The electronic trails created by scanning driver's licenses are raising concerns among privacy advocates. Standards and scanning, they say, are a dangerous combination that essentially creates a de facto national identity card or internal passport that can be registered in many databases.
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I was with a friend one night when he was turned away from a club in Boston. He had no driver's license - but he *did* have a valid Mass. state ID. I guess only drivers are allowed to drink.
-- Lost: Sig, white with black letters. No collar. Reward if found!
Re:grocery stores do this too
by
gorillasoft
·
· Score: 3, Funny
found my Kroger card in a parking lot somewhere. I think it was the walmart parking lot.>:) So someone, somewhere, has a bout 14 pounds of cheese, 6 pounds of tofu, 6 cans of beans, and 4 industrial sized cans of Tomato sauce per month showing up on his purchasing record. MUAHAHAHAHHA!!
You forgot the twelve dozen rolls of TP you are going to need.
Re:Defacto Privacy
by
electroniceric
·
· Score: 4, Funny
Well put.
The irony is that what causes the info-tracking technology to cross the line between helpful and invasive is the efforts of clever software engineers in making information impossible easy to store and follow.
The crux of your analogy is following people around. But what if you could record every conversation within a mile as easily as overhearing it? Even people with the most innoccuous intentions could run roughshod over privacy. That seems to me to be exactly what this bar owner is saying: "Well, I bought this doodad to reduce the hassles that go along with checking IDs properly (or checking them improperly and get browbeaten by local liquor control boards), but as long as it says click here to build Customer-Experience Enhancement Profiles, I figure I'll give this a shot." And then, "Wow, this is really useful to me. I can make my bar do much better business."
Information seems more and more to want to be free. The problem is setting it free without letting run around without its pants on.
Jeez. Sounds bad. Giving your personal information away every time your credit card is scanned.
About as bad as giving your personal information away for a nytimes.com account.
-- If you don't understand any of my sayings, come to me in private and I shall take you in my German mouth.
Re:grocery stores do this too
by
spazimodo
·
· Score: 3, Funny
Every few times I'm at the grocery store I turn to the person behind me in line and offer to trade savings cards. Most often, the appeal of fucking with their big database of who buys what puts a smile on their face and then we trade cards. so when i buy depends, treet lunch meat, and 6 pounds of radishes, they may be recording it, but the data is of no value.
--
Fsck the millennium, we want it now. Millennium Crisis Line: 0890 900 2000 [calls cost 50p/min]
So when the wife sees last month's bank statement and it has 23 debit entries to Koch's Liquors, what is she going to _think_ you bought?
"Remember, any tool can be the right tool." -- Red Green
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Does anyone else find that hilarious?
I was with a friend one night when he was turned away from a club in Boston. He had no driver's license - but he *did* have a valid Mass. state ID. I guess only drivers are allowed to drink.
Lost: Sig, white with black letters. No collar. Reward if found!
64 ascii characters should be enough for anybody!
found my Kroger card in a parking lot somewhere. I think it was the walmart parking lot.>:) So someone, somewhere, has a bout 14 pounds of cheese, 6 pounds of tofu, 6 cans of beans, and 4 industrial sized cans of Tomato sauce per month showing up on his purchasing record. MUAHAHAHAHHA!!
You forgot the twelve dozen rolls of TP you are going to need.
Well put.
The irony is that what causes the info-tracking technology to cross the line between helpful and invasive is the efforts of clever software engineers in making information impossible easy to store and follow.
The crux of your analogy is following people around. But what if you could record every conversation within a mile as easily as overhearing it? Even people with the most innoccuous intentions could run roughshod over privacy. That seems to me to be exactly what this bar owner is saying: "Well, I bought this doodad to reduce the hassles that go along with checking IDs properly (or checking them improperly and get browbeaten by local liquor control boards), but as long as it says click here to build Customer-Experience Enhancement Profiles, I figure I'll give this a shot." And then, "Wow, this is really useful to me. I can make my bar do much better business."
Information seems more and more to want to be free. The problem is setting it free without letting run around without its pants on.
Jeez. Sounds bad. Giving your personal information away every time your credit card is scanned.
About as bad as giving your personal information away for a nytimes.com account.
If you don't understand any of my sayings, come to me in private and I shall take you in my German mouth.
Every few times I'm at the grocery store I turn to the person behind me in line and offer to trade savings cards. Most often, the appeal of fucking with their big database of who buys what puts a smile on their face and then we trade cards. so when i buy depends, treet lunch meat, and 6 pounds of radishes, they may be recording it, but the data is of no value.
Fsck the millennium, we want it now.
Millennium Crisis Line: 0890 900 2000 [calls cost 50p/min]