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Comments on ‘'Coercion' plan to force ID cards on first time drivers’

Not compulsion - sign here to end the pain...

Published Monday 28th January 2008 07:56 GMT

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Toy Town Government 

By Nomen Publicus
Posted Monday 28th January 2008 08:39 GMT
Boffin

So, unable to win the argument about the usefulness of ID cards our wonderful government just spins a little and decides to _create_ uses for ID cards.

"universal compulsion should not be used unless absolutely necessary." 

By Anonymous Coward
Posted Monday 28th January 2008 08:55 GMT
Thumb Down

Yes, good point. It's not "universal" if you don't compell absolutely everyone to have one. Let's leave, say, the gay community unaffected. Then it's certainly not universal (as they've been moaning about for years). Yay!

Democratic? or Demoncratic? 

By Anonymous Coward
Posted Monday 28th January 2008 09:43 GMT

Why not just tone down the ID card to just identity, not biometrics this and that, put in a bunch of privacy protections and tighten up on violations like the DVLA are up to. And fix RIPA to put back privacy protection.

Rather than fight the public, get agreement with them and protect their interests.

Look at RIPA, a secret order SELF authorized by various public bodies (I read it's more than 1000 local and governent agencies now that can demand secret monitoring of all electronic communications). I read there have been 5000+ official orders, and the estimate of 200,000 unreported RIPA orders.

The table of who can ask these seems to be here:

http://www.statewatch.org/news/2003/sep/ukdataret.pdf

There should be NO agency that can do that without Judicial oversight, yet even the Scottish Ambulance service can do it, the department of trade, any local fire authority, the home office, any local borough councilman, British transport police, the charity commissioner, the office of fair trading, jobcentres, the foods standards agency...

Article 8, the person has the right to privacy. There is no power the remove that privacy right without judicial process. RIPA is not legal, you cannot remove someones privacy without Judicial process.

So you get back to the right of privacy, throw out that Blair stuff. Put in the judicial checks and balances back in, build confidence in the government, then roll out WITH AGREEMENT a card that does just identity without all the privacy attacks.

Unless 

By Svein Skogen
Posted Monday 28th January 2008 09:43 GMT
Flame

Unless they're starting a policy of requiring biometric ID to be "publically available" for all MPs, there should be no reason for the public to make their biometric ID available to the MPs. Period.

//Svein

Brave new world 

By Spider
Posted Monday 28th January 2008 09:54 GMT
Stop

so it's not compulsory as long as you don't actually want to be able to do anything, ever, at all.

papieren bitte?

Silly me... 

By Alex
Posted Monday 28th January 2008 09:57 GMT
Thumb Down

...for even considering ever emigrating to Britain to work oO

quelle surprise, was für ne überraschung 

By Spleen
Posted Monday 28th January 2008 11:47 GMT

(just polishing up my woeful knowledge of foreign languages in preparation for emigration.)

Exactly what most of us have been predicting. They'll be no watershed moment when suddenly the Government says 'Take this ID card!' and we get to say 'Fuck off!', they'll be rolled out gradually and will be made not compulsory, but essential. You'll be fuming at your computer posting comments on El Reg and behind you they've already handed one to your 16-year-old daughter who's just got her provisional licence. And then why resist when they're already inside your family? There will be no martyrs because giving up employment doesn't count as martyrdom, it counts as laziness in the eyes of the Great British Public.

Which is more oppressive: a government that beats its citizens with sticks when they protest, or a government that cunningly arranges things so they don't even get the chance to protest in the first place? If I said I envied the monks in Burma everyone would probably assume that I was a typical Western Internet blowhard who wouldn't dream of actually getting up from his computer and taking to the streets if given the opportunity. But fuck it, I envy the monks in Burma.

Don't post here 

By Tom Chiverton
Posted Monday 28th January 2008 12:50 GMT
Alert

"You'll be fuming at your computer posting comments on El Reg and behind you they've already handed one to your 16-year-old daughter"

So join our local No2ID group today, and do something rather than just 'posting comments'.

Re: Don't post here 

By John Lettice
Posted Monday 28th January 2008 13:58 GMT
staff

"Don't post here"? So how's MY 16 year old daughter supposed to eat if they don't post here? Just watch it, Sunshine, OK? (-:

@Tom Chiverton 

By Spleen
Posted Monday 28th January 2008 15:28 GMT

Good idea, I'll post my opinion on two Internet sites! Take that, Brown!

Re: Don't post here 

By Anonymous Coward
Posted Monday 28th January 2008 19:05 GMT

I agree. Instead of 'just "posting comment"', you could act for real, and really usefully: create a blog, create a group on FaceBook, join a mailing list, maybe even join "no2ID". That's some real action, man!

Appart from that, I think that this biometric thinggie is kinda cool. Every single person with internet acces in the world will be able to easily download the databases containing the physical characteristic of every single Brit on the planet, from any P2P network. At least once one or two CDs and laptops are lost or stolen. Then we'll know that John Smith, who poses on MySpace as a new Rambo, is really 161 cm high and wheights 47 kg.

ID? 

By Anonymous Coward
Posted Monday 28th January 2008 19:36 GMT
Thumb Down

Its a well known fact that all 16 year old girls on the internet are actually 53 year old pedos.

Breaches of Security 

By Steven Davison
Posted Tuesday 29th January 2008 02:33 GMT

Do we really trust a government that has had so many known leaks of personal information?

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