Leaked Government Doc Reveals UK ID "Coercion" Plans 187
BoingBoing is relating a hair-raising tale from the UK anti-ID-register group 'NO2ID' that claims to have a leaked government document [PDF] detailing how the UK government plans to "coerce" citizens into a national ID register. "UK campaigners NO2ID this morning enlisted the help of bloggers across the world to spread a leaked government document describing how the British government intends to go about "coercing" its citizens onto a National Identity Register. The 'ID card' is revealed as little more than a cover to create a official dossier and trackable ID for every UK resident - creating what NO2ID calls 'the database state'."
24 years behind schedule... (Score:2, Interesting)
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Re:24 years behind schedule... (Score:5, Informative)
Big Brother was British.
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Comrade Brown, however, most surely is British. (sadly)
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Winston lived within sight of the Ministry of Truth, where he worked, not the Party headquarters. In fact it wasn't clear whether there even was a headquarters, but most of the Inner Party members lived in West London and the headquarters could easily have been in America for that matter. Airstrip One used to be known as Great Britain (i.e., the whole island), not London. London was still called London in Winston's time, and he speculated that it had probably been called that for a long time.
The novel
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>Big Brother was British.
As was Orwell, who was satirizing his contemporary view of British society and government by framing it into a dystopian futuristic novel. But the situation that provoked him to write 1984 was his Labour party job that required him to participate in blacklisting people suspected of being communists. It turns out the real "Big Brother" actually *was* watching his every move and keeping detailed records, and that he really did have to write blatant fabrications on behalf of the g
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I dunno why british citizens put up with all the tracking and spying bullshit as it is right now.
Blowing stuff up without being part of an EXCELLENT movie is slightly off the menu, for obvious reasons.
Going to meetings is informative yet frustrating because the people at the big desk are incompetent, selfish, ass covering simpering yes men (or women) who fall out of favour if they overstep their marks enough to become objects of ridicule when espousing ideas out of vogue and become ex-(insert job title)s for their trouble.
Even those who have brains, constructive ideas, time and patience, charisma
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Oh wait, you're too scared to post that with your ID, I guess your email address is hot to touch too?
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Ironically.... (Score:4, Interesting)
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Hmm...sounds quite reminiscent of the US's upcoming version...the RealID act. In our case, they're just calling them drivers licenses....but, if you don't drive, you still need an ID that fits in with the RealID act. So, it really is a national ID, hooked to a national, govt. database.
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We've had the Ministry of Defence, which deals with war, for a while now. We also have the Ministry of Justice, which deals with the punishment of crimes.
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However, the ministry of defence, is clearly frequently on the 'offensive' and *initiating* conflicts, so I'd agree its doublespeak.
However the role of Justice legitimately includes the administration of punishment for crimes
Might be advantageous... (Score:4, Insightful)
Of course, getting past the initial screening may not be trivial--but investigation into that avenue may be worthwhile.
Do it the easy way. (Score:3, Insightful)
Find someone involved in issuing them who has a gambling / drug / sex / whatever problem who can be bought / blackmailed.
The whole system breaks down when it depends upon the honesty of people.
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They outright want to go back to the middle age serfdoms where people are owned, they see the 20th century as a nasty period when almost all would have went wrong for them.
Being bribe able is a work prescription you need to have to be able to do certain jobs like being a politician, no honest person is able to do that job, being non bribe able ma
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I'd lay the blame squarely on the large middle class who are often all too willing to trade away their freedom for additional security.
I always find it funny reading things like that. I would call myself middle class by any definition I know, as are most of my friends and work colleagues. Among that group, there is substantial opposition to ID cards and the like, particularly since high profile data losses of the kind highlighted in my current sig. I recall no conversation with any of my friends or colleagues where someone actually spoke in support of ID cards. So I don't know where the government find all these people in favour of them,
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Those on Slashdot (and your colleagues) tend to be of a specific demographic, which tends to vehemently oppose any such encroachment. Perhaps it's because we better understand the power of information, and how susceptible such information is to abuse? Who knows... But regardless, I'd be ca
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I'll grant you that many policies don't do a damned thing while che
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This system shows that the ruling class is paranoid to the bone, I think it stems from the amount of poor people they see as potential threat to their pitiful life.
No it doesn't ... It just shows that the Labour party is dangerously enamoured with technology
promises sold to it by IT consultants, and at the same time are ignorant and incompetent about
technology (and science and, apparently, civil rights and the rule of law). In fact they're proud of their incompetence - our previous prime minister
ac
Broken link (Score:4, Informative)
Missing authorship information (Score:2, Informative)
There's a noticeable lack of authorship details. It notes that various government departments have "contributed to" the options analysis, but I read that as simply saying that people from those departments have been interviewed in the course of performing this analysis.
Does anybody know who actually produced this report? I'd hardly call the government a bunch of liars for opinions expressed in a report produced by outside contractors, but without any reason to believe otherwise, that's what this sound
Re:Missing authorship information (Score:5, Informative)
I take it back, the IPS [wikipedia.org] are responsible for this, I just didn't spot it because it was written in the third-person.
Re:Missing authorship information (Score:5, Funny)
Asshole!
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Civil servants don't get "out of a job" - they are simply assigned to some other department to increase the beaurocracy there.
This is why we NEED the ID program (Score:4, Funny)
http://vancouvercondo.info [vancouvercondo.info]
boycotting people with ID (Score:4, Interesting)
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The showing of your id should never be compulsory and it should be a criminal offence to attempt to force someone to show their ID. A person should be notified of any and every access to the data stored against their id, who made the access, their id details, and exactly what data was accessed and why it was accessed, absolutely no exemptions for any reason.
RealID (Score:2)
Be warned that the same effort is underway in the US through a push for the RealID legislations with the same sinister goals in mind.
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Look, I don't want anyone doing this. No one should be able to keep large conglomerated databases with my information without my authorization and it shouldn't be disadvantageous of me to opt out.
Now there is a reason why it's worse for the government to do it. They have powers of arrest. They have powers of search and seizure. Do a little search on oppressive governments, blanket warrants, due process etc. In fact right now in the USA there is no due process. There is a concerted buildup to an oppressiv
NO worries (Score:5, Funny)
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Clatto Verata N... Necktie... Nickel... It's an "N" word, it's definitely an "N" word!
OK, I'm not always the sharpest pencil in the packet protector, but were you meaning "klaatu barada nikto"? If so, I get the joke, but the spelling is not quite right...
ah.clem
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Coercion (Score:4, Insightful)
Put it this way: If the people actually volunteered to hand over their money and follow the aribtrary rules set forth by a central committee, then government would be entirely redundant. The reason why government exists is precisely because the people would not voluntarily hand over their money and follow that arbitrary set of rules.
Again, coercion is the fundamental tool which all governments MUST hold -- otherwise it ain't government.
Re:Coercion (Score:5, Funny)
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It's may be restrictive than that. Without a card you won't be able to claim benefits (social security) and therefore will have no income. You won't be able to operate a bank account either, or negotiate your taxes, so being self employed is out. Ironically the only people who will be able to exist without an ID card will be professional criminals, or perhaps su
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Will you be allowed to sign on if you are unable to get a job because you don't have an ID card?
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But I would be wary of "fluffy" puppies.
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Governments don't implement arbitrary rules. Almost every government has a len
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If you can't tell the differ
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On the one hand, there's Arrow's Impossibility theorem [wikipedia.org] which, in short, proves something like "you can please 100% of the people some of the time; you can please some of the people 100% of the time; but, you can't please 100% of the people 100% of the time."
In my opinion, any governm
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Definition error: The government exists to coerce people into doing the things that the people have agreed that the government is allowed to coerce them into (whoa, confusing); but one of the things the government is NOT allowed to coerce people into doing is accepting laws that a small number of people in the government have decided are a good idea.
In other words, they can make you follow the rules, but they aren't supposed to try to make you agree that the rules should
ah yes... (Score:2)
Who cares? (Score:5, Insightful)
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That sounds even worse. At least with a properly functioning sy
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Alert the press! Alert the watchdog groups!
This can't be allowed to happen, again!
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anyone who cares about privacy (Score:2)
I'm going to give you the benefit of the doubt, I think you're joking around and vigorously oppose a 'big brother database.'
Others however, say 'who cares, the government is incompetent' and are serious. Those people are misguided at best...total idiots at worst.
If an incompetent carjacker was pointing a loaded gun at you, would you just go about your business and ignore him? Of course not. If something poses a legitimate threat to your fr
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You are way too late there.
I don't know where you're from or how much you know about British politics, but in the UK political parties of late have been run along very tight lines - politicians will completely ignore any personal feelings and tow the party line almost blindly,
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Awesome (Score:2, Interesting)
After reading the PDF (I know it is against /. rules...) I have two questions:
1. Where can I sign up for the US version
2. Can the US integrate out system into theirs??? That would only help to protect us all!!!
I mean, after all, I am looking for all of the following:
1. I want to know that I have the right to be here
2. I want to know who you "really" are
3. I want to join a service that meet my needs
4. I want to be able to prove who I am
P.S. I want to point out my sarcasm, as my last few posts li
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They probably already are. Back in October I was being by interviewed US immigration for enrollment in to the NEXUS programme. He tapped the details of my Canadian passport in to the computer and came back with a question about something that happened in the year 2000 when I was travelling on my British passport. I can only assume they got the information from the Canadians linking my two passports/nationalities, but I wouldn't put it passed them to have a
New Hampshire and Real-ID (Score:2)
Stories like this make me real glad I live in New Hampshire, one of only 6 US States [freestateblogs.net] that actually opted out of "Real-ID".
Videos [freestateproject.org] of the protests we had against Real-ID are pretty cool.
Don't worry, it's still voluntary (Score:2)
Was the pithy commentary really necessary? (Score:5, Insightful)
Frankly, the commentary sounds like the rantings of some extremist, conspiracy-theorist wanker, and does nothing but muddy the issues, not to mention make reading the document more difficult, as I have to wade through their irritating scribblings.
Smoke Screen (Score:2)
As to the ID car
Big Brother's biggest backer (Score:2, Interesting)
This Is Not Good (Score:2)
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Be careful what you ask for; the Government will probably choose MS SQL Server... DOH! :-)
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I do understand what you are saying, but consider this...
as long as I was in control of all my own information - You are in control of your information when you live in democracy where your elected representatives control and govern the actions and the scope of government. If you think that government has too much or too little information, you call your representative or try get yourself elected.
It could be certified for accuracy by a trusted outside party - That would be the government.
I'd have to a
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I think that the problem both in UK and in US is that people don't truest their government. I don't know if this is because of history of wrong doing in part of the government, or because of television and movies...
Unfortunately, I think that in the U.S. at least, most people *do* trust the government. I don't, and a lot of people here on /. don't, but I think that is more because history has shown again and again that governments that are not kept in check by their constituents tend to become abusive. In fact, the relative freedom that western societies have enjoyed for the last several generations are an historical aberration; one that I *don't* want to see corrected.
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Last several generations? Either you mean "several == 1", or you've forgotten Poland and East Germany.
This is a prime example of why Godwin's Law should be repealed -- by not talking about the Nazis, we are breeding ignorance of history. Sometimes a comparison to Hitler (or Stalin, or Big Brother) is apropos.
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I think that the problem both in UK and in US is that people don't truest their government. I don't know if this is because of history of wrong doing in part of the government, or because of television and movies people automatically assume that anything new or something that makes governing efficient is an grand scale conspiracy to enslave the nation.
My personal feeling is that democracy scales poorly, or at least not very smoothly, particularly in diverse populations. Democracy is predicated on the idea of compromise; of people finding a solution that works for everyone involved. If you have too many groups with radically different ideas of how the government should be run, to the point where a compromise between them can't be found, you start to get disenfranchisement and mistrust when "your" people aren't in power. The U.S. has throughout most of
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US states have roughly a population near Finland's. This's the reason why the idea was for the states to maintain most of the power, and the Federal government to have very little.
On the other hand, quite a bit of the US Federal Government expansion has been for the very reason that people want it. People want the laws to be highly consistent throughout the nation. It is much easier to remember that the legal drinking age is 21 across the country. That the voting age is 18 across the country. That cocaine is illegal throughout the country, etc. Part of this is that travailing around between states has traditionally been far easier than travel between European countries, for various
You will get fooled again. (Score:2, Insightful)
You think a revolution is going to help? Replacing one government with another is only a temporary reprieve. Once the generation that dragged the last batch of tyrants to the guillotine dies off, people will forget what happened and grow complacent. They'll go back to saying "there ought to be a law" every time something doesn't go the way they think it should, and a new bunch of tyrants will corrupt the new government. Every revolution, even the American revolution of 1776, is a case of "Meet the New Boss,
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Holding the government at gunpoint. (Score:5, Insightful)
I agree with you concerning the Framers' reasons for including the Second Amendment. However, I have to ask you why you think that simply overthrowing an oppressive government and replacing it will do any long-term good? Do you think that leading Congress to the guillotine will work in a country where most people, thanks to public education, think that consistent respect for individual rights means leaving poor people to starve to death in the streets?
The American revolution was as successful as it was because of the people behind it, and I'm not just talking about the heroes you read about in school. Just about everybody in the colonies had at least a nodding acquaintance with the ideas of thinkers like John Locke and Thomas Paine.
An armed rebellion today would fail miserably, because most of the people are beholden to the government. They either get money directly from the government, or they work in industries that receive government subsidies. Do you think, for example, that public school teachers will do anything but teach the children in their ever-so-tender care that the rebels are anything but villains?
Before you can have a revolution, you need a people on fire with the lust for liberty. We don't have that, for the most part. Most people, if you were to tell them that it was possible to have a government that did not rob Peter in order to provide Paul with a welfare check, would laugh at you. Suggest repealing the income tax, and the first thing you'll hear is "how will the government replace those 'lost revenues', as if the government was ever morally entitled to that money in the first place.
A revolution won't work right now. The people are not ready; they do not burn with a passionate need for freedom.
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I would have to agree with them that there may not be a perfect government.
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Americans take careful note, don't allow things to get this far in the US.
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Well, at this point, you don't have to give out your SS number, or have it scanned for travelling by airplane. Or soon...to be scanned when buying booze, or entering a bar...or maybe after that, for any CC transaction to validate identity.
You aren't forced to carry it with you at all times, and have that number associated with many actions you take today in every day life. It can't really be u
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Since you say social security number, I assume that you are an American citizen. You do know what the USA do with every foreigner entering the country, I assume? Taking 10 (!) fingerprints! Plus a scan of your passport, storing your credit card number, plus any other
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You do know what the USA do with every foreigner entering the country, I assume? Taking 10 (!) fingerprints! Plus a scan of your passport, storing your credit card number, plus any other information in a related computer system. This gives the "land of freedom" quite a new interpretation.
In other news, it is now trivial to find numerous examples of people from outside the US simply refusing to travel there for either business or pleasure.
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That's when we have all the neat fireworks, right? I love bonfire night.
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Rangiku, rather than Orihime, and Yoruichi, rather than Rukia.
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> and trying to argue that it does not is foolish. The only
> arguments are either that the disadvantages of such a scheme
> to civil liberties are too great a cost or that the financial
> costs are so great that equivalent advantages are cheaper or
> are simply not required if the price is that high.
The thing is, it isn't just an National ID card. There'd be no fuss if it was a simple ID card.
What the UK government want to make is a so
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One way to get out of this 'funny' circle is to find a bank employee that doesn't take the rules too seriously.
Or you find one that follows the law. I know it does not work that way, but under European legislation you can open a bank account in any European country. A utility bill is *not* required. Sometimes I feel like suing just to show them what they should do.
But the best thing about the utility bill is that phone companies are ok. So if you get a paper bill for your VoIP account, that usually does the trick. A classic case of security by obscurity. Or fraudsters being to stupid to get a VoIP account?
I am not advocating doing that, just pointing out that I recently took over our neighbours account because British Gas f***ed up and didn't get the address right...
If there