks:
1) Privacy - but I'm thinking of the US Constitution and Bill of Rights, and it doesn't seem to conflict with anything. Is it our right to drive unfettered on roads paid for by taxpayers?
2) Cost
3) Battery power
Should be interesting. I have a feeling that this is going to go through and 50 years from now, we'll wonder how ancient peoples from 2004 managed to get away without RFID license plates.
I find it funny how so many people... (Score:3, Interesting)
Many of us, myself included, thought that our privacy would be robbed of us by some huge, overbearing government like a thief in the night. But you know what? We gave it up for nothing but convienence and our never-ending desire for newer and better gadgets.
Break out the microwave oven (Score:4, Insightful)
Wonder how susceptible this is going to be to a microwave oven. Sure, it's going to fuck your oven, but it should also provide an easy way to disable the tag. Drilling a hold through the RFID would also be effective I suspect.
I understand the need to monitor criminals and terrorists, but I really don't like the idea of having the government (anyone in fact) able to freely track my every movement. We have the Oyster card (RFID enabled travelcard) for the Underground over here, os it will get to the point one day that you won't be able to buy or sell or travel without being monitored. Kinda biblical almost.
Big Brother is really happening. (Score:3, Interesting)
I wonder, if there was a list of steps that a state needed to take to be completely like 1984, how many of these steps the UK government would have taken?
Man arrested at work for sending a text (SMS) with a few "questionable" keywords [theregister.co.uk]
I think the government will only be happy when they tax us so much that we can't afford to do wrong, and they can monitor our movements all the time.
I also think the UK wouldn't be so high on the list of targets if we didn't blindly support whatever the US does, which usually seems to anger much of the world.
OT: dollar bill tracking with serial #s (Score:3, Insightful)
I know wheresgeorge.com does this for fun, but how come Ashcroft isn't using serial #s in US dollar bills to track their journey from corrupt hand to corrupt hand in the name of terrorism?
Think about it: You withdraw cash from an ATM, it records the #s on the bills handed to you. 2 weeks later FBI agents bust an anthrax transaction, and some money is confiscated. The money in the confisaction found has serial #s on the bills that matched the ones givent to you by ATM. Are you a suspect now?
Seems like # tracking on bills would prevent any coverups by going "cash-only"(ie no bank transactions, etc)
(/tinfoil hat)
How about chipped pets? (Score:3, Interesting)
It's good, after all... (Score:3, Interesting)
When a government/organisation relies totaly and fully trusts a computer system to do its work, then, in the end, it gives us more freedom. Computers can be hacked, cracked and controlled by whoever actualy tries hard enough. A real person cannot be so easily fooled.
There are two types of people who criticize technology: those who understand nothing about it but fear it or want to use it to control everything (like the senators who pass stupid laws), and those who make this technology and don't want it to be used against them. Do the math: WE got them by the balls.
The more society will rely on technology, the more freedom we can get. Freedom will be "underground" though...
Re:It's good, after all... (Score:3, Insightful)
The more society will rely on technology, the more freedom we can get. Freedom will be "underground" though...
It's not freedom if not everyone has it.
Why I oppose this. (Score:4, Interesting)
I know that in the case of vehicles, these types of things are designed to create revenue for the local police departments and whatnot, but honestly, I don't think this will help make the roads any safer. All it will do is force you to mind every little detail of the law, no matter how insignificant, even in situations where it really doesn't make much sense, as in the case of standing at stop signs for 3 seconds when there are clearly no cars around. I do NOT advocate running stop signs, or even just slowing down and then blazing through them. On the contrary, I hate it when people do that. But if you're stopping, and the car is almost at a complete stop, and you can clearly see that there are no cars approaching, and it is perfectly safe, then what difference does it make if you actually come to a halt and wait for three seconds?
The officer who stops you for that should be looking for the reckless driver, late to work, who is weaving between the cars, going twice the speed limit, and so stressed out that he's about to get someone killed. But instead, the officer will wait on some secluded street, where about three cars pass in an hour, because he knows that none of those three cars will make a 100% stop at the stop sign, and then he'll write those drivers tickets. Meanwhile, on the main road, someone is driving drunk on the wrong side of the road. If you've ever wondered why the police are always there when you do something insignificant that is "wrong" but they're not when something truly dangerous is going on? That's why.
So the short version of all that is that I am against putting any kind of tracking technologies in vehicles because first, it will be for convenience, then, it will be for safety, and finally, when nobody is noticing and the technology is widespread and in place, it will be for revenue purposes. Without adding safety.
News Flash! (Score:3, Insightful)
From Tyranny to Self-Rule to Tyranny (Score:3, Insightful)
I am no political scientist, nor a historian for that matter, but I remember coming across an interesting idea posited by one of America's 'founding fathers' (either Washington or Franklin?)
--begin paraphrase--
It is evident that in history, cultures progress through different states of rule. In many cases, the people are ruled by a strict tyranny. The people will revolt and establish some sort of self-rule. After a period of time, those in power will gradually take freedoms from the people whilst the people slip further into ignorance and laziness, thus capitulating their rights to the elite. At some point, the government has come full cycle and exists as a tyranny. This repeats itself throughout history
--end paraphrase--
All people should voice their opinions about the use of this technology. Technology has a habit of limiting instead of broadening people's freedoms.
Remember, a flood starts with one drop of water...
pull the plug ! (Score:3, Interesting)
remove the battery, no more tracking...
Well let me be the first to say... (Score:5, Insightful)
The point is that everybody who said that RFID will never have a range longer thatn 18 inches have already been proven wrong, even before RFID has even begun to be implemented. You pro-RFID folks care for some salt with that crow?
The real point of the matter is that NOBODY has a right to see what possessions I have in my house. Not a stranger/burglar on the street, not the government, NOBODY.
Re:Well let me be the first to say... (Score:3, Insightful)
An RFID designed to be read from 18 inches won't be read by this RFID scanner from 300 feet (if that scanner can even read it properly from the 18 inches). Furthermore the RFID's intended for products can be disabled.
The s
Re:Ouch. (Score:4, Insightful)
You forget where you are (Score:2)
Now bend over.
Re:Ouch. (Score:3, Insightful)
How would this be unreasonable search and seisure? They aren't seasing anything and they aren't searching anything
My worry would be if the police started tracking speeders with this.
Otherwise, I'm not worried about them tracking my moves. Who wants to track me? And how can they track me and everyone else at the same time and keep records of this. The states don't have that kind of mone
Re:Ouch. (Score:3, Insightful)
And here we have the classic straw man argument. "Why should I care if I don't have anything to hide..." All resource issues aside (because if they don't have the ability to do it now, they will certainly be able to in the near future), there are many of us who value our privacy, and this is one mor
Done nothing wrong != nothing to hide (Score:5, Insightful)
A few years later, the govt requires everyone to carry personal RFIDs when out in public, 'for your protection.' You think, "that's not cool, but I haven't done anything wrong." So you let it happen. You probably believe the the few who bother to protest are in the tinfoil hat-wearing crowd. "Only people who have something to hide should be concerned," you assure yourself. Besides, nothing bad happened when the govt started tracking vehicles. "Alarmists," you think. So you swallow another one.
Then the govt decides that every room in every home should have a camera, 'for your protection.' At this, you balk: "that's going way to far!" you cry.
Too late. You didn't care when they put protection devices on cars, or on people, but why do you care now? Surely, you must have something to hide. "Don't worry," grins the guard, "they'll cure you of those subversive thoughts at the Ronald W. Reagan Memorial Reeducation Center.
Moral: Every right you abnegate while gaining nothing in return is another proverbial nail in your coffin. Unless there is a demonstrated benefit (Fox "news" saying there is does not count) for your tact acceptance, your acquiescence robs us all.
Re:Done nothing wrong != nothing to hide (Score:3, Interesting)
The British government is debating bringing in biometric ID cards: it seems logical that if RFID technology proves "useful" to the government in identifying cars, they may also include it in this device, if they are making it anyway.
The later example is speculation, but valid: the widespread acceptance of deeper invasions of privacy is likely to cause complacency. Despite the UK being the most watched (via CCTV in public) of the Western democra
Re:Ouch. (Score:4, Insightful)
Otherwise, I'm not worried about them tracking my moves.
In that case, you wouldn't mind a police officer pulling you over at random to check your ID, right? And while he has you stopped, you don't mind if he conducts a search of your vehicle and your person, right?
Those examples are a bit extreme, but in the eyes of the courts, they all violate the Fourth Amendment. A police officer has to have cause to search your vehicle, to check your ID, or even to follow you or track your moves. That cause can be that he observed you commit an offense or that he has a reasonable suspicion that you have committed one--but he can't pick your car out of a crowd and pull you over on a whim. You should expect the same deference whether he has the ability to track your vehicle or not.
Re:Ouch. (Score:3, Insightful)
Because it's tracking people in case they commit a crime, not because they are a suspect. It's the classic "if you have nothing to hide you have nothing to fear" argument. Unfortunately it completely violates the concept of "innocent until proven guilty".
If you speed, you have broken the law and have to take whatever punishment is deemed to be appropriate.
A) Speeding does not necessarily endanger other people every single time. There are times when 80mph is not reckless and
Re:Obligatory Simpsons Reference (Score:5, Interesting)
Can't think of a Simpsons license plate reference? Come on... there are dozens [snpp.com]:
Just a few:
[8F14] Krusty's pink convertible: KRUSTY
[8F15] Quimby's vehicle: I RULE U
[8F15] Snake's car: EX CON
[8F20] Sideshow Bob & Selma's honeymoon car: IH8 BART
[1F14] Ned's car: JHN 143 (John 14:3)
[2F09] car in lot of nuclear plant: 3MI ISL (3 Mile Island)
[2F13] Hitler's Mercedes Benz: ADOLF1
[2F32] Lionel Hutz's white Bronco: NOT OJ
[3F09] President Ford's limo: MR DUH
[AABF06] Comic Book Guy's car: NCC 1701 (Star Trek)
[8F20] Sideshow Bob's creations: RIP BART, DIE BART, BART DOA, IH8 BART
DIE BART - "Nobody who speaks German could be evil..."
Re:Easy way to catch speeders (Score:3, Interesting)
That tollway long ago paid for itself [well, the drivers paid for it] but it's interesting to see an old idea crop up in updated form, as it were.