UK To Passively Monitor Every Vehicle 703
DrSkwid writes "The UK Police are building a network to monitor the movement of every vehicle in the U.K. through an extensive Automatic Number Plate Recognition (ANPR) system. The data will be retained for 2 years. The Register further reports that the system will likely be used for issuing speeding fines." From the article: "The primary aims claimed for the system are tackling untaxed and uninsured vehicles, stolen cars and the considerably broader one of 'denying criminals the use of the roads.' But unless the Times has got the spacing wrong, having one every quarter of a mile on motorways quite clearly means they'll be used to enforce speed limits as well, which would effectively make the current generation of Gatsos obsolete. Otherwise, checking a vehicle's tax and insurance status every 15 seconds or thereabouts would seem overkill."
What's a Gatso? (Score:2, Funny)
Don't misread that you dyslexic perv.
Re:What's a Gatso? (Score:5, Informative)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gatso [wikipedia.org]
I've got a bike, (Score:4, Funny)
It's got a basket, a bell that rings
and things to make it look good
I'd give it to you if I could,
but I borrowed it
Syd Barrett escapes the universal monitoring!
Re:What's a Gatso? (Score:2)
Re:What's a Gatso? (Score:2)
D
Re:What's a Gatso? (Score:3, Insightful)
These new speed cameras (called SPECS) are already deployed on some parts of motorways and a few A roads (they look like yellow CCTV cameras), which have two cameras spaced about a mile apart and they calculate your average speed.
Either way, i think these new systems are generally a good idea. Speeding is a problem, and the current speed cameras can in some areas cause more accidents than they save. I think all we need now are more dynamic speed
Whose problem? This is just a power play. (Score:4, Interesting)
That is very debatable. The speed limits here in the UK are now so absurd in many places that the vast majority of motorists exceed the limit, yet no accidents ever result (literally; speed limits have been dropped on roads that haven't had even a minor injury accident in a decade).
This is just another power play by Blair's dictatorship and his ever more draconian Home Secretaries, right along with ID cards for everyone, the National Identity Register, electronic strip searching on the way onto the London Underground, the RIP Act, detention without trial for as long as they can get away with, installing CCTV everywhere (yes, we're still the most spied-upon nation in the world), reversing the burden of proof and/or attempting to do away with jury trials for increasing numbers of cases...
All of these things, of course, are "justified" by arguing that they increase national security, help to prevent crime, or otherwise benefit Joe Public. Unless he's in the wrong place at the wrong time, in which case he loses his benefits because some junior staffer in a government office mistyped one number out of 1,000 they entered that day into the master database. Or the ANPR system misreads a number plate, and sends him a fine for doing the physically impossible, which he then has to challenge in court after several weeks of concern, with no compensation for the time wasted or grief caused. Or his daughter's the one being rendered naked for the pervert watching the screens at the Underground station. Or he's late for the train, and since he ran through the screen he's obviously a terrorist so they shoot him dead. Or he's black, old, bald, young, or a registered member of an opposition political party, the biometric recognition doesn't work, and he's held for three months as a suspected terrorist on the whim of a senior politician, by which time he's lost his job, his home, and the trust of all his family and friends, not to mention the ability to challenge the statements of absolute fact issued by our political leaders (and I use the term loosely, since they didn't even win the popular vote in England, never mind an overall majority that might justify their absolute control of parliament, not that this particular abuse ever went before parliament) to justify all these Big Brother efforts.
I used to think the tin foil hat brigade were eccentrics. In recent years, looking at the direction New Labour have taken our government, I think the sooner we have a written constitution and a constitutional court above parliament and answerable only to the public, the better.
Re:Whose problem? This is just a power play. (Score:4, Informative)
The British government has proposed a "National Corriculum" for Under 5 year olds and in a year when there are riots in Paris. (The Paris uprising in 1968 was because the teaching curriculum was too rigid).
And if you don't support him, you must be an Al Quaida suporter. A member of his own party was arrested at the party conference for pointing out that Jack Straw is completely dishonest. He was charged under the Prevention of Terrorism act. However, they want the power to hold people for 90 days with no charge whatever, in case they notice that some other ministers are "economical with the truth".
The words neurotic, obsesssive, compulsive, posessive, paranoid, manic, and several less polite ones come to mind.
The only reason they are in power is because "her majesty's Loyal opposition"'s slogan is "we are the party of convictions" - most have several for corruption, libel, slander, purjury, and other things that normally bar you from high office.
I suspect that the Robert Mugabe's complaints against Blair are fuelled by jelousy over the ease with which these controls are imposed (no need to deport inner city kids to remote Scottish islands, etc).
It's not the speeding as such... (Score:5, Insightful)
I am a professional driver, and see this every day. The motorways are full of people who are too scared to use the outside lane when neccessary, but who drive in the centre lane almost obsessively. Consequently, when they come up behind a slower moving vehicle in the centre lane, they brake, causing following traffic to either, brake hard themselves, or, swerve into the outside lane, regardless of the traffic situation. This is what causes pile-ups. I drive for miles on virtually empty motorways sometimes and there are still lines of cars in the centre lane, usually only 20 or 30 feet behind each other. There is another problem with this - when I have to overtake a vehicle in the left hand lane, I have to 'break into' this line of cars somehow. This is difficult when they are only 20 feet apart, so I have to pull out much sooner, and stake my claim before they pull alongside.
I could go on for hours about the bad things that are happening on the roads, but speeding is the least of my worries. My truck has a tachograph, so anytime the police wants to stop me, they can tell instantly whether I've been speeding or not. Why should the car drivers be exempt from this ? Bad driving is the real issue, and nothing much is being done about it. I am fed up with seeing females negotiating junctions with their right hand holding a phone to their left ear and their left hand on the right hand side of the steering wheel. Sometimes the right hand has a piece of food in it as well ! No-one can argue that that behaviour is safe, either for them or others.
In the end, there are too many cars on the road, driven by very basically qualified people. No one forced them into this situation. The free market sold these people cars and the idea of freedom, so they can't really complain that they need a car to get to work, the shops, whatever. It's down to their buying habits that turned villages into dormitories for workers who have to drive 50 miles to work everyday. Either people find alternative ways to work (internet based etc) or live closer to the place of employment.
How long can the country as a whole be held to ransom by the car ? The government can't ban cars outright, but they can make it as difficult (read expensive) as possible to own and operate one.
As a disclaimer, I must add that I ride a GSX1100 suzuki, and so speeding is a virtual certainty, but even then, it is so much harder to find adequate space in which to do so, because of the unpredictability of the other traffic. But as a motorcyclist, I know with painful certainty what a mistake at speed will mean. I have in the past fallen off and hit the road at over 60 mph, and it's not fun believe me. So, hands up all those car drivers who have intimate knowledge of the surface of the road. Apart from motorcyclists / cyclists, there aren't any hands showing. This is where it has gone wrong. Every driver should be aware of the road surface in front of them, the temperature, how wet the road is, what white lines feel like as you go over them. That's where true control comes from, being aware of your surroundings.
Instead, they have the heating up high, the sound turned up, and sit in the middle lane eating and talking on their phones, and hope that no-one gets in their way until they get to work.
I for one won't miss their departure from the environment, and sad to say, they deserve everything they get in the mean time.
Re:It's not the speeding as such... (Score:3, Interesting)
Otherwise how do you explain new housing estates being built with no public transport links and no local shops - only a Tesco superstore five or ten miles away? Or how do you explain business parks built with no public transport access?
My company relocated from a town centr
Re:It's not the speeding as such... (Score:3, Informative)
Your whole argument was so well written and insightful right up to this point. Why did you have to blemish a perfectly good comment by singling out women drivers. It only weakens your entire comment, which was otherwise very well put.
I've seen plenty of drivers talking on their phones. About 50% of them were women. I've also seen peopl
Re:Whose problem? This is just a power play. (Score:4, Interesting)
Mind some people didn't stop fighting [wikipedia.org] for quite a few years after this date, and even today there are outstanding issues [twm.co.nz]...
By and large, I'm proud to say, we have given to the hysteria of the Threat Of Terror less than many places, but we have at least one stain [amnesty.org.nz] on our human rights record that derives from this.
Re:Whose problem? This is just a power play. (Score:3, Interesting)
What you say is true, but to be brutally honest, I have little sympathy if someone moves into a house next to a road and then complains about noise. That house was probably available significantly cheaper than others like it but away from roads, and it's not like it's hard to spot a road outside. Personally, I'd love to buy my own home, but since I can't afford one that I want, I have to accept renting for now. These are voluntary choices.
Having said that, where local conditions would be worsened through
Re:Whose problem? This is just a power play. (Score:3, Interesting)
I do understand your argument, and on the face of it I agree that it has merit, too. The thing is, driving psychology is a funny thing, and history and research tell us that speed limits don't really work at all when set according to current policy, and can actually be counter-productive if set too low.
For example, you get roads with very low speed limits, which drivers routinely exceed by a large margin. If the limit is raised by 10mph to something more realistic, it's not unusual for the average speed t
Re:What's a Gatso? (Score:5, Insightful)
However, I agree that these cameras have bad implications for civil liberties -- and far beyond just traffic offenses. Once they're tracking you, they can be monitoring to see if you're engaging in any "terrorist-like" behavior, such as planning protests against an opressive government.
Of course, this just makes me glad I don't live in Airstrip One.
By the way, even if speeding were a problem, in this case the "solution" is worse.
Re:What's a Gatso? (Score:4, Insightful)
Don't know about UK, but in DK about 1 in 5 casualties of traffic is thought to be caused speeding. Those are the official numbers. I would imagine that the numbers are not so different in UK.
Of course, such numbers comes with the usual reservations. No one knows if the casualty would have been suffered if the speeder had not, in fact, speeded.
Re:What's a Gatso? (Score:3, Insightful)
No, 0% of accidents are caused by just speeding. Speed doesn't kill, it's the sudden stop. The only way that speed could have killed a person is if they had a heart attack: "scared to death" from going so fast. Actually, then it's their heart thay killed them.
Re:What's a Gatso? (Score:3, Insightful)
OK, maybe you do like lining Gordon Brown's pockets. I sure as hell don't.
New motorsport in the UK (Score:3, Funny)
Does this mean drag-racers can practise on the highway and get away with it?
Re:New motorsport in the UK (Score:3, Funny)
-matthew
Boy am I glad... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Boy am I glad... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Boy am I glad... (Score:5, Insightful)
Thanks to the USA-PATRIOT act, I might be one of the 30,000+ US citizens with no links to terrorism who was a subject of a national security letter. I'll never know, because of the gag order that accompanies them. My (9th amendment) right to know, as previously guaranteed by the FOIA act and other laws, has been nullified.
My right to petition the government for grievances and to peaceably assemble is violated every time I'm herded into a "free speech zone".
My right to be secure against unreasonable searches and seizures disappears the moment I get in to a motor vehicle, whether I'm driving it or not.
My property can be taken without just compensation any time the government feels that someone else would pay more tax if they had it instead of me.
That's just what I can think of at 11:30 at night after a couple of stiff drinks. I'm sure I can come up with some more.
Thanks (Score:5, Insightful)
Why upset (Score:3, Insightful)
Besides, maybe they use the new money to fix some of the other systems or perhaps increase the police.
Re:Why upset (Score:5, Informative)
Unfortunatly, it is more likely that the money will be distributed around the various family members of government officials who 'happen' to own services companies who amazingly seem to always win those cushy government contracts.
It is not widely known that the NHS often use private ambulance companies. When my mother was in the hospital I got talking to a few staff at the hospital and they let me on on how much the NHS pays for a 15 min ambulance journey between two London hospitals. It is an absolutely disgusting figure and given that my terminally ill mother was left in a seriously uncomfortable state for hours while she waited for an ambulance I can assure you that we do not get our money's worth.
They will put up speed cameras to generate wealth for a government who tells us that it is a choice between raised 'tax' or lower public spending. Very rarely will they mention the waste that is so pervasive in our public services. I suspect because if anyone were to look into the books to investigate this waste they would find corruption that runs all the way up to downing street.
It is just easier to pretend there isnt a distinction between driving fast and driving dangerously (and I have seen dangerous driving within the speed limit and also quite safe driving above the speed limit). Of course, it is far more difficult to punish dangerous driving using a device that will work 24/7/365 and doesnt require a salary!
Re:The irony (Score:3, Insightful)
It might be interesting to note that (at least in the US) the public has been clamoring for the privitization of certain government services, thinking it would save money. The joke's on them. Many private companies, once they get their hand on the public teat, won't let go, and milk it for all they can. This is where these astronomically-prised ambulance rides come in. I can't seem to figure it out, but people in government
This will cost money (not make money) (Score:4, Insightful)
If you know that you will be "caught" and have to pay everytime you speed, you probably won't do it if you really don't have to.
So my guess is that they will spend a lot of money to install such a system and afterwards will lose lots of money because of less people speeding.
I think it is more likely that the system will be used to create a giant toll system.
I've seen the future... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I've seen the future... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:I've seen the future... (Score:2)
Re:I've seen the future... (Score:2)
Been a while since I've seen that sucker.
Brazil (Score:4, Funny)
Another reason (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Another reason (Score:3, Funny)
The UK Gov't hasn't given us a whole heck of a lot of trouble since...
Re:Another reason (Score:5, Insightful)
>
> Or you could do what we did, have a revolution!
> The UK Gov't hasn't given us a whole heck of a lot of trouble since...
Ah yes, flee UK ID cards and 90-day detention without trial for the balmy shores of the United States, with REAL ID, and, umm... indefini... aaw fuck.
As the gray of November gives way to a long cold winter for Western Civilization, the UK's forgotten stepchild (Canada, eh?) is beginning to look warm and sunny by comparison.
Re:Another reason (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Another reason (Score:2)
Re:Another reason (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Another reason (Score:3, Insightful)
Do you object to cops monitoring your speed?
Would you object to an increase in police personnel to do this same job?
Do you object to automatic ticketing?
Do you object to the notion of guilty until appealed? (tickets are like this)
Do you object to the entire notion of speed limits?
Do you object to spending this much money on speed limit enforcement? Any money?
Do you object to the excessive proportional allocat
They have given you trouble! (Score:3, Funny)
Really they fuc8ed you over big time. If they hadn't gone with you on the Iraq war fiasco then Iraq II would not have happened and you Yanks would still have a reasonably good international reputation. The UK gov plan is to make the US look so bad that the UK can lead Europe as this centuries only super power.
God shave the Queen!
Re:Another reason (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Another reason (Score:3, Interesting)
Unfortunately, as the UK system so kindly demonstrated a few months ago, a "democracy" can still be a place where winning the support of only 22% of the population eligible to vote (and only thirtysomething percent of those who actually did vote), not to mention losing the popular vote in the largest single country in the union (England), is still enough to get you a comfortable absolute majority in parliament, with which you can p
Fight this (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Another reason (Score:5, Informative)
Add to that a CCTV camera on virtually every street corner (hell I even had one pointing at me inside a taxi the other day), the extention to detention without trial (even to 28 days is longer than most common law countries*) & the hair-brained biometric passport & ID card schemes, so now they know exactly what I do and where I go all the time, and want me to pay for it all. Sounds doubleplusgood to me.
*according to the latest private eye.
Re:Another reason (Score:3, Insightful)
Maybe you're having an affair, your spouse can now petition the state to have your movements tracked.
Maybe you take the daughter of a important MP out on a date, one thing leads to another. Now he can track you and have you busted for statutory rape! (not sure if that is a law in the UK, but you get my point).
Government tracking is never a good thing.
Kinda Cool, Kinda weird (Score:5, Interesting)
Kinda werid though, for some reason it reminds me of 1984.
interesting from the police side (Score:5, Insightful)
Let's say you have a criminal who has been busted for drug charges. You could then find out where he's been, and probably track down where he gets his stuff from, and take it straight up the channels to the big guys.
Or does it not work that way?
Re:interesting from the police side (Score:5, Insightful)
I am not a privacy nut but this seems just wrong.
Well, apart from the matter of evidence (Score:3, Insightful)
In general, though, I'm very disappointed. Christ, I thought geting rid of "lockemup, lockemALLup" Blunkett was a good thing. Looks like we swapped the frying pan for the fire
Simon
Nobody remembers the acquittal, just the arrest (Score:3, Insightful)
At least here in the U.S., the arrest gets all the press. An acquittal NEVER gets nearly as much press. Case in point, recently nine women attending two fraternity parties near the University of Colorado were taken to the hospital for alcohol poisoning. It was front-page news for several days when two of the women apparently tested positive for GHB, a "date-rape" drug. One of the frats has actually had its local chapter closed down for the
Re:Nobody remembers the acquittal, just the arrest (Score:3, Insightful)
On the contrary. That is exactly the excuse that has been offered to justify detaining thousands of people under anti-terrorism legislation since 11 September 2001. Of those people, fewer than half have ever even been charged with a terrorism-related offence, and AFAIK the total convictions under that legislation so far remain in single figures -- around 1/10,000th of those arrested under it. That's not good law, that's a
I predict... (Score:5, Insightful)
1984 wasn't set in America.
Re:I predict... (Score:2)
Don't forget the third group... (Score:2)
Re:I predict... (Score:4, Interesting)
If they really feel that privacy is an extinguishable notion, then they should be the ones to suffer that loss of it the very most. If they are unwilling to put up with this intrusion, then they can bloody well stop demanding intrusions on the common citizen.
Re:I predict... (Score:3, Interesting)
Information wants to be free and all that.
I think we should all have access to all the CCTV cameras.
In Ian M. Bank's sci-fi books, the culture have droids that will follow you and record your every details so you can watch it later, and that other people can have access to. You can turn them off but people in The Culture generally have nothing to hide. If your citizens are hiding stuff, you're society is wrong
Re:I predict... (Score:4, Interesting)
That would be grand. Unfortunately, they were all switched off for maintenance while the police held a few hundred people against their will on May Day the other year, right out in the open in London. Funny how that happened.
Re:I predict... (Score:5, Insightful)
angry voters, film at eleven? (Score:5, Insightful)
Ok, never mind.
A culture prone to understatement. (Score:5, Funny)
In other news, the Atlantic Ocean is described as being "considerably broader" than the English Channel.
But these are folks whose pet name for the gulf of water separating North America from Europe as "the pond".
One might go further and suggest that British people are prone to occasional tendencies towards understatement.
Speed Limit (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Speed Limit (Score:2, Flamebait)
However this isn't the only issue with these cameras. There's the privac
Re:Speed Limit (Score:3)
There is an "except." When the limits are set too low, no one else follows them. It is less safe to follow the limit than it is to speed up to the flow of traffic. So, to follow the laws while working to change them will make me less safe. Also, disobedience, like Rosa Parks, is more a catalyst for change than following the laws while working to change them.
You can't complain when police enforce the law. That's
Re:Speed Limit (Score:3)
Not in America (Score:4, Informative)
Much fairer speeding fines (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Much fairer speeding fines (Score:2, Funny)
There are times when the offence of speeding is hardly justified as a safety issue. Overtaking is one such time when, done properly, one may need to exceed the speed of the vehicle one is passing..
Of course one could have fun with this. After passing one vehicle registration plate recognition camera at 150MPH one could slam on the brakes and park on the motorway for a minute or so.. then drop the clutch and zoom off again..!
Re:Much fairer speeding fines (Score:2)
Aaah, no. That's not bad luck. That's illegal. Speeding to overtake somebody (unless that person is a danger to yourself, in which case you should report it to the police ASAP, if only to get out of a speeding fine) is illegal and dangerous. If the truck is driving slowly, then you are able to overtake them without speeding. Otherwise you should have no reason to overtake the truck.
This isn't so bad (Score:5, Insightful)
If you really want to stop speeding, this is the way to do it. All the time. Everywhere.
If it sounds radical, well at least it will mean that in the long run the speed limits themselves will have to be adjusted to something that is reasonable, rather than what has happened in most countries - speed limits that were set but which are only enforced a very tiny fraction of the time.
Also, getting done for doing too fast an average speed is far more important than getting unlucky for doing an instantaneous speed that is too fast at some random point in your trip. Almost everyone speeds a little at some time - unless you only use cruise control to drive with you will always run the risk of going too fast at some point when you aren't looking at your speedo. (And, its not exactly safe to drive the whole trip whilst looking only at your speed)
As for the privacy issues.
Well, I think its a little too late for anyone in the UK (maybe anywhere, really) to get worried about that. Look at the congestion tax in the UK (Automatic licence plate recognition). Look also at the ability to obtain a list of every base station that your mobile is associated with - the phone companies can do this if requested by a magistrate, although that usually only done in murder cases or similar. Look at the number of CCTV's that proliferate in every public place.
Unfortunatly, the invasion into our privacy has only just begun. There is no techonlogical way to avoid this - it will only get worse. Soon enough automatic facial recognition will be connected to all the CCTV's around and you will be trackable just for being visible. You can identify people by the way that they walk. Some systems now can identify potential suicides in the happening in train stations by the typical behaviour people make prior to jumping in front of trains.
The only solution to the privacy issues are legislative ones. You can't stop this level of data collection anymore, all we can do is ensure that only certain legitimate uses for it exist. This is the only way that any of us will have real protection in the future - if its in a constitution or in legislation.
Just my 2c worth,
Michael
Re:This isn't so bad (Score:4, Insightful)
James
Re:This isn't so bad (Score:3, Insightful)
Why? So that people can keep speeding, keep getting caught, and keep getting away with it? A law isn't wrong just because you could get away with it easily before but can't any more.
Re:This isn't so bad (Score:3, Insightful)
Why? The limit isn't there to make you feel better about the speed you drive at, it's there to slow you down to a safer speed.
But I didn't say "travel", I said "operating something as dangerous as a car in public". You can travel by other means if you aren't willing to comply with safety laws regarding cars.
Re:This isn't so bad (Score:4, Insightful)
Speed can be objectively measured and legislated. You can't make rainy, dark nights illegal. You can't measure how attentive a driver is as he passes. We already bar the less skillful from driving (you need to pass a test before getting a driving license).
I'm not stupid, I know that speed is just one factor. But it's an important one, and an easily controlled one.
But speed limits aren't based on that. Speed limits are based on the idea that a particular speed makes a road unsafe. And that's obviously true. You might argue that particular limits in particular locations are unreasonable, but that doesn't invalidate speed limits as a concept.
The second you start driving faster than people can get out of the way, you are putting people at risk. That's okay, as a society we've learned various practices to reduce that risk to a socially acceptable level. Imposing upper limits on speed is one of those practices. Who are you to decide that the rules don't apply to you? The rules that are there to reduce that risk? Because you think you are a better driver than average? Newsflash: everybody thinks they are better drivers than average.
And something is not automatically okay just because you have been getting away with it for a long time.
The only thing I have a problem with (Score:5, Interesting)
Quarter miles? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Quarter miles? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Quarter miles? (Score:2)
The UK uses miles for measuring road distance.
NeoThermic
Re:Quarter miles? (Score:2)
Living in Northern Ireland makes for fun as once you cross the border to the Republic of Ireland you switch to KM for distance and MPH for speed limits whilst they're in the transistional phase to metric
Stuart
No intent proven (Score:4, Informative)
The regularity of the cameras is irrelevant, you only have to know the distance between them, and ensure their clocks are in sync to be able to issue a speeding ticket.
So thinking around the subject:
A very moral government (Score:4, Insightful)
I guess if a government goes about giving very large numbers of otherwise law-abiding citizens a criminal record they should not expect much more than cynicism when it comes to other social problems. We are then all the losers.
A by-product of the current obsession with safety is that enormous sums have to be spent on repairing emergency vehicles whose suspension is wrecked going over speed bumps in urban areas. In addition, more acute cases die because it takes longer for an ambulance to get them to hospital and the ride there is bumpy to say the least. It might even turn out that the safety obsession kills more people than it is intended to save.
Meanwhile, new licensing laws in the UK permitting the sale of alcohol 24/7 promise many mores deaths from alcohol abuse and its fallout. Liver disease from alcohol abuse among those under 30 is several hundred per cent higher than it was even twenty years ago. Apparently it's OK to drink yourself to death in the UK, but woe betide you if you get in an automobile stone cold sober.
Re:A very moral government (Score:3, Insightful)
Yes; for example it's virtually certain that airline "safety" regulations have led to more deaths. As air travel becomes more inconvenient and expensive, marginal travelers will choose to drive instead, which is far more dangerous per mile.
Why is speeding a crime? (Score:3, Interesting)
What about other circumstances where I sped up to avoid an accident, or to avoid further traffic congestion (as in moving into place to merge into an open spot rather than having 10 people brake behind you)?
Not new - already in use (Score:3, Interesting)
The system failed miserably because it falsely recorded cars *passing by* the car park.
It's a real intrusion, but on the other hand, try getting compensation if you are in an accident with someone driving without insurance.
I'll stick to monitoring speed cameras
Let's watch the watchers (Score:5, Insightful)
I would be in favor of a system to track the movements of all cars and issue speeding violations as long as the data is a matter of public record and it can be proven (for example, via Freedom of Information requests) that all traffic regulations are being strictly enforce on all public officials, including elected official, appointed official, off duty police and their families, friends, and relatives, and anybody else in a position of influence.
If a speed limit is too low, I'm sure it would get rapidly fixed if there were 100% enforcement of fines and penalties against senators and representatives.
If a speed limit is, in fact, valid and legitimate for safety reasons then 100% enforcement is certainly a good thing.
The problem occurs when traffic regulations are constructed in such a way that everybody violates them because they are unreasonable and the police use them as a means of selectively grabbing people they have an illegitimate beef against.
Circumvention (Score:2, Interesting)
Sadness (Score:4, Insightful)
Seriously, why is it, that we have to live in such a passive society? Like if it would have been bred for obedience.
First, there were cameras on the streets and noone said a word
Then, there were monitoring of cars and noone said a word
Finally, when I got stripped from all my freedoms, labeled a criminal, then, there was noone to say a word.
Sad.
How else do you expect them to pay for the system? (Score:3, Insightful)
do, or do not, there is no try (Score:5, Interesting)
Vehicles operating without a transponder would be fined steeply. A few random checks would ensure compliance.
It's one thing to be an evil overlord, but there's no excuse for being an expensive and incompetent evil overlord.
Nah, bollocks (Score:3, Interesting)
Bear in mind that Blair's ability to railroad through deeply unpopular legislation is seriously damaged after losing the "90 days" vote last week. The PLP are restive and not likely to rubberstamp deeply unpopular legislation.
I've been had by the London congestion charge system many times, which is always a pain but overall I don't moan about it because it's a Good Thing to ration traffic in central london (for lots of reasons.) That argument won't wash outside of city centres though.
Variable speed limits (Score:3, Interesting)
I last drove along the M42 just over a week ago, and there are plenty of new temporary speed limit signs, one above each lane. These were in use to slow the traffic down to help remove a traffic jam. It seems that all of this has been put in with the intention of these camera trials.
Personally, I think this is a good idea. Variable speed limits might help to curb congestion, especially on the M42 which regularly gets jammed with traffic going to the NEC and the many motorways that connect to it. We have had variable speed limits in the UK for a while now, but everyone (including the police) ignores them.
In the UK, driving is a privilage and not a right. You are issued with a licence which of course can be revoked by a court. A lot of speed limits do seem like BS, and the motorway speed limit IMHO ought to be 80, but if everyone is doing the same speed things might be safer.
The only problem I have with this, is that they want to hold the records for two years. Why? This will probably get tied into our expensive ID cards. Might be time to migrate.
Oh, those European countries (Score:3, Funny)
Britain: Land of really stupid criminals who don't know enough to switch license plates before committing a crime with a car.
Seems to me that Q knew what he was doing when he gave James Bond an Aston Martin with changeable license plates.
This clearly isn't about speeding. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Am I the only one suspicious of the source? (Score:2)
The Register thinks the worst of just about everyone and everything. Since it's pretty evenhanded in its loathing, 'biased' while technically correct doesn't quite convey the right picture here.
Re:Am I the only one suspicious of the source? (Score:2)
"The Register thinks the worst of just about everyone and everything."
But the vulture looks so friendly....Re:wow (Score:2)
Speed traps are used as a revenue source for small towns.
Re:wow (Score:5, Insightful)
There are so many problems with government organizations having this level of control over their citizenry. Starting with the people actually doing the control, who do they get to monitor these systems? What if it's some creepy guy trying to stalk women with this technology? What if it's someone trying to use knowledge of your actions to blackmail you? If I'm working the camera, and I see you walking down the street holding hands with one woman, then the next day another woman, I could demand that you pay me money or I'll let them know about each other, etc. This is one example but you can see many more. What if I'm not even working for the government, but I hack the system to gain access to this kind of information?
At a higher level, what's legal and what's not is always subject to change. You could be subject to hundreds of dollars in fines every day just for doing something that otherwise seems ordinary. See the above comment about the man asking a drug offender for directions. Nothing illegal took place, but in the investigation of the drug offender, while trying to find his customers and sources, you would get flagged for investigation and would be subject to search and arrest. Just getting arrested is often enough for you to lose your job and be embarassed by your friends, colleagues and family.
I can go on, but I hope that you see why your line of thinking that this is "only bad for bad people" is flawed.
Re:wow (Score:5, Insightful)
You've got nothing to hide, so it's all fine and dandy, right? After all, why watch you? You're just doing your average activities, right?
Whys is this so hard to understand? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:A little difference (Score:5, Interesting)
And if you have absolutely no privacy in public? Even if you walk past CCTV cameras, you are primarily observed, not tracked. In general, there is no record of you being there. I would certainly feel that a full record of my public movements would be an invasion of my privacy. Even big celebreties tend to get some privacy. Try these on for size, all "public" facts:
Who bought condoms last week.
Who slept where, either going away or coming over.
Who went to Alcoholics Anonymous.
Who went to see Fahrenheit 9/11 in cinema.
Who went to a mosque last week.
That's a lot of social, political, religious and other profiling for each and every citizen. In general, I place a big difference between being observed and being tracked, and what is being described here is a tracking system. Would you really like to have the government keep a huge file on everything and everyone? Move to DDR, ca. 1970 but don't bring that society here. We don't need nor want it.