Olympic Tickets Contain Microchip With Your Data 254
OMNIpotusCOM writes "Tickets to the Olympic opening and closing ceremonies will contain a microchip with information about the ticket holder, including a photograph, passport details, addresses, e-mail, and telephone numbers. The stated intent is to keep troublemakers out of the 91,000-seat National Stadium so that they cannot cause disruptions while China is on world-wide television, but it brings up serious concerns for privacy and identity theft."
Well That's It (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Well That's It (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Well That's It (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Well That's It (Score:4, Insightful)
Yay.
Re:Well That's It (Score:4, Insightful)
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Exactly the same? No, no - whatever China do to invade individual privacy, you can be sure that the UK Government plan to outdo them
As an added bonus, all of the microchipped tickets will be lost in the post.
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1st time - walked right through security. Got the magic wand treatment - they didnt take my lighter - kosher like Christmas
2nd time - Might as well have been going through a gestapo checkpoint. Literally took me five minutes of taking my entire wardrobe apart, checking my iphone, and harassing me to my obvious annoyance before I got through
3rd time - (Two nights ago) I beeped going through the metal detector - she gave m
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Just go to the 2012 event
After all in 2012 in the UK you'll have:
I am sure that can't be abused
Oh the irony. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Oh the irony. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Oh the irony. (Score:5, Insightful)
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China does not have to be nice. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:China does not have to be nice. (Score:5, Interesting)
There are many high dollar products crappily made in China and sold at whatever your favorite retail outlet happens to be.
I don't find wal-mart to be particularly worse than the vast majority of stores in terms of amount of crappy Chinese goods. The others, for whatever reason, make people feel good for paying more for the same crap they could have gotten for 20% less (and a different brand stuck on said products coming off the same assembly line with the same materials).
To find non-crap you not only have to be lucky enough to have a store locally that sales such items but also know enough about whatever you are purchasing to know what is and isn't crap.
In the end people purchasing crappy products made in china at a high price contribute more than people purchasing cheaply made items at a cheap price. The profit margin there is HUGE even when you take into account the extra money spent on advertisement to get people to hate the less expensive place to purchase it.
And, to note, one can very much find some quality items made in China - I have some cookware and cutlery that is quite good (and yes, I have several good kitchen knives - a few Henckel "s" grades and a Shun - but it is really hard to beat a Chinese high carbon steel cleaver and the hammered carbon steel woks are great).
Re:China does not have to be nice. (Score:5, Informative)
Sometimes yes they are the same.
Sometimes the materials going in aren't quite the same quality. (using lower quality steel, or cheaper plastics, or whatever...)
Sometimes the goods coming out are held to lower standards. (ie stuff that would have been rejected for the 'premium brand' is good enough for the 'walmart brand'.
I recall film in particular was like this some years ago. The brand name stuff and the generic stuff was indeed made in the same factory on the same line from the same stuff. But QC on the brand name stuff was higher. Flaws in batches that didn't meet the brand's QC levels but were still 'ok' were sold under the generic brand.
Bottom line, knowing a product came from the same factory and even assembly line as product X means squat. It might be the same product. Or it might be highly inferior.
Re:China does not have to be nice. (Score:5, Interesting)
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Re:Oh the irony. (Score:5, Informative)
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...but other govermnents already know a "good idea" when they see it. People are still trying to develop and legalize ubiquitous, biometric ID schemes. Imagine having to carry your biometric passport with you everywhere you go because it's required to board a domestic flight or to go to a rock concert. Ze paperz pleez.
And If I go to the US (rant/troll) (Score:5, Informative)
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Re:And If I go to the US (rant/troll) (Score:4, Interesting)
Amen, brother! I'm a US citizen (middle-aged White Anglo-Saxon Programmer) who occasionally travels abroad. Without exception, the US customs officials have been the rudest I've ever encountered.
<rant class="us_border_policies">I was in England at the height of the whole Mad Cow thing. When I returned to the US they distributed fliers on the plane warning us about Mad Cow, that it was a very serious thing and be sure to disclose if you've been to any place rural. The same fliers were posted all over the international terminal at O'Hare. So I fessed up to the customs guy (or is it the immigration guy? Whoever stamps your passport) that yes, I'd been hiking in rural England, I had crossed a few cow pastures, and probably trod in a cowpie or two. He just grunted(*) and waved me through. WTF?! What's the point of all the warnings if they're not going to do anything about it?</rant>
(*)And I mean that literally. He grunted. Not a single syllable of any intelligible language came out of this guy's mouth. And that brings us back to having the rudest officials in the world.
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Sorry, but cross our borders, submit to our policies.
Similarly, you're free not to go to China and attend the Olympics if you wish not to.
(okay...I'm done channeling Bush...can you please remove the electrodes from my genetalia now?)
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Sir (or Ma'am):
I travel quite extensively for business and pleasure to countries rich and poor, 'Eastern' and 'Western.'
I can assure you that being a foreigner visiting another country never gives you many rights, everyone keeps databases and your information is probably never really that secure.
I have applied for visas for various countries and have been shown my intelligence record for a few, including information about where I stayed in-country, who my contacts there were, and even in one case, the
Scalpers? (Score:5, Funny)
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Just wait this is only the first (Score:5, Insightful)
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I wouldnt be surprised if it didnt trickle down to even the major games in Footbal, Soccer, Baseball etc...
My immediate reaction was "how bad do they expect it to be"... I can understand name, passport info, and picture (although shouldnt any non-citizens already have their passport which contains all this info?), But telephone number and street address etc? are they expecting some gia
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It will trickle down much further than that. Soon you will need one of these cards to unlock the door to your house... from the inside.
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Really worse than the last one? (Score:5, Interesting)
If they wanted to, they could have very easily tracked card number, and thereby person buying, with ticket info.
Re:Just wait this is only the first (Score:5, Informative)
They already did .... http://www.pcworld.com/ [pcworld.com] and http://networks.silicon.com/ [silicon.com]
Counterfeiting was the public reasoning for the RFID chips in the 2006 World Cup tickets.
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You had to register for your ticket and you could not give it away. So they could check if you are the person that ordered the ticket. I don't remember if they already had a chip in the ticket, but when you can check the serial number against a database, you really don't need a chip.
I don't see the problem (Score:4, Insightful)
Tibet (Score:4, Funny)
So much for free Tibet... with every purchase.
cruise (Score:4, Interesting)
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bad people (Score:4, Insightful)
It's sad the tone of this article from CANADA so readily equates acts of terrorism with the possibility of someone simply unfurling a tibetan flag. Is it just the english speaking countries that have gone completely batshit insane, or is liberty actually enadangered EVERYWHERE in the world now?
Re:bad people (Score:4, Insightful)
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Sorry, for me the chinese government are the bad people.
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OMG (Score:3, Insightful)
Call me a skeptic, but (Score:3, Insightful)
Maybe they feel there's a correlation between someone who doesn't want to share personal information and troublemaker.
Re:Call me a skeptic, but (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Call me a skeptic, but (Score:5, Funny)
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would this be unreasonable for a business? (Score:4, Interesting)
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Let me get this straight. You're on slashdot asking if Walmart was selling something, and attaching electronic passport (and other sensitive) information on it, whether we'd consider it unreasonable??? Your
Those pesky troublemakers, eh? (Score:5, Insightful)
I'd say it also brings up pretty serious concerns about the various definitions and interpretations of the word "troublemaker". Perspective is a wonderful thing - until they take it from you.
Trouble makers are all the same (Score:2)
The question is, how big of a trouble makers can you be before you go to jail?
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Uhm... Why? (Score:5, Informative)
So What? (Score:5, Interesting)
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Cheers!
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People know that they have to look after their passport. Will they realise that if they lose (or throw away) their ticket, it could become a vector for someone to steal their identity?
Privacy and identity theft? (Score:2)
Since when did the Chinese government care about privacy and identity theft? They don't even care about human rights. You'd probably get a bullet for even mentioning the issue, in China.
Why bother with photos? (Score:5, Funny)
Westerners all look the same, anyway.
What's that? Ohh, you round-eyes got no sense of humour!
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Why are we putting up with this? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Why are we putting up with this? (Score:4, Interesting)
He is probably taking notes, like "Hmm, that is a good idea, that is a tad bit too far for now, that another good idea"
We already have RFID chips in our passports. The government is engaging in warrantless wiretaps, the National Security Letter [wikipedia.org] is a blatant violation of the first amendment, Gitmo, War on Drugs, etc...
You don't need to look further than Washington to see "nonsense-ical human rights violations"
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Online? Or Offline? (Score:2)
Is this not more like "Your Rights Offline"?
Seriously, though, way back in the Stone Age when I attended the Olympics, things were a lot different. The volunteers were given unsold tickets for the events, and they basically had tickets for any event that was not sold out. I got to be friends with them and got a lot of free tickets.
So, what would stop somebody from using somebody else's ticket? Are they seriously thinking of carding everybody at the door to every event? That would have been impo
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What else is in the tickets? (Score:2)
In Communist China... (Score:2, Funny)
Tracking? (Score:2)
If you are not a Chinese citizen... (Score:5, Interesting)
As an alien in this country, I am subjected to intrusion of privacy by a multitude of institutions that I do business with - The only way to avoid that is to "go under" and become an illegal immigrant.
I perfectly understand the need for this. I am an immigrant to the USA and if the society here (which has been nice enough to tolerate me) feels safer by having my life glimpsed at, I am OK with it. I strongly dislike it, but atleast they let me stay here eh?
What my college does with my privacy and what the Olympics committee of China does with a tourist's is not all that different.
I would however be mighty pissed if I were a Chinese citizen and subjected to this treatment. I truly feel sorry for them.
I am just pointing out that aliens in a country having their privacy violated is not unusual and as an alien I am not particularly bothered by China doing it to tourists.
Note: This is NOT an "I have nothing to hide" issue. It's more of "Thanks for letting me be in your house, you can watch me and I will be on my best behaviour"
Cheers!
Re:If you are not a Chinese citizen... (Score:5, Insightful)
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You tell the foreign side of story. I will tell you from the Chinese side. As a Chinese, I don't see any problem neither
There you have it. Everyone's happy!
A lot of things that the occidentals assume is best for the world are things whose importance varies by culture. While I am a huge fan of freedom of speech, it is not something you necessarily take for granted in countries like Singapore, India and Indonesia (where I've lived). Propaganda on the other hand is something that I have been somewhat 'culture shocked' by in the US because in India where I grew up, urban dwellers with a good education are not targeted by propag
And I take it... (Score:2)
China Bashing (Score:2, Redundant)
Obligatory (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Inevitable (Score:4, Insightful)
So, while the natives are doing their sacrificial dance around the flame and we sit in the big cauldron, we should remain informed and alert, fully aware of what's happening as the hairy guy in the funny hat puts the flaming torch at the base and we start enjoying a terminal hot bath, knowing full well that Tarzan will come and save us?
Life's no Hollywood movie. People DO get boiled in cauldrons and we ARE screwed unless we act. Being alert and informed isn't enough.
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Re:Inevitable (Score:5, Interesting)
I don't buy this.
They will eventually clone a human - somewhere in the world - regardless of laws.
Arguably this has already taken place. If you mean clone a human and implant the clone in a human womb, or else have some sort of artificial womb technology to bring the cloned embryo to term...that may take a while.
We will eventually have computer chips embedded under our skin - it will start with a way to track children, then a way to expedite purchases, then a way to hold critical medical info and so on.
Do this in the US and you will have a million zillion Christians up in arms. Literally. The "Left Behind" book series was a huge-ass bestseller in a country where most people don't read if they don't have to. This might happen elsewhere, like the PRC, Vladimir Putin's Russian Federation, Japan...in fact, my prediction is that it will happen first in Japan and it will be promoted as a youth trend. It will never happen in the US. It will probably not happen in Alberta, Canada. It will probably not happen in certain Central and South American countries. It will probably not happen in South Korea, which is almost as Christian-centric as the US is.
Nothing is inevitable except death and taxes. Period.
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Start by putting them in phones. once all hthe old naysayers drop off, give the option of implanting them, since your shone is implanted anyways...
I wonder where the best place to implant a phone..of yeah, back of the wrist.
Of course, all that is just crap, and I wouldn't mind being chipped if we had guarantee of freedoms~
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The U.S. is overwhelmingly Christian, whereas South Korea is more or less evenly split between Buddhists and Christians (and probably more "non-believers" than either of those groups).
Wrong Order (Score:4, Insightful)
I think you've got some things out of order. We've already started by chipping pets and certain researchers. I think the next thing would be chipping soldiers as a replacement/supplement to dog tags. Once there, it will be a small step to chipping the elderly and ill, especially Alzheimer's and those who tend to wander off and forget things. Next will be children. Then, last of all, joe consumer. After all, Joe can carry a paypass RFID keyfob, or an RFID credit card. So why get it implanted?
Oh, and prisoners. They'll wind up getting chipped at some point as well.
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Re:Wrong Order (Score:4, Funny)
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Amen.
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That doesn't sound nearly as awesome unless you're talking about guns. In Charlton Heston's voice. And you're Charlton Heston.
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The home of the free? (Score:4, Insightful)
Yes, thats why we see the good ole US of A protecting its citizens rights so very very well these days.
Tell people that it will stop the terrorism, drug problems, and help them buy new Hummers, and people will be voting FOR it, not against.
After all, pretty quickly the majority will see that this would be a great way to accurately identify those 'troublemakers' you mentioned, and keep them out of their nice safe middle-class lives.
I estimate that if you chipped the soldiers overseas, at least 20% of the US population would get chips just to show their support!
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Wow, that would be an interesting protest.
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modded flamebait? (Score:2)
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Cheers!
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