Captain Murphy":1rndd02f said:
If it can make identity theft a much harder crime to commit then £300 may be a worthy investment.
There are three leading methods of identity theft:
1.) Taking someone's details during internet transactions.
2.) The misplacement or theft of cards or letters with a person's details upon them.
3.) Cracking a database and leeching the information from it.
So the government is going to solve this problem by consolidating everything into a single file, require you to use it constantly in every civil transaction including those taking place online in their new "egov" schemes.
So it won't be secure at all. Far from it, it will actually be a boon to criminals.
Australia and America both have greater problems with identity theft than the UK precisely because they are over reliant on single reference sources. The Dutch have had a similar problem, especially seeing as the cards they use have been shown to be easily readable by third-parties at a distance, and they are using the same technology as the proposed UK database.
And of course, once parties unknown have *everything* on you including things such as biometrics, you're pretty screwed.
And you are forced in those cases. You want to use the Internet? Then you've got to use an ISP, and you've got to use a web browser. While you can pick and choose which ISP and browser, there are only a few to choose from and you have to use one of them. (And while you aren't forced to use the Internet, you are also not forced to live in Britain).
...which is contingent on my deciding to use the internet - and I can still decide not to use the internet. Still the comparison doesn't stand. Are you suggesting that the 1 in 5 people who oppose the ID card on principle should leave the country Wyatt?
If nobody did things just because it would cost money then nothing would ever get done.
That's not what I said, Wyatt: It's a waste of money. We're paying an absurd amount for unproven, insecure database which currently has no ceiling. The money can be better spent, or (astonishingly) there's always the option to give it back to the people who earned it.
Under the scheme the Home Office takes a large swathe of executive powers, especially seeing as the extension or revision of the database, once in action, is an extra-parliamentary decision.
The database has limited oversight, with little to stop the information being abused: the state have not made it clear what measures are in place to deal with the inevitably large numbers of identifications, or deliberate attacks or corruption of what is going to be a vital piece of national software. How much does this cost?
And worst of all, it makes an individual's inalienable right to civic life entirely dependent upon the state - even if I don't have a car, I must contact the state and inform them occasionally that I do not have a car.
Considering the dependency we would have on this database
What I want to know is, what information could you possibly have that the Government want access to, that you wouldn't be willing to give? And, furthermore, why?
You've never heard of third party abuse?
There are hundreds of people across the country who have ever reason not to disclose things such as their ethnicity, whereabouts, car registration numbers etc into an unsecure database. Those fleeing foreign governments for instance. The example has already been brought up of Google parting with the names of Chinese dissidents to the Chinese state. Or how about something more local and domestic, spousal abuse for instance?
You know, some people might not want their medical or psychiatric records (or any other "notes" which the state feels it has the right to make a note of on your file) being as accessible to the DVLA - such as religious or sexual issues.