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National Biometric IDs

Jester998 writes "I just came across this article about how two U.S. congressmen want biometric identification. They're trying to avoid the controversial 'national ID' issue by creating what would be new drivers licenses with biometric information embedded. What does the Slashdot community think about having your retinal pattern embedded on a smart card?"

467 comments

  1. Two words. by jarodss · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Proudly Canadian.

    1. Re:Two words. by n3r0.m4dski11z · · Score: 3, Funny

      Oh canada,
      glorious and free,
      god save our land,
      from americans tyranny.

      --
      -
    2. Re:Two words. by Wedman · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If it happens in the USA, it can happens in Canada 20 minutes later, eh.

    3. Re:Two words. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, no, no. That's "half an hour later in Newfoundland." Get it right...

      Damn, I wish I still had my original /. ID...

    4. Re:Two words. by edrugtrader · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      is that right, eh?

      i'm taking you to the loony bin

      --
      MARIJUANA, SHROOMS, X: ONLINE?! - E
    5. Re:Two words. by DrFrob · · Score: 0

      Oh Canadia, if only you would give me residence (and had a good graduate school) I would be yours.

    6. Re:Two words. by Darby · · Score: 1

      Oh Canadia, if only you would give me residence (and had a good graduate school) I would be yours.

      I suppose they probably have some sort of policy about allowing someone into a graduate school who can't even spell the name of the country in which the school is located.

    7. Re:Two words. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good point. Canada will adopt USA's tyrannical, fearful laws just like Canada has adopted the US measurment system, the US health care system, the US mentality on guns, the US currency, the US system of government...

      If you knew anything about Canada you would know that the only reason it exists at all is so a bunch of folks can live in a truly free country within North America and don't have to endure being called 'American'.

  2. Ummm.... NO. by Xyverz · · Score: 0

    Lose your card, get your identity stolen easily. That's all I can imagine. Bad idea.

    But then again, I could be wrong.

    1. Re:Ummm.... NO. by GutBomb · · Score: 3, Insightful

      well, how would your identity be stolen? they are not stealing your eye, they are stealing a card with your retinal scan on the back. i imagine that what the retinal scan is for is that you present your card, then put your face to a retinal scanner to make sure that the card is not a fake and you say who you are. now i don't like this idea, but i do feel that getting ahold of somebody's card with a retianl scan stored on the chip is no more risky than getting thier traditional id card stolen.

    2. Re:Ummm.... NO. by garett_spencley · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I think that's what this is trying to avoid. The whole problem with National Id cards is what you just described.

      Biometric encoding would eliminate this because you could easily match a peron to an id card.

      My problem with this kind of stuff is just the security involved. I'm a System Administrator and so I know first hand how lazy people can be when it comes to security. People always choose convenience over security. No matter what. And the U.S government is no exception.

      A couple small examples:

      In the gulf war a U.S Navy ship was compromised and e-mail was leaked.

      Presently there's a group of blackhat's calling themselves "The Deceptive Duo" who have succesfully hacked into government systems..

      I don't want to trust every single piece of information that's very personal to an irresponsible government that doesn't take the security of it's network seriously. Because most likely everyone's information will be stored in a single database that government officials can use to lookup your information. It's already happening it's just not as centralized as they want it to be.

      I guess the idea is that if you get pulled over the cop will take a hand or retinal scan, go to his cruiser and get every single piece of information he could possibly need to know about you from a central database.

      That scares because of both security and privacy concerns that I have.

      --
      Garett

    3. Re:Ummm.... NO. by WinstonSmith · · Score: 2, Funny

      Lose your card, get your identity stolen easily.

      Not unless I accidentally drop my retinas on the ground too.

    4. Re:Ummm.... NO. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      I dunno, if they used something along the lines of public/private key encryption, where your card was the equivalent of your public key and your actual retina pattern was the private key, this wouldn't be so bad.

      Of coures, who would you trust as the CA? Verisign?

    5. Re:Ummm.... NO. by visualight · · Score: 2

      Biometric encoding would eliminate this because you could easily match a peron to an id card.

      And how is this different from a photo i.d? If you had a picture of everyone on your guestlist it would be more secure than this. The proposed system is like coming to the party with a picture of yourself and saying "See here, it's me!". My prediction is that somewhere during the implementation of this latest scheme, the federal database will be built/linked.

      This is a bad idea

      --
      Samsung took back my unlocked bootloader because Google wants me to rent movies. They're both evil.
    6. Re:Ummm.... NO. by garett_spencley · · Score: 2

      Because it's a lot easier to forge/counterfeit/phake/steal a picture than it is a retinal scan or a finger print.

      I never said I agreed with the technology (actually I stated the contrary) but that's the idea anyway.

      --
      Garett

    7. Re:Ummm.... NO. by ghostrocket · · Score: 1

      I think that you are right about trusting a goverment that does not take security seriously. This concerns me because goverment will have more power that can be miss used by part of a goverment or system invaders (Cracker / Hackers etc..) . This IS something that I know they all ready (Not Centrly based) can do but puts all of the eggs in the same basket. Does not sound good to me...

  3. actually, by eric6 · · Score: 5, Funny

    i'd just like my retinas embedded on a smart card. then i could see if i have correct change before pulling out my wallet.

    --

    --
    fight global cooling

    1. Re:actually, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah and then someone will hack you retinas and run ads for flea bag Hindustani hotels in your peripheral vision till you wack your self, ala Diamond Age.

  4. mixed reactions by jeeves99 · · Score: 1

    On one hand, I agree with the idea. The state license system for discerning citizens from non-citizens is a joke. It doesn't work. Any joe can make a fake identity.

    On the other hand, do you think they'll allow me to substitute my fingerprint for a scan of my ass on my license?

    1. Re:mixed reactions by Silver222 · · Score: 2, Insightful
      That's because the driver's license is not a citizenship ID. That's what passports are for. Why do the police need to know what citizenship you possess? You either broke the law or you didn't. That isn't going to change if you are from another country.

      --
      "It's not a war on drugs, it's a war on personal freedom. Keep that in mind at all times." Bill Hicks
    2. Re:mixed reactions by KingAdrock · · Score: 0, Redundant

      So because I don't have a passport, I'm not a citizen? God damn it, I hate it when I lose my citizenship!

    3. Re:mixed reactions by Random+Feature · · Score: 2

      Because if you are a US citizen and you break the law you are entitled to certain rights.

      If you break the law and you are not a US citizen, you have no rights and you can (and usually should) be deported.

      --
      I don't have a solution, but I certainly admire the problem.
    4. Re:mixed reactions by mgv · · Score: 2

      Because if you are a US citizen and you break the law you are entitled to certain rights.

      If you break the law and you are not a US citizen, you have no rights and you can (and usually should) be deported.


      What, so if a tourist hires a car while on holiday in the US and speeds, they should be deported?

      Actually, I think you will find that if you break the law as a non US citizen, you go to a US jail, the same as anyone else. Or are you suggesting that if come to the US, buy a gun and shoot someone, my punishment should be deportation?

      I don't think it works that way.

      Michael

      --
      There is no cryptographic solution to the problem where the intended receiver and the attacker are the same entity.
    5. Re:mixed reactions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sounds like a crock of that anti-immigrant shit - or maybe just ignorance.
      I don't claim to have a law degree, but I don't need one to know that the concepts in the US constitution (enshrined in US law) apply equally regardless of citizenship.

      Everyone has equal rights under the law, hence the "court appointed attorney if you can't afford one". That might be the absolute worst lawyer possible but.. The only way deportation is a consideration for non-US nationals on US soil is if the person has illegally entered the country, in which case they have already broken US law even before taking their second step in. Otherwise they still have to be found guilty of some crime before they can be deported. That's the basis under which Dmitri Skylarov(sp?) was arrested.

      yeah - posting as AC cause I don't about karma.

    6. Re:mixed reactions by Random+Feature · · Score: 1

      People like you remind me of why I stay away from public places.

      Get real. A couple years ago a guy from Britian spouted off at the mouth, and then tried to claim that his mouthing off was covered by the First Amendment.

      They sent him home. Why? Because he (like other non US citizens in the US) aren't guaranteed the rights afforded to citizens.

      If you come to the US, buy a gun and shoot someone, you should pay the price and THEN be deported.

      As far as the speeding, well - it depends on how nasty the government is feeling at the moment.
      As you note, you'll probably pay a fine and go on your merry way.

      Just DON'T try to claim protection under the Constitution. As a non-citizen, you don't have the right to it. That's the point that was being made.

      --
      I don't have a solution, but I certainly admire the problem.
    7. Re:mixed reactions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      If you break the law and you are not a US citizen, you have no rights and you can (and usually should) be deported.



      Untrue.



      Very few provisions of our Constitution differentiate between citizens and non-citizens. Non-citizens are still protected under Miranda, are still protected from unreasonable search or seizure, et cetera. As a matter of fact, of the enumerated rights, IIRC only voting and gun ownership are restricted.



      Speaking now as a cop, I usually don't give a good goddamn whether someone I contact is a citizen or not. Probably half the people on my beat are probably illegals anyway. If I were even legally allowed to enforce immigration laws, I'd never have time to deal with real crime. About the only time that citizenship matters is when I'm trying to decide whether to arrest someone or release him on a misdemeanor summons. That decision is based, more than anything, on whether or not he'll actually appear as required if I don't.



      But the truth be told, I've already got too much to worry about. If I weren't piloting a desk because I'm on crutches this week, I'd be four hours into a ten-hour shift and would likely have a half-dozen calls for service already stacked up. I don't have time to go chasing some guy who came from Juarez to rake leaves without getting the proper paperwork. And even if I did have that kind of free time, I could probably find something better to do with it.

    8. Re:mixed reactions by mgv · · Score: 2

      Just DON'T try to claim protection under the Constitution. As a non-citizen, you don't have the right to it. That's the point that was being made.

      Point taken. However the original comment was a bit of overkill. To quote again:

      If you break the law and you are not a US citizen, you have no rights and you can (and usually should) be deported.

      There probably isn't a citizen in the first world that hasn't broken the law somewhere. Like making a video tape of a movie on TV. There are lots of laws, and most tourists end up breaking some just because they aren't aware of minor differences between two countries. I don't suppose that you read the law books of every country that you have visited now?

      Just DON'T try to claim protection under the Constitution. As a non-citizen, you don't have the right to it.

      Now, think about what you have said about my lack of rights under the US constitution. If I visit the US, do the police there have the right to beat me up because I am a "non-citizen", or shoot or kill me? If they do not, then I have rights under the US laws. I believe that I do. I just don't have the right to remain in the US - which is fair enough.

      As I understand it, the US are keeping most of the Taliban fighters in Cuba because they would have alot more rights to lawyers in the US. No, I'm not saying I like what happened on 9/11/01 - many of my fellow nationals were fighting alongside US troops in Afganistan. But ask yourself why the US refuses to bring these people into the country? I believe its partly because they would have access a whole lot of legal rights, and if they were funded by Bin Laden they probably have access to enough money to use those rights to the fullest.

      So I ask you again, are you sure I would have no rights in the US? Not even (for example) the right to a fair trial if I did break the law? Because thats the point I am arguing here.

      This isn't said as flamebait. I'm interested in knowing the answer to these questions. I have enjoyed the times I've visited the US, but I guess I'd like to know that US citizens can't just take pot shots at me the moment they hear my accent. Which is how I interpreted the first post.

      Michael

      --
      There is no cryptographic solution to the problem where the intended receiver and the attacker are the same entity.
    9. Re:mixed reactions by Ozymandias_KoK · · Score: 1

      Deportation is simply a good way to get rid of non-citizens in lieu of prosecution or when you are unable to for some reason (evidence, that sort of thing.) Instead of going to the effort, you just make them go away. Individuals are subject to the laws of the country they are in, it does not matter a damn if they are from there or not. The fact that they can be expelled has no relation to to whether or not US laws might protect them. Your argument is not valid.

    10. Re:mixed reactions by Ozymandias_KoK · · Score: 1

      IIRC, as they are in Gauntanamo, a US military base, they ARE on US soil the same as they would be were they in a US embassy in a foreign country.

    11. Re:mixed reactions by mgv · · Score: 2

      The fact that they can be expelled has no relation to to whether or not US laws might protect them. Your argument is not valid.

      So are you saying that a visitor in the US has all the obligations under the law but no rights? That is my question here. (Including such things as a fair trial, the right to a lawyer to defend themselves, etc).

      Michael

      --
      There is no cryptographic solution to the problem where the intended receiver and the attacker are the same entity.
  5. What a relief by Jerp · · Score: 3, Funny

    I'm just relieved that they no longer want our rectal pattern stamped on the license.

    1. Re:What a relief by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A xeroxed copy of your butt will do the trick

  6. Not me by BigGar' · · Score: 2, Funny

    I'll gouge my eyes out first.
    That'll teach 'em ......

    --


    Shop smart, Shop S-Mart.
  7. ID. by saintlupus · · Score: 2, Interesting

    They're trying to avoid the controversial 'national ID' issue by creating what would be new drivers licenses with biometric information embedded.

    That's a great evasive tactic. After all, when people ask me for identification, they hardly expect to see a driver's license.

    Much like the Social Security Number has become a de facto customer ID number, the driver's license is essentially the official ID card of the nation.

    Try buying a case of beer with a "non-driver identification card" some time. Or god forbid, a passport.

    --saint

    1. Re:ID. by (H)elix1 · · Score: 3, Funny

      Try buying a case of beer with a "non-driver identification card" some time. Or god forbid, a passport.

      No kidding. Last week I went to Taco Johns, paid with a check, and was asked for some ID. I had my passport, but they would not take it.... had to be a driver's license.

      A week later I go to get a new drivers license -- moved states. The DMV would not take the others state's license since it only had my middle initial, not my full middle name. They did take the passport as ID, however.

    2. Re:ID. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Been hassled more than once becuase a US passport is not good enough ID in the USA to get a drink since bars in Mass. are not legally obligated to accept out-of-state DLs as ID.

      "I don't think I can take this either. I have to show this to the manager."

      Yikes.

    3. Re:ID. by Q2Serpent · · Score: 1

      That sucks. When I moved to New York, they put my name on my license as "First Initial" "Middle Initial" "Last Name" because if they wrote out either my first or middle names, the last name wouldn't fit (it's 11 characters).

      Go figure. I hope I don't move to your state, because they'll never accept my license there :)

    4. Re:ID. by PhxBlue · · Score: 1

      Try buying a case of beer with a "non-driver identification card" some time. Or god forbid, a passport.

      My military ID works just fine, actually. . .

      --
      !#@%*)anks for hanging up the phone, dear.
    5. Re:ID. by awb131 · · Score: 1

      Actually, a passport works better than a driver's license when you're outside your home state. Most door staff don't know what the licenses of all 50 states look like, and therefore can't tell if one is legit or not. But most of them know what passports look like, at least in my experience.

      Growing a beard and looking like you're 35 also helps. I rarely even get asked anymore.

      Of course, I suppose this only applies in the U.S., where drinking laws are stupid.

      --
      "There is no night so forlorn, no mood so bleak, that it cannot be infused with pleasure by tender meat..." - R.W. Apple
    6. Re:ID. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Here in Massachusetts, you can go to the RMV and get a liquor ID. It's basically a driver's license but it doesn't allow you to drive. Funny thing is, almost every liquor store I've been in has a sign saying they don't except them!

    7. Re:ID. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, that's NOT true in most of the states I've been in. I have tried to use my passport in Connecticut, Illinois, Texas, and Colorado, and been told repeatedly that it is unacceptable since it isn't issued by the state in which I was attempting to drink. There might be some states where the laws allow you to use a passport, those four are the four that I know for a fact don't (or didn't, since it's been a while since I've been to them.)

    8. Re:ID. by gol64738 · · Score: 1

      um, sorry to break this to moronic american businesses, but a passport is an internationally recognized form of identification...

    9. Re:ID. by StarOwl · · Score: 1

      I suppose that a National Biometric ID is better than Microsoft's proposal that Social Security Numbers be replaced by consumers' WindowsXP product activation serials.

    10. Re:ID. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The drinking laws are stupid, if a 10 year old wants to eat out there kidneys and surley tell their mother to "f" herself, then they should be able to. If a 16 year old wants to drink and drive and kill a family of 4, shit why have a law against that. However if someone wants to smoke a joint and watch cartoon network, that is an outlaw. They should criminalize drinking and decriminalize pot, the world would be a much better place.

    11. Re:ID. by UncleFluffy · · Score: 1

      Heh

      I have two middle names, which makes the name field on my driving license wrap onto two lines.

      That always confuses them.

      (In fact, my second middle name is down in my credit record as an "alias" because someone was too dumb to actually read the card properly).

      --

      What would Lemmy do?

    12. Re:ID. by Grunschev · · Score: 1

      Try buying a case of beer with a "non-driver identification card" some time. Or god forbid, a passport.

      Really? I haven't been asked for an ID when buying beer in at least 15 years.

      Igor

    13. Re:ID. by shades66 · · Score: 1

      If you had an operation and got a new heart/liver/eyeball would you need a new WindowsXP number? Or would you have to have at least 2-3 major bodyparts replaced before this is required?

      hehehe
      Mark.

      --
      ---- There are 10 types of people in the world. Those that understand binary and those that don't
    14. Re:ID. by Ozymandias_KoK · · Score: 1

      It depends. Some places won't take any ID other than the state ID (drivers license or otherwise.) There is a wide variety of what constitutes acceptable ID...most of it quite stupid, actually.

    15. Re:ID. by Ozymandias_KoK · · Score: 1

      Not really valid is it? Unless you misstated, you haven't been asked for ID, which is different from having unacceptable ID.

    16. Re:ID. by jo42 · · Score: 1
      > Try buying a case of beer with a "non-driver identification card" some time.

      Try getting older.

  8. I would prefer by KingKire64 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    ...To have my stolen "inalienable" rights printed on the card.

    --
    "All I can tell the "lesser of two evils" folks is that if they keep voting for evil, they'll keep getting evil."-Lp.org
  9. No, no, no! by NickRob · · Score: 3, Insightful

    A national ID card is a way to restrict freedom. Unlike searches at the airport, you don't gain security for the trade-off. Instead you get to be treated like a criminal when you've done nothing wrong. Would it have stopped any act of terrorism? No. Would it have ever stopped anything? I seriously doubt it. This only oppressed the law abiding citizens.

    1. Re:No, no, no! by Fig,+formerly+A.C. · · Score: 1

      I would favor a national drivers license if they also made traffic laws identical across the land. A single card that was your drivers license, SS card, nationwide gun permit (with appropriate safety classes), and perhaps ATM card would be handy IF it could not be stolen or forged. Sorry, i know I'm in the minority, but I think this state to state stuff is a load of crap. Let's standardize and be done with it.

      --
      Murphy was an optimist.
    2. Re:No, no, no! by edrugtrader · · Score: 2

      so does a state drivers license.....

      a national id card would ease a lot of the troubles i've had moving a few times between states. i don't mind it.

      --
      MARIJUANA, SHROOMS, X: ONLINE?! - E
    3. Re:No, no, no! by j1mmy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      A national ID card is a way to restrict freedom.

      No joke! My having an American passport has damn-near ruined my life!

      Instead you get to be treated like a criminal when you've done nothing wrong.

      The last time I used my passport, I was not treated like a criminal.

      This only oppressed the law abiding citizens.

      You're absolutely right, sub-genius. Any form of identification is completely uncalled for. I say we all ditch our social security cards, driver's licenses, student id's, employee id's, and any other form of picture id. We should all start wearing bags over our heads to preserve our anonymity, as well as dressing in drab grey robes.

      Who's with me??

    4. Re:No, no, no! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm with you, if you're saying you're stupid.

    5. Re:No, no, no! by aminorex · · Score: 2

      It's not the law abiding citizens I
      want to protect: It's the freedom fighters,
      who are actually worthy of the air they breathe,
      unlike said good Germans.

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
    6. Re:No, no, no! by soapvox · · Score: 1

      I disagree strongly, we can't take away the states rights to legislate, they are already losing thier power to a large central gov't that is seperated from the people by enourmous margin. Also the biometric card is something very scary, then it can be used for tracking more so than my SSN, what happend to innocent until proven guilty and my rights to be free?

    7. Re:No, no, no! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, let each state keep its laws and whatever, just make the national ID card an ID card. I hate having to get a new license every freaking time I move states, and I wound up in trouble this last time since I didn't do it in the required short ass 10-day limit. I took a more leisurely year to do it... ;) I also hate trying to use a bank (other than the atm) in any other state, because even if it's the same bank (ie. Well's Fargo, PNC, etc.), they take freaking forever trying to figure out if you have a fake ID or not, and then you normally have to put your fingerprint on your check anyhow. So, I'm all for a national ID, and I don't care one way or the other if they put my retinal pattern on it.

    8. Re:No, no, no! by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1
      Any form of identification is completely uncalled for.

      What's uncalled for (besides your sarcasm) is a manatory id.

      Think of it this way: how would I personally benefit from being forced, by threat of incarceration, to carry around government papers? Not at all. How would you benefit from me being forced to carry around those papers? Not at all.

      Now, how would a (hypothetical or not, depending on your viewpoint) state bent on restricting its citizen's basic libertaies benefit from making people carry around its papers? Greatly.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    9. Re:No, no, no! by banuaba · · Score: 2

      Searches at the airport do not increase security, if you're referring to body searches. The baggage, as always, is the weak point.

      --


      Brant

      Argle. Bargle.
  10. Oh, the Pain... by phraktyl · · Score: 1

    If they have to run my head through the same machine they use to get credit card imprints for receipts, I'm not looking forward to it.

    --
    Karma: Marginal (mostly due to the border around the website)
  11. As if you needed to ask... by Kphrak · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What does the Slashdot community think about having your retinal pattern embedded on a smart card?"

    The same as ALL THE OTHER attempts to remove our privacy...NO! NO! How often does this need to be repeated before people finally understand that "NO" really does mean "NO"?

    It's not the method of privacy removal that we find disgusting. It's the removal of the privacy in the first place.

    --

    There's no sig like this sig anywhere near this sig, so this must be the sig.
    1. Re:As if you needed to ask... by jridley · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I think you are confusing privacy and anonymity. A nationally unique form of ID doesn't remove privacy. In fact it does not necessarily remove anonymity. If it's abused, it could certainly remove anonymity. However, I'm not sure how an ID card removes your privacy, unless it's got a listening device built in.

    2. Re:As if you needed to ask... by ackthpt · · Score: 1
      Congressional Code:

      until 0% {
      Invasive, but hopeful proposal
      Slapdown by rights groups
      }

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    3. Re:As if you needed to ask... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What part of biometrics are you unable to understand? Buy a dictionary.

    4. Re:As if you needed to ask... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Having a single, trustworthy national ID means that this single ID will be tied to everything for which any kind of ID is relevant. SSN did this in finanical circles, and now an SSN will reveal a detailed, life-long financial record to anyone who asks. A national ID would likely result in everything being tied together, and probably available (for a fee) to anyone who asks.

      Compartmentalization of personal information (so that by revealing one fact you do not necessarily reveal everything there is to know) does not require anonymity, but does require what amounts to pseudonymity. My driver's license should not reveal my yearly income, my passport should not reveal my political affiliation, but with a single, unified ID one can trivially tie such information together.

    5. Re:As if you needed to ask... by Kphrak · · Score: 1

      I think you are confusing privacy and anonymity. A nationally unique form of ID doesn't remove privacy. In fact it does not necessarily remove anonymity in many cases.

      I don't know about other states, but the State of Oregon requires your current address to be on your driver's license...which you need to show for identification. You're right, I'm confusing privacy and anonymity a bit, but that's OK; they're confused a bit in real life. It's difficult (although not impossible) to have privacy without anonymity.

      Biometrics are like fingerprints; they're not provably unique. A criminal who puts his mind to it could likely forge biometric information on his card anyway.

      If it's abused, it could certainly remove anonymity. However, I'm not sure how an ID card removes your privacy, unless it's got a listening device built in.

      We need to assume such a form of ID will be abused, not just hope it won't. And NOT just by criminals! Oregon used to sell their DMV database on CDROM to anybody who wanted it. I'm not really sure what the average person could do w/ my biometric information (I'll leave that to the paranoid among us), but I don't care to give the State free access to it. We need our governments to follow a minimalist strategy of information-keeping, because the average State Department takes a diabolical joy in keeping trivia, no matter how useless, about anyone under their jurisdiction. If they don't ABSOLUTELY need it...I don't want 'em to have it!

      OK, I'm shouting now. I'll simmer down a bit. :)

      --

      There's no sig like this sig anywhere near this sig, so this must be the sig.
    6. Re:As if you needed to ask... by F34nor · · Score: 1

      Make it illegal to copy the information w/o consent. Have a check box on the back. Information for law enforcement and finacial use only.

      Like the NYTimes article about scanning the ID's. I wouldn't mind having a secure biometric ID as long as only I can decide how it is used.

      Make the information have a half life. Read it into WMRO (write many read once) memory for a bar etc. So they can check it but the next read erases the previous one.

    7. Re:As if you needed to ask... by symbolic · · Score: 2

      As far as I'm concerned, it's all semantics, and it all sucks. The issue is that the more likely we are to have a national ID, anything about us will become more accessible- and completely out of our control. And what if the information is incorrect? I can say that I'm lucky I've never had my indentity stolen, nor have I ever had to have inaccurate credit information corrected. For the people that have had to endure either of these, it's hell. Do we need MORE of this?

      The thing that puzzles me the most about this is that everyone (in the government) is so damn sure that a biometric ID is impervious to fraud. What happens when (not if) someone figures out how to get around it? We're stuck with just one more bureaucratic f/u, that's being imposed on our lives.

    8. Re:As if you needed to ask... by Whyrl · · Score: 1

      Um..how does this violate my privacy? It's actually quite simple. MY biometrics ARE MINE. You have no need to have any PRIVATE information about me. The government is (arguably) you AND me. Please tell me why YOU need my biometric information.

    9. Re:As if you needed to ask... by Sentry21 · · Score: 2

      Some of these so-called 'anti-privacy measures' can actually help privacy in some cases. For example, face recognition technology. A terrorist's face can be put into the computer and the computer can scan faces. This removes the need for police and airport security, etc. to grill every arab or asian or about who they are, what they're doing, where they're going, and why. A computer doesn't discriminate against race, religion, or nationality.

      ID cards are similar. The problem, however, is WHEN you let the ID card be used. You shouldn't have police be able to demand to see your ID, but it should be required for some things (government services, employment, or as an option to prove your identity to anyone (Blockbuster, etc).

      It can be done, and will probably be done eventually. People point to South Africa and the Soviet Union for how national ID cards are bad, but Israel has them, most EU countries have them. The issue is not do we do it, but how do we do it well.

      --Dan

    10. Re:As if you needed to ask... by jridley · · Score: 2

      You could extend that to your photo, which is also biometric information. Why should you be required to put your photo on your driver's license? I'm sorry, but this seems to me to be a continuum. Your photo is biometric information. People, and increasingly, machines can look at the photo and look at you, and make a judgement as to whether the person standing in front of them is the person the card claims. Fingerprints, iris scans, etc are just more certain (not 100%) forms of ID.
      Note I don't personally like it. I won't get prints as long as there's an option not to, and I'll vote against people who try to get them instituted. But, I don't see how they're qualitatively different than photos.

    11. Re:As if you needed to ask... by plastik55 · · Score: 2
      ID cards that need to be electronically verified imply the possibility of a centralized database that tracks the usage of the ID card. If that database is not created by the government, it will be created by private interests.

      I have a right (for example) to buy liquor, pay cash for it and not have that purchase recorded in a national database. That is a privacy issue. I also have a right to buy pornography, pay cash for it and not have the purchase recorded in a national database. That is also a privacy issue.

      Anonymity in certain situations IS a prerequisite for privacy.

      --

      I have a positive modifier on Troll. When I mod someone Troll their karma should go UP!

    12. Re:As if you needed to ask... by Loundry · · Score: 1

      Make it illegal to copy the information w/o consent.

      And we all know how effectively laws have stopped criminals in the past!

      --
      I don't make the rules. I just make fun of them.
    13. Re:As if you needed to ask... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Everytime you go into a bar they'll inevitably want to scan your ID and save it in a huge national database for marketing purposes. "So, Johnny likes Malt Liquor.. let's send him a coupon for a case of 40ozers."

    14. Re:As if you needed to ask... by RKloti · · Score: 1

      EU (European actually, since all European countries have them, even those not in the EU) ID cards do not have biometrics. I am looking at mine right now, so I can say this with relative security. They have precisely the same as you'd find on a passport: name (machine type + hand written), photo, date of birth, place of origin, eye colour + height, place and date of issue and expiry date.

      They do NOT (well, mine does not) have your address, your fingerprints, medical or criminal records or anything really personal. Unless you consider your height, eye colour or a photo of your face to be particularly personal.

      Finally, you are not obliged to have one. The serve primarily as a more convenient replacement of a passport. You can use other forms of state ID to the same effect (passport, drivers license). I had to apply for mine, the process is similar to that of a passport application, but doesn't take as long and is cheaper.

      Also, I haven't been asked for my ID by any police officers doing 'random' checks, the *only* time I've ever needed to show it is when I crossed the border. And then only when the border police actually bothered to check it.

  12. they wont feel safe without it..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    and I wont feel safe with it.

    do they really think that a national ID cared will make any sort of a difference? we really already have one, the state's drivers licence.

    and who exactly will be wondering the streets asking people at random for their cards? this really docent do ANYTHING to protect the common folk from anything. it only allows more through tracking.

    1. Re:they wont feel safe without it..... by HobbitGod42 · · Score: 0

      not even that we have social security numbers. that was originally a national ID. coruse its not photo or anything. we also have passports... what the retinal scans are going to try to do is thwart boot leg IDs

      They figure since its got a complex retinal scan on it will be harder to copy. the problem is that most peoples eyes look different at different times of the day not to mention if you are tired/stoned/drunk etc etc

  13. oops, there goes the planet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think its a great idea. What we need is something like this, but with more information,, and on a global level, so if I go to another country, they will know if I am evading something from where I came from, and send me to the proper authorities, (or not).

  14. hmm by Jacer · · Score: 1

    how easily can these smart cards be hacked? i've been looking for something other than directtv cards to use with the scr that came with my soyo dragon+

    --
    --fetch daddy's blue fright wig, i must be handsome when i release my rage
  15. Scares me by cboscari · · Score: 1

    I worry that the info on the card will be used for other, more privacy invading things that they will claim we agreed to by getting a driver's license. Somthing like "By getting a license, you agree to have your data put in law inforcement data bases, market research, genetic screening databases "for organ donation if you are interested" etc... Scares me.
    Chris

    1. Re:Scares me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree totally. It seems like they would take a bunch of your rights, and there would be nothing to do about it. They aren't literally taking your rights, because you agree, but then again... you have to agree if you want the card, and you will basically need the card.

    2. Re:Scares me by smaug195 · · Score: 1

      I dislike the slippery slope arguement, because quite frankly you can make anything out to be bad. (Don't sell food, because then the goverment can put cocaine in it, and we will then have to rely on only that food. Ok, terrible analogy, I am tired :)). I think if we simply control how it's used, and pass laws that give very strong boundarys to the power of this card, then we probably will not have a problem.

    3. Re:Scares me by Darby · · Score: 1

      I think if we simply control how it's used, and pass laws that give very strong boundarys to the power of this card, then we probably will not have a problem.

      Now how the fuck do you suppose "we" control anything about this. And don't even bother with any crap about voting. In case you are not aware we had a coup last November. It has since been proven *absolutely* and even printed in The Washington Post (page 8, months after the investigation completed so "buried" would be a better word than printed) that Jeb illegally struck 100,000 voters off the voter roles in Florida. Curiously the majority were black and they were all registered Democrats. Also, another *fact* if they had recounted the entire state Gore won.

      Now given these facts please reassess your feelings about this. We have absolutely no say in our government any longer.

    4. Re:Scares me by smaug195 · · Score: 1

      Oh please, get over it, I voted for Gore, we got somewhat screwed, move on. If gore had not lost his 15% advantage in the polls from july we would not be having this discussion. Now to be honest, you bring up one example and say democracy is crap, we have no say, because of that one fallacy(Which to be honest was a close election, separated by maybe 200,000 popular votes.) We still vote in senators and house representatives, they make the laws, can impeach, and hence checks and balances sorta work. I will stick to my guns, no one in power would have their positions without voters, if something totally screws over a majority or a decently sized minority, you bet they'll think twice about passing a law like that.

    5. Re:Scares me by Darby · · Score: 1

      Oh please, get over it,
      You are completely missing the point.
      I didn't vote for Gore. I suspect he would be very similar, but more or less as bad as Bush.
      It isn't a question of "a close election" it is a question of the entire process being subverted.
      If it was just a case of the first count being wrong it would be one thing. The Florida governor struck 100,000 voters from the rolls for the sole reason that they were registered in the party that his brother wasn't in.
      Think about that. Let it sink in. If you don't see that as by far the single most critical event in US Government history then you need to wake up.

      I will stick to my guns, no one in power would have their positions without voters

      You need to clean your guns. Someone is in power without the will of the voters. Sure he had some voters, but he was *only* elected by criminal actions on the part of the Florida governor.

      if something totally screws over a majority or a decently sized minority, you bet they'll think twice about passing a law like that.

      The event I am talking about screwed over every single person in America and by extension the world. Regardless if you voted for Bush or not.

      If you seriously think I should "get over" the fact that the Constitution of the US was completely subverted in the last election and that the head of state is a criminal who only got his office through the machinations of his organized crime family, then you do not deserve the priviledge which this form of government is supposed to offer.
      I think you would feel more comfortable living somewhere else like China or Iran.

      Seriously, study the facts.

  16. My ISP uses biometrics at 3 security points. by Anonymous+Crowhead · · Score: 3, Interesting


    The do a scan of your hand and match it to info embedded in your passcard. You have to do this at 3 of the 7 security check points to access your servers.

    1. Re:My ISP uses biometrics at 3 security points. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      And your pont is? Hrm my ISP has all these fancy locks (they had a lot of VC money to spend or were competing with the VC boys) I just about live in datacenters (and in manhaten that might be cheaper than a decent apartment) but lets face it who does this stop?

      Some hacker, hrm how hard is it to keep out the average 14 year old. The rest are smart enough to lease a space right next to yours after scoping things out via the absolutly no security tour.

      Normal everyday criminal, probably but so does a simple lock.

      A terrorist, na one ak 47 under a long coat trust me the unarmed security guards in the datacenter arent playing hero at 7 bucks and hour with an average of 3 - 5 people on shift it's not to hard to take over one of these places.

      Cops, they use search warents given out like TP from our court system.

      Me, na I'm probably on the access list and if not I can play cisco tech #xxxxxxx and call in a trouble ticket for ya. Have to love those 3 hour responce maitnence contracts. The nice tech on duty will even show me to your cage unlock it for me and point out any servers of interest while asking if they can get a job doing what I do.

      Biometrics are nice they make things harder to fake. Embeding them on a smart card etc is idiotic at best you can program one with whatever biometircs you want. Any security dongle must rely on 3rd party verification to be worth something a pin associated with your current drivers liscences would be more usefull.

      And national ID cards or anything else all blow big chunks persoanly I'm against drivers licences just dont let drunks buy cars or more kindly just let them get motoscooters or something paint there cars blaze pink even better force them to use happy computer controled cars. Cars are NOT optional to most people you either have one and can work or dont have one and are forced into low paying menial labor and forced to live in urban spraws that support bus or subway systems.

  17. $315 Million? by jweb · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Setting aside the privacy issues for a moment, how do these guys figure that $315 million will be enough money to create this system?

    After all, with the current US population somewhere in the neighborhood of 270+ million (I'm too lazy to look up a more accurate estimate) they think they can create and implement this system for just over $1 per citizen?

    Seems a little conservative to me.

    --

    Think For Yourself. Question Authority.
    1. Re:$315 Million? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The cards themselves will probably be paid for by the cardholder (that's what they do with regular drivers licenses today).

    2. Re:$315 Million? by david614 · · Score: 1

      Maybe they mean the federal government's share. I agree - this would cost much more than $315 milion. The thing is, since the federal government doesn't issue drivers licenses (at least in CONUS), the *states* get to pay for it. Neat eh. (another Canadian sneeking in under cover of darkness). Even if the feds pick up *some* of the tab, they get to make the states take the heat from the privacy protectors. I think that this all quite clever. D

      --
      ELITISM: It's always lonely at the top. Uninvited company is rarely welcome.
    3. Re:$315 Million? by totallygeek · · Score: 4, Insightful
      they can create and implement this system for just over $1 per citizen?


      No, no. That $315 million was per citizen. The day the government can implement something decent Hell will have a slight chill.

    4. Re:$315 Million? by gambit3 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I think that this figure, as most other figures for proposed legislation, are woefully under-estimated, just to give it a chance to pass.
      Once it's approved, well, Budget overruns, here we come!

    5. Re:$315 Million? by Wolfstone · · Score: 1

      "...how do these guys figure that $315 million will be enough money to create this system?" First, this disguised national ID card piggybacks on the state drivers' licenses. So you don't need one per citizen, just one per driver. So maybe they are allocating $1/card. :-) Second, the feds won't actually be doing any of the _work_. They are merely blackmailing the states into doing it: "Add this to your drivers' licenses or lose those juicy highway funds." It's called an "unfunded mandate", and shifts the real cost to a place that most people won't look. The average driver probably won't even know why his license renewal fee went up $20, or think to blame the feds.

    6. Re:$315 Million? by Cenam · · Score: 0

      this is WAY more liberal than conservitive dumbass..conservitives want to keep privacy, librals are closer to the idea of communism(which yes is perfect, excluding human nature, but liberals are far from perfect)

      --

      The Truth: There is no string:)
    7. Re:$315 Million? by symbolic · · Score: 2

      No, no...the $315 million is BEFORE all the cost overruns, delays, and other assorted screw-ups. Afterward, I'd be surprised if it came in at under $1.2 billion.

    8. Re:$315 Million? by doubtless · · Score: 1

      they think they can create and implement this system for just over $1 per citizen?

      I recall the last time I had to get my driver's license I paid $14. I am assuming the $315 million is _not_ for making the individual IDs. You probably still need to _pay_.

      --
      geek page at KY speaks
  18. Hand and forehead by Wedman · · Score: 4, Funny

    Why not just mark everybody's hand and forehead? If they don't have the mark, don't let them buy and sell. Easy as that.

    1. Re:Hand and forehead by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And while they're at it, why not just make us all bow down and worship the image of capitalism....

    2. Re:Hand and forehead by Iguanaphobic · · Score: 3, Informative

      [16] And he shall make all, both little and great, rich and poor, freemen and bondmen, to have a character in their right hand, or on their foreheads.
      [17] And that no man might buy or sell, but he that hath the character, or the name of the beast, or the number of his name.

      Revelation 13:16-17

      --
      Fascism should more properly be called corporatism, since it is the merger of state and corporate power.
    3. Re:Hand and forehead by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude, you're not supposed to ruin the obscure references like that!

    4. Re:Hand and forehead by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      [14]Thou shallt call upon the Evangelions to destroy the angels and prevent the merging of all humans into one

      Book of Evangelion, Dark Sea Scrolls

    5. Re:Hand and forehead by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's not obscure at all....

    6. Re:Hand and forehead by daern42 · · Score: 0

      Are you just crazy? I am just as good of a christian as anyone, but it is the extremists who try to find the end of the world in everything. Do you think God would want you to be trying to incite a panick just for some upgraded driver's licenses??? You are all very, very sad people to think this is the mark of the beast. GET A GRIP PEOPLE!!!

  19. positive sideefects by johanneswilm · · Score: 1

    Will that mean that they can make a true clone of you when they find you? Might be a way to get the official number of highway death go down...

  20. The Slashdot community? by clambert · · Score: 1
    What does the Slashdot community think about having your retinal pattern embedded on a smart card?
    Well, the Slashdot community probably thinks it'll be fun becoming Bill Gates for a day, thanks to that new card writer they just ordered.

    However, I'd bet the rest of the country probably has a problem with it.
    --
    mailto:<?=implode("@", array("chris", implode(".", array("php", "net"))))?>
  21. Why? by wk633 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Nobody is asking what the problem is that this is supposed to address. Step 1) of implementing a security measure is to ask "What is the problem it addresses?"

    So, what is the problem? Terrorism? The 9/11 terrorists HAD legal id. Having their DNS sequence on the card would not have stopped them.

    1. Re:Why? by Alzheimers · · Score: 1

      But maybe, if we had their DNS Sequence, we could have issued a Denial of Service attack before they could finish their deeds...

    2. Re:Why? by david614 · · Score: 1

      >having their DNS sequence..... I can see how you got confused. Maybe having their *DNA* sequence would have flagged them in a "dangerous persons'" database, however... D

      --
      ELITISM: It's always lonely at the top. Uninvited company is rarely welcome.
    3. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      So, what is the problem? Terrorism? The 9/11 terrorists HAD legal id. Having their DNS sequence on the card would not have stopped them.

      No, but we could have found their "I am a terrorist" web page that much faster.
      Oh, did you mean DNA sequence?

    4. Re:Why? by Catskul · · Score: 1

      Well maybe if their DNS was the same DNS that Osama was using then you know they were using the same ISP : )

      --

      Im not here now... Im out KILLING pepperoni
    5. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      God, I HATE it when someone sequences my DNS.

    6. Re:Why? by rhost89 · · Score: 2, Funny

      Having their DNS sequence??? I think you've been behind a console too long :)

      --
      I will bend your mind with my spoon
    7. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah. The terrorists weren't supposed to have even been let into the country. I think the problem here has more to do with letting well known and wanted terrorists through customs than with ID cards that have every necessary form of ID printed on them.

      If they had used faked IDs and fake names then the government's excuse for this might be more plausible.

    8. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The 9/11 terrorists HAD legal id. Having their DNS sequence on the card would not have stopped them.

      And if you can't stop the 9/11 terrorists, what's the point!!!!

    9. Re:Why? by interiot · · Score: 2

      The 9/11 terrorists HAD legal id. Having their DNS sequence on the card would not have stopped them.

      Your argument is somewhat flawed.

      What happened on September 11th was a first of its kind. It was the first time a plane had intentionally been flown into a building, and it was the first time that foreign terrorists had been so successful in the US (we were used to it only happening over there).

      Being thinking humans, we can generalize a bit, and see that the US isn't as invulnerable as we thought. This wasn't the only way that terrorists could have attacked us, and in fact, they probably won't attack us in the same way again because they know we'll specifically be looking for those patterns. America was very suprised, and the logical reaction is to protect various avenues that terrorism could be carried out.

      However, we almost certainly are going to overreact and clamp down more than we need to because emotions are high right now. In time, it's possible that more logic and less emotion will be used to make these decisions. On the other hand, these are politicians we're talking about.

    10. Re:Why? by Iguanaphobic · · Score: 2, Interesting

      In time, it's possible that more logic and less emotion will be used to make these decisions.

      Consider the logic. All 19 terrorists were Saudi. The US attacks Afghanistan.
      Consider economics. The US buys large quantities of oil from Saudi Arabia. The US would like to buy large quantities of oil from Turkmenistan to lessen their dependence on the benevolence of Saudi Arabia. Unfortunately, the Taliban were in control of the country that the needed pipeline would need to cross.

      Solutions: Change the government in Afghanistan to get to the richest oilfields in the world. Don't invade Saudi Arabia to kick the terrorist governments butt and jeoprodize the US oil supply. Once you get by the hypocrisy of it all, it's really quite simple. It's all about maintaining the "American Way Of Life"tm at all costs. Everything else is window dressing.

      --
      Fascism should more properly be called corporatism, since it is the merger of state and corporate power.
    11. Re:Why? by Galvatron · · Score: 2
      Correct me if I'm wrong, but weren't some of them known terrorists, using their real names? I seem to recall that they were fairly certain within a day that it was foreign terrorists because the passenger manifests turned up matches in FBI/CIA databases.

      Obviously, more reliable ID isn't going to help if you're letting known terrorists on the plane, but it might help if done in conjunction with checking names against lists of known terrorists.

      --
      "The question of whether a computer can think is no more interesting than that of whether a submarine can swim" -EWD
    12. Re:Why? by dmeese · · Score: 1

      The geek version of a Freudian slip....

      Having their DNS sequence on the card would not have stopped them

    13. Re:Why? by Cenam · · Score: 0

      you just disproved the idea of it helping twhile trying to say it would..they COULD identify them with the current system, no need for a new one, you just need to prevent them from getting on the damned plane in the 1'st place!

      --

      The Truth: There is no string:)
    14. Re:Why? by Danse · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The point would be that if this new system wouldn't have been effective in preventing the WTC attacks, then the government should be made to explain why such a system would be effective use of our tax dollars. There are obvious downsides to such a system, and I think the government must make some very compelling arguments in favor of the system if we are going to spend a ton of money on it and accept the problems that it will create as well.

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    15. Re:Why? by Darby · · Score: 1

      America was very suprised, and the logical reaction is to protect various avenues that terrorism could be carried out.

      Americans were surprised. America's government was *not*. Keep this in mind. The American government knew about the attacks. We were warned by at least 5 other foreign governments. The FBI was investigating until Bush ordered them to stop. One of the top FBI officials resigned over this. They even knew the day since several VIPs were warned not to fly that day.

      However, we almost certainly are going to overreact and clamp down more than we need to because emotions are high right now

      Or given the above, maybe this isn't so much an over reaction, but something more sinister.

      To any Americans reading this, if you were not aware of these facts, then you are not taking your responsibilities as an American seriously. If your only source of news is the major networks, then you are not doing your duty.

      As Americans we have more priviledge than any other people. The thing most of us forget is that with great priviledge comes great responsibility.
      It is your duty to actively inform yourself, not passively get fed what the corporations owning the major media consortiums want you to see. If you are not willing to take this responsibility, then you do not deserve the priviledge.

    16. Re:Why? by Darby · · Score: 1

      Also, keep in mind that about a month before the attacks, the Taliban was told by a US government representative representing the oil companies involved and I quote, "You will accept this carpet of gold or we will bury you in a carpet of bombs".
      Do a search on that quote. Also look at Usurper Bush's cabinet. They are all neck deep in oil.

    17. Re:Why? by Alien+Being · · Score: 1

      They should put money into recombinant research to create airline execs, politicians, and law enforcers smart enough to do the simple-but-effective things.

      Lock the cockpit door.

      Don't give visas to known terrorists. Giving visas to the dead ones doesn't hurt, but it's not a good sign.

      I have no complaint about the feds having a way of authenticating my identity. It's something i should have to present to get a passport. The scary thing is that supermarkets will think they have the right to require it.

    18. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unfortunately, the Taliban were in control of the country that the needed pipeline would need to cross.

      That is some pretty weak logic. In order to build a pipeline you need a country that has money. Turkmenistan does not have money, Afghanistan does not have money. So the US would have to fork over the money. And we still are not even to the ocean yet!

      You still have to run the pipeline through India, Iran, or Pakistan. Iran is just right out, like they are going to support competition. India is a hell of alot of mountians and rivers you have to go through, and you still would have to go through Pakistan. Pakistan does not have the money for a pipeline either, and if they oil were to go to the US, various groups would be blowing up parts of it every other week. You simply cannot guard 1000 mile pipe.

    19. Re:Why? by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 2
      So, what is the problem? Terrorism? The 9/11 terrorists HAD legal id. Having their DNS sequence on the card would not have stopped them.
      You mean that the solution to terrorism is to perform a reverse lookup on them???
    20. Re:Why? by dangermouse · · Score: 1

      As far as I can tell, the airlines have been executing a Denial of Service attack against their passengers for years.

    21. Re:Why? by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 2
      It's all about maintaining the "American Way Of Life"tm at all costs.
      It ain't the "'merican Way of Life". It's just the fat oil companies bottom-line.
    22. Re:Why? by jeffy124 · · Score: 2

      i beleive you meant to say DNA, but anyways...

      the motivation behind the cards: 1) the terrorists had false IDs when the attacks were carried out. 2) Identity theft is becoming a big problem.

      (note that I said terrorism was the motivation, not what the system is trying to prevent)

      The solution poroposed makes it difficult if not impossible for a person to obtain a falsified ID card. In doing that, it prevents one person the capability of getting an ID of somebody else and then using that person's identity.

      Think about that. I have my driver's license in my home state (NJ). If I lose it, all I need to get a new one is my mother's maiden name. Ask yourself how difficult would it be for an ID thief to get a license in my name with his picture (unlike PA, NJ doesnt keep DL photos on record, the photo DLs are actually polaroid-like). Now under the proposed system, that ID thief would have to somehow forge my thumbprint or retina in order to get an ID in my name.

      --
      The One Rule Of Chess You'll Ever Need: Don't play someone who carries a kit in their bookbag.
    23. Re:Why? by jeffy124 · · Score: 1

      The American government knew about the attacks

      Post a reputable link to a story about this and maybe people will beleive what you're saying.

      --
      The One Rule Of Chess You'll Ever Need: Don't play someone who carries a kit in their bookbag.
    24. Re:Why? by Darby · · Score: 1

      Post a reputable link to a story about this and maybe people will beleive what you're saying.

      Sorry for the delay in responding. Hopefully you check your user page for replies.
      Anyhow, a quick search found this article

      This isn't where I originally found the information, but it is a good summary of a lot of the relevant information.
      Don't let the fact that the site is the "world socialist web site" allow you to disregard it out of hand. It was my first visit to the site which I found through a google search. They have references to all of their statements in the story.

      If you do read this, please post at least an acknowledgement so I know I didn't waste my time posting this so late.

      Thanks.

    25. Re:Why? by jeffy124 · · Score: 1

      thanks.

      --
      The One Rule Of Chess You'll Ever Need: Don't play someone who carries a kit in their bookbag.
  22. Better than SSN by loosenut · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I haven't considered all of the ramifications, but I think it's a good idea. There may be privacy issues, but, really, who cares if your retinal pattern is in a database somewhere? It isn't as if your DNA is being sampled[1].

    What makes this a GOOD idea is that identity theft would be much more difficult. Right now, if someone gets a hold of your SSN, they can screw you over. It's much more difficult to recreate a retinal pattern.

    David Brin refers to this distinction in The Transparent Society. Your SSN maybe a good identification number, but in many cases it is also used as a password, which is just foolish, because you can't change it, and it can be stolen. On the other hand, a retinal scan, as I said above, makes an excellent ID/password, because it is so difficult to duplicate.

    I'm still interested to hear other's arguments against this.

    [1] The implication here is that insurance companies may be able to get a hold of your DNA and use the information within against you.

    1. Re:Better than SSN by hfox · · Score: 1

      If your SSN is used for identity theft, you can get a new one. If your retinal pattern is stolen, you're screwed. How screwed you are depends on exactly what it's being used for and the security of the scanners being used (e.g. are they at the airport where they're being monitored (hah) by the security people or are they in at an unattended location like an ATM where someone could hack into the data connection and feed in a copy of your scan.)

    2. Re:Better than SSN by WickedLogic · · Score: 1

      Your SSN maybe a good identification number, but in many cases it is also used as a password, which is just foolish, because you can't change it, and it can be stolen.

      How is this different than a digital repesentation of retna, or data derived from your retna, or any bioinformation for that matter. You think it's hard to change your ssn, try your retna. Once that is compromised what are you going to do?

      This logic is dangerous as it treats bioinformation as symlinks to people, not as identifiers for people. bioinformatoin eq username, username != user, therefore bioinformation != user.

      SSN numbers are great for identifiers, but not as authentication methods. Bioinformation make even better identifiers, but not as authentication methods.

    3. Re:Better than SSN by Hooya · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Your SSN maybe a good identification number, but in many cases it is also used as a password, which is just foolish, because you can't change it, and it can be stolen. On the other hand, a retinal scan, as I said above, makes an excellent ID/password, because it is so difficult to duplicate.

      you contradicted yourself. you said SSN as a password is bad because you can't change it. but in the next sentence you go on to say retina is good? if someone does figure out my retinal patterns in practical resolution. what options do i have? change my eye? and link 'pwd' to extract my eye, extract the eye of a coworker down the hall with a mechanical arm and then interchange 'em?

      i suppose you've been getting retina implants on a daily basis huh? and what happens when you do donate you eye (i have to plead ignorance here as i don't know which eye-part is actually transplantable.)?

      Oh btw, just like 640k was sooo enough for everyone; and the world market only had demand for about a thousand (or a hundred, i forget which) computers (some IBM head-huncho back in the 60s) retinal scans are very difficult to replicate.

      in the process of implementing this type of IDs, we will have figured out a cost effictive way to work with retina-scans. effectively, figuring out reproducing and or manipulating the scans. what seems difficult technologically will become trivially easy tomorrow. so don't bank your entire identity on the fact that today's technology can't crack it. because tomorrow, you may cease to exist.

    4. Re:Better than SSN by Wise+Dragon · · Score: 2

      A retinal scan only makes a good identification when the scanner is secure, which cannot be guaranteed. The danger here is that you can't change your retinas like you can change your password, but if folks assume retinal scans are 100 precent secure, there's a very real security risk. Far better is a combination of a retinal scan (something you are), a password (shared secret), and secure hardware with public key encryption (something you have).

    5. Re:Better than SSN by 3Bees · · Score: 1

      Well, I wasn't going to respond, but since you asked for it :-)

      What makes this a GOOD idea is that identity theft would be much more difficult. Right now, if someone gets a hold of your SSN, they can screw you over. It's much more difficult to recreate a retinal pattern

      The only reason that the SSN is so dangerous is because it is illegally being used for so many things. The Social Security Act specifically provided that the SSN was never to be used for identification purposes beyond payroll deductions. It works quite well for this, and while it is dangerous if somone gets your SSN, little damage can be done via the original intent. The question that I have whenever I hear this sort of proposal is: where does the urge for identification come from? Why do we want/need some sort of secure identification? Some parts of our "modern" or "post-modern" society depend on a certain extent of identification (purchasing on credit, for example) but they seem to work just fine as they are. Sure there is fraud, but the amount lessens all the time and in general the amount that the credit companies make from their operations dwarf the amount the lose from fraduluant exchanges. Otherwise they wouldn't be in business.

      Please present me with a counter-view, but it seems like the drive to more certain identification comes from a combined fear/greed motive (maybe with a spot of ego-fraility thrown in for good measure).

      --
      "I think we should tax people who stand in water! " - Mr. Gumby
    6. Re:Better than SSN by bluprint · · Score: 1

      From the article: Using a biometric identifier in an encrypted chip would make it much harder for criminals to steal people's identities, Drummond said.

      What makes you think (and what makes those congressmen think) that everyone at the local DMV is such a good honest person that no criminal would ever get ahold of that information?

      If one person can print a retinal pattern onto a card, then it's technically possible for a card to printed for a criminal, or BY a criminal for that matter.

      By the way, I love how two government officials are offering solutions to the problem of SSN's being misused....a problem that was CREATED BY THE GOVERNMENT TO BEGIN WITH when they implemented SSN's.

      --
      A modern day witchhunt.
    7. Re:Better than SSN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can't really blame the Government, when they specifically stated that the SSN was not to be used for identification outside of payroll tax.

    8. Re:Better than SSN by dazed-n-confused · · Score: 2

      the world market only had demand for about a thousand (or a hundred, i forget which) computers (some IBM head-huncho back in the 60s)

      You're out by several orders of magnitude, and a couple of decades.

      "I think there is a world market for maybe five computers." - Thomas Watson, chairman of IBM, 1943.

    9. Re:Better than SSN by kcbrown · · Score: 2
      Brin's idea of the transparent society has one huge flawed assumption behind it: that the people in power aren't going to exploit their power to give themselves some opacity.

      But of course they will, just as they have and will exploit their power to give themselves other advantages over those who lack that power.

      And once they do that, all of the advantages of the transparent society disappear, and we're left with "big brother".

      This is why it's so important to oppose any incursion into our privacy. The transparent society simply cannot happen as long as humans behave like humans, so the only reasonable alternative is a reasonable amount of privacy.

      Things are bad enough as it is. They don't need to get any worse. But I believe that they will, that the United States will transform itself into a police state the likes of which the world has never seen, and that it will take the rest of the world with it through its military power. And it will all happen because the large corporations (more precisely, those who own and run them) want cheap labor and a captive market simultaneously, and by their nature have no ethics (and yet are given almost all of the same rights as individuals are yet none of the responsibilities). And popular revolution won't happen either, not when the military has a millions to one advantage in firepower.

      Enjoy your privacy and freedom now, while you still can. It probably won't be long before they're gone.

      --
      Use 'slashdot stuff' in the subject line in any email you send me if you want to get past the spam filter.
    10. Re:Better than SSN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Many have argued that if your retinal image or your fingerprint is stolen, there is no way to issue a new eye or finger.

      While this is true, this applies only to biometrics methods that use your body. There are others that use your behavior (some do not call them technically biometrics though) like signature recognition.

      Not only that in the worst case you can start using a new signature (or use different signature for different applications) but those systems reject "perfect copies" since no one can sign twice the same way and, therefore, is a fake.

      This site has a very nice online demo where you can test your signatures (provided you have a graphic tablet)

    11. Re:Better than SSN by Loundry · · Score: 2

      It isn't as if your DNA is being sampled

      Yet.

      Right now, if someone gets a hold of your SSN, they can screw you over....Your SSN maybe a good identification number

      It sounds like you damn the SSN in one sentence and then praise it in the other.

      On the other hand, a retinal scan, as I said above, makes an excellent ID/password, because it is so difficult to duplicate.

      With our currently technology, yes. Humans are ingenious creatures though. It's only a matter of time until that, too, becomes both theoretically and economically feasible.

      --
      I don't make the rules. I just make fun of them.
  23. Just wait... by Garion911 · · Score: 1, Funny

    They will be asking to have this embedded into out skulls next...

    Then the RI/MP AA will be asking for implants that will listen/watch what we see/hear, and turn our senses off when we see/hear something we don't have their permission for...

    Just you wait, this will be coming. We won't be able to breathe without permission from the EPA next..

    --
    Slashdot is like Playboy: I read it for the articles
    1. Re:Just wait... by Alzheimers · · Score: 2, Funny

      Last I checked, I *DO* have my retinas embedded in my skull...

  24. Great. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Now if I lose my drivers license, a criminal can impersonate me AND get through any biometric lock I have access too. Why don't I just print my bank PIN number on it and attach my spare house keys to it?

    They say this is supposed to replace social security numbers. Since when were SS numbers written anywhere, encoded or not, on my drivers license? Nice goal, but a poor solution IMHO.

  25. What's the point? by LunchingFriar · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Um...and what's this supposed to accomplish?

    So the people making fake drivers licenses have to jump through some extra hoops...big deal. What problem is this solving? This smacks of gun control and Windows Product Activation...in that it just makes things more difficult for John Q. Public. Fake IDs will still be easily accessible.

    Besides, don't we pretty much already have a national ID system? As in a Social Security Number?

    1. Re:What's the point? by jridley · · Score: 2

      It's still theoretically possible to withhold your SSN from any agency except the SSA. (yeah, right, and income tax was just for a couple of years, until we paid off the world war one debts).

      I'm not sure where the SSN refusal is protected in the law, but I'm assuming it must be pretty deep, since people are talking about building a new ID system rather than trying to change the law so we can use that one.

    2. Re:What's the point? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Read the article. They aim to replace social security numbers with these. Replace them by putting them (in encrypted form) on the card that almost everyone has and uses and sometimes loses. I don't care how encrypted it is, my social security number or biometric data is a lot harder to steal when it isn't even there to begin with. God forbid I ever lose my wallet. Don't want to cut off my fingers and gouge out my eyes. Canceling credit card charges and stuff is bad enough.

    3. Re:What's the point? by baka_boy · · Score: 2

      First, while it's entirely within your rights to refuse to disclose your SSN, it's also entirely within the rights of most businesses, credit providers, etc., to simply refuse to offer you services without the information. People "sell" their privacy on a daily basis, and will probably continue to do so as long as credit and convenience are the top priorities of our society.

      Second, Social Security Numbers are not, I repeat, not, a reasonable form of identification. They are a very low-order numeric designator, which is completely useless as proof of identity. Hell, the number is shorter than a phone number with area code, and phone numbers are designed to be easy to remember by the dozens.

      This was really driven home for me recently, when my girlfriend and I were submitted a rental application, and found out that some woman in LA had used my girlfriend's SSN in a bankruptcy hearing two years ago, resulting in a nice, fat warning siren going up every time someone did a credit check on her.

      We really, really need good PKI and trust metric systems, not more "secret" identifiers that can easily be stolen and mis-used. The technology exists, and it certainly can't be any worse than the current state of affairs, which is basically a case of security being totally based on random chance and a poorly-educated public.

  26. Keep it managed by the state by Laser+Lou · · Score: 1

    I don't mind adding biometric information to my driver's license as long as its registered by my state rather than the Federal government. It should not be thought of as a national id card as long as the biometric information is used for verification rather than identification.

    --
    No data, no cry
  27. GA by davidesh · · Score: 1

    Georgia already has this....

  28. Re:Ummm.... NO. - No. by Woodie · · Score: 1

    Actually the idea behind biometric identification is that you have something other than a piece of paper to vouchsafe your identity.

    So, have your drivers license stolen - it's no longer identity theft. As soon as the retinal information on the license is cross-referenced with an actual retinal scan of the individual carrying the card, bingo the scanner knows they're in fraudulent posession.

  29. Re:Two words. (-1 joking, but nobody gets it) by ShinGouki · · Score: 1

    "proudly canadian"

    isn't that an oxymoron?

    /me runs

    --
    -dk
    Dream with the feathers of angels stuffed beneath your head.
  30. I *am* an entry by JabberWokky · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Look, I am a person. I can be identified. I don't care *how* precisely I am recorded - it's *who* gets those records and *what* is done with them.

    The basic question is easily stated: do we apply the privacy desires of the majority, or the privacy desires of the individual? The majority may very well not have a problem with having megabytes of data in every corporate database that leads to loads of junk mail, spam, targeted ads, higher insurance, HMO profiling, your neighbor knowing about how depressed you got when your fiancee left you, if you are a women, the creepy guy down the street finding out when you shop and what tv shows you like so he can always "bump into you"... ad naseum. Once the data is open, it will get used in... creative... ways that we can't predict.

    So... I am a mass of data. I know what I like, what I don't like, my favorite indulgences, my pet peeves, my moral boundaries. I don't want my neighbor knowing.

    Biometric info on my ATM card? Sure! As long as it *remains tied* to that account. If you start cross correlating that with my purchasing and medical data, that starts to worry the hell out of me. Not for what will happen in the next few years - but for how my children's children will live.

    Do we really all want to live on the set of the aptly named "Big Brother" with any corporation or neighbor with a wallet able to predict, profile and peer into our lives?

    I am data, and I want to be able to control who knows me.

    --
    Evan

    --
    "$30 for the One True Ring. $10 each additional ring!" -- JRR "Bob" Tolkien
    1. Re:I *am* an entry by JabberWokky · · Score: 2
      (BTW - before some yutz points out that this is biometric info on a driver's license, not an ATM card, I knew that when I wrote that. This is a general statement on privacy, and I was using an ATM card, as that's a place where biometirc info seems like a Good Thing. I'm not sure why they would need such info on a DL, other than to tie into other databases.)

      --
      Evan

      --
      "$30 for the One True Ring. $10 each additional ring!" -- JRR "Bob" Tolkien
    2. Re:I *am* an entry by allacds · · Score: 1

      "Biometric info on my ATM card? Sure! As long as it *remains tied* to that account. If you start cross correlating that with my purchasing and medical data, that starts to worry the hell out of me. Not for what will happen in the next few years - but for how my children's children will live."

      And that's exactly the problem. Because every step that we take in this direction is one step closer to the scenario that you're talking about. Once we start giving out our biometric info, I promise it's only a matter of time before someone suggests "well, why don't we just link it all together...ATM card, drivers license, etc" Little by little, privacy and individual rights get eroded away...

    3. Re:I *am* an entry by JabberWokky · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Right. It's not the data (your friends know quite a bit about you), but rather three key aspects to that data: Spread, correlation and mandatory collection. The first aspect is "okay, my employer needs my SSN, but better not give it to anybody else. My doctor needs my medical history, but I'd rather it not be available for a $7 reproduction fee at City Hall". Correlation is two data collectors getting together, so it's related to spread, but it also generates new, potentially incorrect in specifics data, like demographic profiling and statistical generation of missing information. Finally, mandatory collection prevents the first two from occuring by a government "trying to care for it's people". Even if this government is enlightened, the next generation of leaders might have different ideas.

      Note that "opt-in" systems like the credit system or a criminal history might have certain negative aspects, but as long as they stay clearly "opt-in", there is nothing wrong with them. Unfortunantly, credit and banking is getting increasingly tied together, and criminal records often have rather extensive data on citizens that have never committed a crime.

      There is a need for a clear, simple and effective set of guidelines for what is acceptable "without consent" data use, and under what conditions that consent can be given (i.e., without subtle coersion like tying that collection *and* consent of data sale to obtaining a drivers license).

      --
      Evan

      --
      "$30 for the One True Ring. $10 each additional ring!" -- JRR "Bob" Tolkien
  31. What happens if.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What happens if I shoot my eye out while looking at porn?

  32. Retina prints? by jridley · · Score: 2

    That'd be fine, since retina prints change over time and are not a useable form of ID. Perhaps you mean IRIS print, or face or hand profile?

    1. Re:Retina prints? by david614 · · Score: 1

      That 's right, Irises. As far as I know, the research shows that these change the least over a lifetime. They also don't change much after certain illnesses that can alter the reliability of other forms of biometrics. D

      --
      ELITISM: It's always lonely at the top. Uninvited company is rarely welcome.
  33. How can they do this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This makes me almost as mad as them forcing me to have my picture there on the ID. Who do these authorities think they are, anyway?

  34. Look at it this way by ocie · · Score: 2, Funny
    What does the Slashdot community
    think about having your retinal pattern embedded on a smart card?


    Better than having rectal patterns on the card

    --
    JET Program: see Japan, meet intere
  35. Do you really need to ask? by jimmu · · Score: 1

    "What does the Slashdot community think about having your retinal pattern embedded on a smart card?"

    C'mon . . do you really need to as this? Anything short of the govermnet not knowing a damn thing is goign to piss off 90 percent of the people here.

    --

    ----
    One of us needs to stick ones' head in a bucket of ice water.
    - Hobbes
  36. Personal ID's by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    If you have to carry around a form of ID, then then haveing an identification system which is harder to forge and proves without reasnoble doubt (due to confidence with the system being used) that you are who you say you are, must be a good thing, else the whole point of having a form of ID to prove who you are is pointless.
    -
    of course there are a number of privacy issues and debates with haveing ID card in the first place...

    (and the codeing of non-breaking spaces need to be looked at on that page ";" missing)

  37. Why ? by Catskul · · Score: 1

    I dont want a national Biometric ID, but I dont see your point. If anything, this would make it harder to get your identity stolen. A retinal scan could verify wether or not the drivers lisence you are using is yours or not, thereby keeping people from using stolen ID's.

    Fingerprints on the otherhand could be really bad, since they are much more easily reproduced. Plus, if someone had your fingerprints, they could leave them at the scene of a crime.

    --

    Im not here now... Im out KILLING pepperoni
  38. 2D barcode by swimfastom · · Score: 1

    The international drivers license features a 2D bar code than can hold 100 times more information than standard bar codes. This type of barcode would be a great feature to identify the individual with more detail.

    --
    http://tomgould.com/
  39. A good place on this planet? by no-body · · Score: 1
    If this happens - I'll leave.

    Don't those goofs have anything better to do to compensate for their inferiority- or whatever complex/defect and trying to stand out to get what - liked, respected?

    Contemplating - what's a good place these days?
    I heard of some cities having it more together, one in Brazil, another in India.

    Suggestions?

  40. If they can put it on a card by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    someone else can take it from that card and put it on another. If it's not meant to be secure and is illegal for businesses to use (don't target me based on height, weight, blood type, racial background, medical history, et cetera), I'm fine with it.

  41. Disturbing thought. by Crusty+Oldman · · Score: 1


    Your drivers license IS you national I.D. card. Think about it a moment.

    It absolutely and uniquely identifies you. It's accepted in every court in the civilized world. It ties you in (thru the social security account, required for issue) to every financial transaction you ever made in the last twenty years. It indexes your actions into every medical, professional, legal, and political database on the planet.

    And Slashdot readers are debating whether they should call it a national i.d., or what?

    Oooo! He's a mean sucker. Mod him down!

    1. Re:Disturbing thought. by jridley · · Score: 2

      SSN is not required for issue. In many states (Michigan, for instance) it's not even asked for. In other states, such as Illinois, it's normally on the driver's license, but you can refuse and have them issue an alternate ID number. There may be some states that require it, but there shouldn't be, since by law only the SSA can absolutely require you to provide your SSN.

    2. Re:Disturbing thought. by kevinqtipreedy · · Score: 1

      Illinois does not put it on the license anymore. It used to always go on. Then each DMZ building had a choice, but you could tell them otherwise and they would comply. Now, they don't put it on anymore.

    3. Re:Disturbing thought. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't mind a national ID. My problem with this national ID is that it puts one of the most unique ways to identify me ON THE CARD. If I lose it, then it's just easier to impersonate me. There's a reason social security numbers aren't printed on IDs. Putting everything in one place is a security risk.

    4. Re:Disturbing thought. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Try and get one here in California without a SSN!

    5. Re:Disturbing thought. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And indexing your entire life by SSN, or biometrics, or whatever, isn't?

  42. uhh.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i think that if they take that $315 mil and invest it into hiring educated people at the state DMV's, terrorists might not be able to get licenses so easily..

  43. No, no no! by Anonymous+Cowrad · · Score: 0, Insightful

    A national ID card is a way to restrict freedom. Unlike searches at the airport, you don't gain security for the trade-off. Instead you get to be treated like a criminal when you've done nothing wrong. Would it have stopped any act of terrorism? No. Would it have ever stopped anything? I seriously doubt it. This only oppressed the law abiding citizens

    --

    --
    pants ahoy
    1. Re:No, no no! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      A national ID card is a way to restrict freedom.
      How do you figure?

      I see it as a way to be identified. A side-effect is a potential loss of privacy. Privacy does not always equate to freedom.

      I do not see your logic in saying it restricts freedom.
  44. Identification by stikk · · Score: 1

    The idea of biometrics ( probably finger not retina ) for identity is one of the most trusted forms of identification. I am for a more faithful identification process. I for one would like to use technology for improvement. The situation is not biometrics, its need. Does the government NEED to take these steps to govern the people. I for one believe the world is ready for it, I will be pulled kicking and screaming but will be forced to conform. As some states already have my fingerprint on file, that is the same as having it on a smartcard. Authentication has three levels ( for beginners here ) something you have ( drivers license ) , something you know ( possibly drivers license PIN ) and something you are ( biometrics ) . If these steps are put to use, there would be highest of difficulty to fake this process. I am one to keep my opinion out of gossipy government. I do hope to see new toys. I feel sorry for the college kids and their fake id shops. ENJOY

    Also, I would like to note, I change my password every 30 days. If I keep this up for biometrics.... I am only secure for 10 months. Toes .. 20 months .. remember biometrics are only as safe as the environment they are used in.

  45. blind senior citizens by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As long as the blind old ladies earning minimum wage are still behind the counter at the Pocatello Idaho DMV, biometric data ain't gonna help.

  46. How accurate is this stuff? by Monkey+Angst · · Score: 1
    Leaving aside the civil-liberties issues for a moment, I don't even know how these biometric methods of ID are supposed to work. Say you've got a retinal print, is is still the same if you, say, develop glaucoma? Do you still have the same voiceprint after being hit in the throat really hard?

    -----------------
    Monkey Angst
    We all live under Monkey Law

    --
    stripShow - Where WordPress meets webcomics
  47. Stop thief! by bachelor3 · · Score: 5, Funny
    Using a biometric identifier in an encrypted chip would make it much harder for criminals to steal people's identities, Drummond said.

    Harder?!? Like when Arnie used an employee's dismembered thumb to gain unauthorized access in The Sixth Day, or when Wesley used a employee's eyeball to escape from prison in Demolition Man??? Oh no, biometric technology will simply cause violent crimes to increase. Identity theft will come to signify the loss of a finger or eyeball! We must rely on movies to provide the rationalization our policy makers lack : )

    1. Re:Stop thief! by Fredge · · Score: 2, Informative

      Any decent biometric reader out today has the ability to determine if the finger/hand or eyeball being scanned is alive or not.

    2. Re:Stop thief! by DonM · · Score: 1

      At least some of the technologies created thusfar do have features that verify that the item being presented is still, err.. attached.

      Let's hope that little feature is not eliminated to "save costs"!

    3. Re:Stop thief! by GospelHead821 · · Score: 2

      Exactly. Much harder! Stealing somebody's wallet or purse is not terribly difficult. It's easy enough that the person might not even notice. Stealing the wallet/purse while simultaneously severing their thumb and popping out their eyeball, so you can use their ID card may just make them take notice. Sure, maybe ID theft will be a more violent crime, but the fact that it is no longer EASY will make it a much rarer violent crime.

      --
      Virtue finds and chooses the mean.
      Aristotle, Ethica Nichomachea
    4. Re:Stop thief! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Uh, guys? I think he was being sarcastic...I'm thinking the line at the end of the post:

      We must rely on movies to provide the rationalization our policy makers lack : )

      ...might have been the clue.

  48. What about eye problems and retinal scans? by Shadowell · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Stuff like this makes me wonder about another factor. I have minor keratoconus (http://www.nkcf.org), which isn;t bad enough to keep me from driving, etc., but has made it pretty much impossible for any retinal scanner to get a proper image of my retina. Basically, unless EVERY factor is the same when it tries to take the image (and my eye doesn't twitch), no two scans end up looking the same. What would people with problems like this do if they passed crasp like this, instant second class citizen status?

  49. Trust? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Given that many States already sell our driver's license info to marketers, this is potentially much more disasterous than it first appears.

  50. already there by naoursla · · Score: 2

    Technically, isn't a photograph already a form of biometric data?

    1. Re:already there by GigsVT · · Score: 2

      Hieght, weight, eye color, damn near everything on the license is biometric data.

      This is still scary. Mix power and technology, and you have a recipe for opression.

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
  51. all fun and games. by BenTheDewpendent · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Its all fun and games until someone loses an eye.

    so what happens when someone loses and eye?

    1. Re:all fun and games. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then the game becomes "Find the Eye".

    2. Re:all fun and games. by MountainLogic · · Score: 1
      An eye for an eye

      A tooth for a tooth

      and soon you have a dirty database.

  52. Smart Cards Not Smart Enough by CPIMatt · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It wouldn't be so bad if the card could be used for verification, and not identification. If the cards could answer specific questions, yes or no would be sufficient instead of divulging all sorts of other information that I would not necessarily want divulged.

    For example, there are bars now that at the door have a magnetic strip reader which is used for verification purposes. This makes it easy for the bar to make sure a patron is 21 or over by swiping the person's driver's license. It does verify that the person is over 21, but also records their birth date, DL number, address, height, weight, eye color, and driver restrictions which the bar uses for marketing purposes.

    In the same situation I would want a smart card to just answer two simple questions; Does this person belong to this card? (yes/no) and Is this person 21 years of age or over? (yes/no). And nothing else.

    For airline checkpoints, does this person belong with this ticket, yes or no? Does this person belong with this baggage? This way everything is on the card and your personal information is not tracked all over the place. Of course the government doesn't want this because they can't track anyone this way.

    -Matt

    1. Re:Smart Cards Not Smart Enough by evilviper · · Score: 2

      Right now, it's necessary for them to know you're approx. age, not just if you are over 18/21 or not. If it was a simple yes/no answer, a dead 90 year old's license could VERY EASILY be modified into a fake ID.

      So, what you want is something that is tied to you uniquely and impossible to modify it to fit someone else (sounds good, but implimenting it is impossible) while not giving out any extra information. The problem is that the police need a unique number to ID you in case your license has been suspended, et al. As soon as there is a unique ID of any kind on an ID that you are willing to give to anyone upon request, the privacy issue is out, you have none.

      The answer is simple... Stop giving everyone your drivers license, your Social Security number, etc.

      The problem is technology. Even if you had an ID without a magnetic strip, and had only a picture of you, soon that picture is being recorded, and a database is full of records of who was where and when. That database gets to be a big problem when there are super-mergers that tie all the databases together.

      There is no solution. And ID needs to uniquely identify you, and the better it gets, the easier it is to record data about you.

      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
  53. Hard to deal with failures by btempleton · · Score: 3, Insightful

    In spite of claims, biometric systems are vulnerable to attack. People can find ways to forge biometric information at automatic terminals, even at manned terminals. For example, some iris scanners can be fooled by contact lenses.

    This presents a problem. Right now, if somebody steals my password, I can just cancel the old one and make up a new one.

    However, I think it would be more difficult to get a new retina.

    --
    Has it been over a year since you last donated to the Electronic Frontier Foundation
  54. Just remember this . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    if your license ever gets stolen and cloned: Once biometric data is compromised, i.e., the digital file titled leaves your immediate control, you can be impersonated for the rest of your life. It's not like a credit card number where they cancel it and issue you a new one. You can't get a new thumb. (cr. B. Schneier) And if technology ever gets to the point that you can clone a new thumb with a new print, or grow a new retinal pattern then biometric ID becomes meaningless.
    I'm not saying that it should never be used, but you have to think long and hard before you start sending biometrics over the airways (e.g., police checks) or the phone lines (e.g., carding someone at the bar to verify their ID), or the internet (e.g., ebay, paypal)

  55. Already in the kitty by Anti-Microsoft+Troll · · Score: 0

    Part of the DOJ's settlement with Microsoft will give the government access to MS's huge biometric database.

    You think the "product activation" for XP was for Microsoft's benefit? Ha! It actually is intedede to retrieve all 10 of your fingerprints from your keyboard (2 for hunt-and-peckers), assign them an ID number, and store them in MS's database along with computer specs and web surfing history. MS came up with this when the antitrust case was first filed, as a possible settlement concession/blackmail option.

  56. Biometric-ID is a pork-barrel boondoggle by Seth+Finkelstein · · Score: 4, Insightful
    In my view, the biometrics-mania is a pure boondoogle, created and driven by the companies which want to sell their particular gizmos as a national standard. Consider, biometrics? You mean such identity information as eye color, gender, weight? But that information can be encoded simply, by any vendor, nothing fancy. Aha, but if we use retinal patterns which require RetinaCorp's patented RetinEncoder, to be read by their RetinReader ... the money rolls in.

    Sig: What Happened To The Censorware Project (censorware.org)

    1. Re:Biometric-ID is a pork-barrel boondoggle by wurp · · Score: 2

      Excellent point. Name, picture, and thumbprints all digitally signed by multiple private keys held in separate places is much more secure than some bullshit retinal scan system.

  57. Biometrics by Wise+Dragon · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Part of an article by Bruce Schneier:

    Biometrics don't handle failure well. Imagine that Alice is using her thumbprint as a biometric, and someone steals the digital file. Now what? This isn't a digital certificate, where some trusted third party can issue her another one. This is her thumb. She has only two. Once someone steals your biometric, it remains stolen for life; there's no getting back to a secure situation.

    And biometrics are necessarily common across different functions. Just as you should never use the same password on two different systems, the same encryption key should not be used for two different applications. If my fingerprint is used to start my car, unlock my medical records, and read my electronic mail, then it's not hard to imagine some very unsecure situations arising.

    Biometrics are powerful and useful, but they are not keys. They are not useful when you need the characteristics of a key: secrecy, randomness, the ability to update or destroy. They are useful as a replacement for a PIN, or a replacement for a signature (which is also a biometric). They can sometimes be used as passwords: a user can't choose a weak biometric in the same way they choose a weak password.

    Biometrics are useful in situations where the connection from the reader to the verifier is secure: a biometric unlocks a key stored locally on a PCM-CIA card, or unlocks a key used to secure a hard drive. In those cases, all you really need is a unique hard-to-forge identifier. But always keep in mind that biometrics are not secrets.

    http://www.counterpane.com/insiderisks1.html

    1. Re:Biometrics by Wise+Dragon · · Score: 2

      To relate the above to the article: the main difficulty with putting everyone's retinas on their drivers license is that their retinas are no longer a secret. Right now nobody on earth has my retinas scanned. I'd like it to stay that way, but I'm resigned to some loss of personal secrets in this post 9-11 day and age.

    2. Re:Biometrics by JimBobJoe · · Score: 2

      replacement for a signature (which is also a biometric

      I have a quick disagreement with that part of his article (which is otherwise very good.) Yes it is a biometric, but it is a changeable biometric. You may decide one day that you don't like your signature, and that you start signing documents with a completely different signature.

      Is this possible with retinal/iris scan or a fingerprint? Yes. Apparently retinal patterns change when someone takes a particular type of prescription for macular degeneration. And of course, if you were a bricklayer, the lime used in the stuff that connects the bricks will burn away your prints...however, it is significantly harder than just changing your signature.

    3. Re:Biometrics by antv · · Score: 1
      Depends how biometric checks are implemented. If you record retina or thumbprint image - that is stupid.

      However, if card contains biometric data that went through some kind of one-way secure hash function, then it might make sence. Stealing card wouldn't make your biometric data open then, but there at least be some way to verify that given ID does indeed belongs to person who carries it.

      This might be helpful against identity theft and so on, but it would require a lot of expensive hardware like retinal/thumb scanners.

      --
      Obama 2012: our incompetent asshole is slightly less of an incompetent asshole than the other incompetent asshole !
    4. Re:Biometrics by scm · · Score: 1

      I think the point of the Schneier quote is that once the same "password" is used for more than one thing it becomes less secure. It is input more often in more places. Everytime you set up a password with someone, you take a chance that the person you give it to, or the equiptment used can't be trusted. If you're interested in *strong* security, you don't take any chances.

    5. Re:Biometrics by awhitty · · Score: 1

      The fact that biometrics are not replaceable is indeed one of the greatest dangers of the technology. For those who doubt that anyone could "steal" a copy of your retina, just take a time to think about your last trip to the optomistrist, for all you know - if biometrics were in use he could be off stealing your identity.

      Biometrics is already in place! A supermarket in Seattle just implemented a fingerprint system that allows you to pay for groceries. Consider the implications of having your personal information available with a simple touch of your finger. Anyone with the proper software and hardware could capture your personal information without you even being aware.

      Even most driver's licenses have information on a 2D barcode that can provide personal information without the user's informed consent.

      Privacy? What's that?

  58. The Bewoulf trolling project by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We need 5 trolls to post 5 copies of this message each!
    That = 25 Trolls.
    Now 5 more trolls reply to each of them to get 625!
    Those 625 go on and fuck up slashdot completeley by saturating the message boards with total crap! Its the perfect Dos attack!

    So what are you waiting for? Crap flood this post now! And remember its not just restricted to 5, crapflood as much as you want! Do the math and make taco cry!

  59. Needs to be linked by datastew · · Score: 1

    Many of you have probably already read this, but here is an excellent newsletter on security and ID cards.

    To paraphrase, the following questions must be answered for each proposed security measure:

    1. What problem does it solve?
    2. How well does it solve the problem?
    3. What new problems does it add?
    4. What are the economic and social costs?
    5. Given the above, is it worth the costs?
  60. Whats the point? by Jainith · · Score: 1

    Perhaps I'm missing something here but what is the pupose of putting retna prints on a card? As I understand it retnal prints can be used for identification. To me this means they could be used for security by keeping them in a database. Then whenever someone wants acess to the secured building/materials/whatever they get their retna scanned to verify that they have clearance.

    Wouldnt putting the prints on id's just make identity theft one step easier?

  61. In my view: fuck it! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    These ID's are really good - if evertything is allright.

    But they are extremely dangerous in a police state or dictatory.

    I remember when I was beaten up by the police as a teenager just becouse I forgot to take with me my ID card - in one of the former communist countries.

    I certainly did not move to that part of the world to get a new ID - no matter what the technology is. You guys probably have no idea about the joy of freedom that you don't have to carry an ID by law just to walk down on the street.

    Don't get fooled into something that you don't fully understand.

  62. Identity theft and secure id cards by smoondog · · Score: 2

    The one thing I like about this (I likely wont support it, however) is that it may protect against identity theft, specifically the kind where people use the identity to steal from the person whose identity they stole.

    Also, right now the INS, IRS and other gov't organizations don't talk to each other much. A national id card would change that, it might remove some beaurocracy.

    -Sean

    1. Re:Identity theft and secure id cards by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps the IRS doesnt talk to other agencies because it's not a goverment agency! That's right, its a private instiuttion.

      On the other hand...

      Someone needs to go back to school and learn why our government departments dont talk to each other.

    2. Re:Identity theft and secure id cards by GigsVT · · Score: 2

      Also, right now the INS, IRS and other gov't organizations don't talk to each other much. A national id card would change that, it might remove some beaurocracy.

      "I own I am not a friend to a very energetic government. It is always oppressive." -- Thomas Jefferson to James Madison, 12/20/1787

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
  63. Please check box if you are a terroist by aero6dof · · Score: 3, Insightful
    According to a statement by Moran, at least eight of the 19 September 11 hijackers were able to easily obtain licenses.
    What the Reps. Moran and Davis don't realize is that if biometric security measures were in place, that would just mean that we would have retinal measurements and fingerprints on eight dead hijackers.
    1. Re:Please check box if you are a terroist by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 2
      What the Reps. Moran and Davis don't realize is that if biometric security measures were in place, that would just mean that we would have retinal measurements and fingerprints on eight dead hijackers.
      ... and of thousands of their victims...
  64. why the card? by sykt · · Score: 1

    Shouldn't biometrics remove the need for a physical card? Just scan your thumb, no swipe necessary and you can't lose it (easily at least).

  65. The Bewoulf trolling project (copy) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We need 5 trolls to post 5 copies of this message each!
    That = 25 Trolls.
    Now 5 more trolls reply to each of them to get 625!
    Those 625 go on and fuck up slashdot completeley by saturating the message boards with total crap! Its the perfect Dos attack!

    So what are you waiting for? Crap flood this post now! And remember its not just restricted to 5, crapflood as much as you want! Do the math and make taco cry!

  66. Re:Two words. (-1 joking, but nobody gets it) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No it's not an oxymoron--running dog. dink

  67. Re:Ummm.... NO. - No. by Xyverz · · Score: 0

    Like I said, I could be wrong.

    My whole point is that I'm uncomfortable with this entire idea. I already have enough of my life on somebody's computer as it is. Ugh.

  68. How is Canada this time of year? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What is this? Nazi, Germany?!

  69. There are some benefits by Necron69 · · Score: 1

    Since I recently had two books of checks stolen from my mailbox. I now have a different perspective on biometric IDs.

    The check thieves quickly produced at least six fake driver's licenses to go with their newly stolen checks, and proceeded to spend their way across metro Denver. At last count, they've run up over $5,000 in bad checks. Guess who gets all the collection notices?

    Setting aside the fact that checks are evil and I plan to rarely if ever use them again, if we had biometric verified IDs, then the assholes who stole my checks wouldn't have been able to use them. At least, not as easily as they did.

    I say bring on the national ID card!

    - Necron69

    1. Re:There are some benefits by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Biometrics are false security. They may assure that you and your card belong together, but NOT that the information on the card identifies you. Crooks will just fabricate fake ids keyed to themselves and continue on their merry way. Only a check against a centralized database could reject one and then only if the database was not full of fake entries they had already placed there in the first place. And how will those be entered in the first place? On the basis of birth certificates?

  70. scans scans scans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So they're going to scan this part of your body or that part of your body.

    So, whatever part of your body they choose to scan and store on the card, what if you don't have that part of your body?

    There are people who don't have eyes or have lost both hands or have deformed hands.

    Will these poor bastards become second class citizens because their biometric data isn't "industry standard?"

    (Of course, imagine how valuable someone who doesn't have a card will be. Like Gibson said, "Sixteen and SINless." Will kids born outside the system be denied entry into society and be forced to take up prostitution or crime to live?)

    Bozos in Washington want to "make the world a better place" and they really do is just shuffle around who gets crapped on.

  71. not a big deal by JeanBaptiste · · Score: 1

    I leave my dna all over most everything I touch right now anyways...

  72. Who are you? What are you doing? by Sean+Clifford · · Score: 2
    Okay, maybe I'm just a paranoid leftist, but I'm deeply suspicious any time the goverment wants more data on me. They've already got my fingerprints and DNA, a catalogue of my scars, photographs, background checks, and "interviews". WTF do they need my retina prints or other biometric data for? Damn.


    I'm worried (like other posters) that all this is going to end up in a massive, clustered relational database. I can see how all someone's habits, financial transactions, phone calls, etc., will be linked together and analyzed for patterns that fit certain "criminal/terrorist profiles".


    Sorry, but last time I checked the United States was a FREE COUNTRY where the 4th Amendment (among others) protects us from heavy-handed government prying like this. I don't think we should allow our government to do this kind of BS. Otherwise, twenty or thirty years from now we may be seeing mind-search warrants.


    A century ago phrenology was all the craze. Seems like things haven't changed all that much.

  73. Knee jerk reaction by wurp · · Score: 2

    Are drivers licenses a bad thing? Is allowing easy forging of them a bad thing?

    If you answered no to the first question and yes to the second, I don't see how you can have a problem with a biometric ID system. I accept the fact that for some purposes, it is valuable to be able to validate your identity. If it is valuable to do so, then it is more valuable to be able to do so reliably.

    When the government (or corporations) start asking you to validate your identity unnecessarily, bitch about privacy by all means. But making validation more reliable when it's needed is a good thing.

    1. Re:Knee jerk reaction by aminorex · · Score: 2

      You can't travel without being tracked.
      That's a violation of your privacy,
      all sophistry and gerrymandering aside.

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
    2. Re:Knee jerk reaction by edrugtrader · · Score: 2

      you can't travel BY THE GOVERNMENT FUNDED AIRLINE SYSTEM without being tracked.

      go buy a used car from the guy down the street, and fill up at chevron and you're good to go anonymously.

      --
      MARIJUANA, SHROOMS, X: ONLINE?! - E
    3. Re:Knee jerk reaction by wurp · · Score: 2

      All attempts to change the subject aside, making ids more difficult to forge is a good thing. This is a discussion of whether or not biometric information in a national id is a good thing, not a discussion about how ids are used. I explicitely pointed out that we have to be cautious about in what circumstances we allow the government/corps to require id.

      I do very much agree that ids are required far too often, but the solution to that is to fix the problem, not to make it easy to forge ids.

    4. Re:Knee jerk reaction by aminorex · · Score: 2

      Making IDs more difficult to forge is a *bad*
      thing. It means that I have to blow your head off
      to get through the door, instead of just flashing
      my badge.

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
    5. Re:Knee jerk reaction by curunir · · Score: 2

      Are drivers licenses a bad thing?

      In concept, no. In practice, yes. Current CA driver's licenses encode each piece of data printed on the front into the magnetic stripe on the back. Businesses have begun swiping licenses and ID cards for age verification and capturing the other data for demographic purposes.

      Is it the DMV who's violating my privacy? No. Is it the DMV who's at fault for my privacy being violated? Yes. Do I want the same people who thought it was a good idea to encode my age, address, height and weight on the back of my driver's license to also have access to my retinal scan data? Hell No!

      I can give a police officer my driver's license and he can see a picture of me and read my name. What further identification is necessary?

      Is allowing easy forging of them a bad thing?

      Yes, it is. Is encorporating biometric information into them the best way to make them hard to forge? No. It is expressly the *wrong* way to do it.

      With current technology, forging a retinal scan would probably be quite difficult. But criminals will always be pushing the envelope of technology trying to get ahead of the technology that law enforcement uses. We need to make a system that utilizes the latest technology, but remains as flexible as possible should criminals catch up. By using something like a retinal scan (something that cannot be changed), you limit the system's flexibility 10 and 20 years down the road.

      --
      "Don't blame me, I voted for Kodos!"
    6. Re:Knee jerk reaction by Steveftoth · · Score: 2

      The bad thing in my opinion is not that a COP can swipe your id and get your information. This is valuable in that it reduces both work for the cop and errors in validating your identity. What a larger problem in my opinion is that businesses can buy id readers and check your ids. Getting valuable information about you for next to nothing in cost. an example is the story on /. a couple of weeks ago about the bar in Boston (I think) that tracked all of it's customers.

      It's bad enough that Vons, Ralphs, Price Chopper, etc all track our shopping habits, but if they made us swipe our ids then they could track us forever.

      Also I don't think that forging a retinal scan would be difficult at all. Think about it, unless the data on the card is encrypted via some sort of public key system where the private key is in a central DB, anyone who knows how to read/write the data on a card can replace it with bogus information.

    7. Re:Knee jerk reaction by Silver+Rose · · Score: 1

      Making IDs harder to forge might be a good thing. But:
      1. The Sept. 11th hijackers who had easily gotten IDs DID NOT forge them. They got them from (I think) Vermont or West Virginia, where you only need a friend with a license and a notary to sign for you to get a license.
      2. A retinal scan or a fingerprint DOES NOT necessarily make an ID harder to forge. All one has to do is add the capability to do the scan to the forging equipment and encode false data. If I wanted to, and I had the equipment, I could get some information about random person A and encode their SS number and name, but my height, weight and photo into a license. If I needed biometric info too, I see no reason why I shouldn't be able to encode that false information too.
      So: Is making IDs harder to forge a good thing? Probably. Is this the right way to do it? Absolutely not.

    8. Re:Knee jerk reaction by singularity · · Score: 2

      The last time I tried to register a used car I just bought I had to provide identification and proof of insurance.

      Then they matched my named with the license plate number.

      I was able to pay for my gas with cash, but by that time it was all over.

      --
      - (c) 2018 Hank Zimmerman
    9. Re:Knee jerk reaction by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 2
      You can't travel without being tracked.
      Oxdung.

      Just ride the dog.

    10. Re:Knee jerk reaction by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 2
      In concept, no. In practice, yes. Current CA driver's licenses encode each piece of data printed on the front into the magnetic stripe on the back. Businesses have begun swiping licenses and ID cards for age verification and capturing the other data for demographic purposes.
      Just degauss the mag stripe. Voilà, problem solved.
    11. Re:Knee jerk reaction by Loundry · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      Just ride the dog [greyhound.com].

      Ride greyhound? I think a three-way with Alan Greenspan and Yassir Arafat would be about a million times more enjoyable!

      --
      I don't make the rules. I just make fun of them.
    12. Re:Knee jerk reaction by frinkadelic · · Score: 1

      I'm normally the last person to fall back to the terrorisim issue in these sorts of arguments, but I personally don't want any random person to be able to travel absolutely anonymously for any number of reasons. I gladly give up a little of my anonymity through vehicle registration and licensing because I know that the drunken asshole in the next lane headed to his ex-girlfriend's house (who has a restraining order against him, BTW. Oh, and he's a pedophile too.) has to give up exactly the same amount of his anonymity too.

    13. Re:Knee jerk reaction by rark · · Score: 2

      Have you traveled greyhound since 9/11?

      My partner did, last week, due to a death in the family. Every hour or two, all night, they'd wake everyone up, check tickets, check IDs. ID best match your ticket. (They were looking at baggage as well)

    14. Re:Knee jerk reaction by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 2

      ??? In bus terminals waiting room, I'd understand but your reply seems to imply that they do it on the bus, too... But asking for ID is illegal; only the cops can do it, and then only if you're arrested.

    15. Re:Knee jerk reaction by rark · · Score: 2

      It was on the bus (they asked for ID at the terminals, too, but that's normal, in my experience).

      I've never heard that it's illegal for them to ask for ID -- they've essentially always asked me for ID when buying tickets with cash (they've forgotten a few times, or maybe they knew me, since I was doing the short run every week or so, but for all the long runs I've done they've asked me for ID) for as long as I've been riding greyhound (five years or so) but I've always had some sort of appropriate ID so I don't know if they would have given me trouble if I refused. AFAIK greyhound busses (terminals, etc) are more-or-less private property, so they have the right to kick you off if you refuse to follow any of their rules, including refusing to show ID (they kicked a guy off while my partner was riding last week -- in the middle of nowhere! For having lost his ticket stub, apparently. I've seen them kick people off for drinking alcohol, in the middle of nowhere, even, but you'd think that if the guy had had the stub when they left hte last stop, they could have at least waited until the next stop!)

      One of the new things they have implemented is some sort of bus police/security folks. I don't know the legal standing of these folks (security gaurds? police? something else?) but they search the busses and the lugguage and do metal scans. It's much more like airport security these days.

  74. How to get SmartCard acceptance by ArhcAngel · · Score: 1

    Initially most people will resist the new technology because people are inherently averse to changes in general. But wait! What if we offer people something they couldn't possible pass up? Something so good they we be beating down our door to get these things. Think it's not possible? When a bank in South Africa (I will continue to try and identify the bank. Any help appreciated) decided to switch to Smart Cards over 10 years ago. They offered FREE transactions for the first month to anyone who adopted the cards. Needless to say the cards were enthusiastically adopted by the masses and the bank won over countless new customers in the process. If they did something like that here I'd get one. Then I would go get that new Ferrari I've got my eye on.

    --
    "A person is smart. People are dumb, panicky dangerous animals and you know it." - K
  75. this makes Identity theft a lot more serious... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... by ensuring that you can never change your ID. someone screws you over, good luck. Get new retinas

  76. Problem is... by coene · · Score: 1

    .. and this problem is directly related to any attempt by the government to use technology in something that all or must americans must take part in, is that it has to be secure.

    Now, this isnt a HUGE topic due to it being a drivers license, because as we all know, drivers licenses are quite easily faked anyways.

    The problem is that if this happens, you know that Microsoft (as well as many other large companies, though Microsoft scares me the most) is going to go up for the bid on the server systems that hold the biometrics data.

    This creates a large security issue. There's NO WAY to spread this data throughout the field to the people who need it, without letting those who dont want it at it also. Again, not drivers license specific.

    To be honest, I dont think we are there yet. Biometrics is a big thing. Its not like a social security number, etc. As biometrics becomes more mainstream, we are talking about a GLOBAL IDENTIFICATION SYSTEM. Do you want the method, security, and 'secret key' to be the same for the government, your office network, your internet presence, and the one you use to start your car and enter your home? Remember, in this example its not like they authenticate against a centralized security system. The keys to the right answer has to be stored locally for a lot of these, and if one is crackable, there's your ID, running naked out in public, or even worse, private.

    And do you want it stored on a computer system? Do you trust Microsoft systems with this? How about Sun? Oracle? (Hey, its Unbreakable :)

    Hell, I wouldent want my biometrics information on a single machine inside a 9x9x9' room surrounded by three foot of solid concrete and a thousand military guards.

    Before biometrics become mainstream, we must thoroughly review the why, as well as the consequences. Is it worth such a security risk to do whatever these congressman think needs to be done?

    Call me crazy and paranoid, but this is NOT a good idea. It has far reaching implications i'm sure the folks in congress arent aware of yet.

  77. Re:Who cares by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Your post contains a typo:

    (*% of wars can be attributed to them, not *(%, as you state.

    Please try to be more accurate.

  78. They're blaming the wrong problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    From the story:According to a statement by Moran, at least eight of the 19 September 11 hijackers were able to easily obtain licenses.

    And how many were wanted by the FBI and shouldn't have been let into the country to begin with? Most? All?

    Jeez, these guys used their real names on these "easy-to-obtain licenses", and nobody bothered to check if they were wanted or not? It'd be nice if we didn't have to keep bending over for the government's failures.

  79. Biometric ID can fight identity theft. by ednopantz · · Score: 5, Insightful

    A biometric ID won't make us less free. It probably won't make us more secure against terror, although reliable ID might have caught Ahmed Ressam, the guy who plotted to blow up LAX, then panicked at a routine border search. He had come and gone across the US border with different Canadian passports. Sure, half of his names were on watch lists, so he just switched identities. Had he not blown his cool, a lot of people could have died.

    But that isn't what interests me.

    Here is where a biometric ID can help:Identity Theft
    It is trivially easy to impersonate someone and rack up credit card charges, commit crime with their identity, etc. Biometric IDs would put a stop to that.

    A year ago, my wife's wallet was stolen from her gym locker. The usual credit card fraud ensued, which was stopped within a few hours.

    Then the crook took her drivers license, somehow mangled it, and got the her picture on the front and my wife's name. Apparently, the Illinois DMV doesn't compare you to a file picture when you get an ID. This let them write checks on that identity, taking out loans (despite calls to every credit agency to put a watch on that sort of thing), culminating in the purchase (with a stolen check) and financing (naturally) of a used Ford Explorer at a sleazy car dealership too lazy to verify the bank balance or credit info.

    Once the car check bounced, the dealer reported the theft, the cops came to us talking about grand theft auto. After some explaining, the license plate (in my wife's name, of course) was put into the police database. Amazingly, they actually caught this crook when she tried to pass one of the checks for a carton of smokes. The check came up bad (for once!), the store called the cops, who ran the plate of the SUV and got her. She naturally looks nothing like my wife, who is short, skinny, and white, not tall, obese, and black.

    The moral of the story is that it is easy to impersonate someone, causing harm to that person because there is no biometric element at any point in the US ID system.

    It doesn't make us more free because we have unreliable ID. Most of us never have a reason to fake an identity (save trivial stuff like faking your grocery club card). We don't get a privacy benefit from poor ID, we just have the risk of identity theft. How are you less free because your identity may be tied to your physical person? How are you more free because your identity is (at present) not 100% properly verified when you get a passport or drivers license?

    We already leave data trails almost everywhere we go. These can be picked up by commercial concerns interested in selling you the exact type of extreme soda for your demographic. A biometric ID won't change that.

    Your SSN will still be in 1000 poorly secured databases, ripe for the taking. The only thing a biometric ID will do is make it harder to impersonate someone else.

    I say it is high time we get ID that works.

    1. Re:Biometric ID can fight identity theft. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I coudn't agree more. Like it or not, we're already forced to carry IDs. Measures like these will simple make the process less vulnerable.

    2. Re:Biometric ID can fight identity theft. by Moonshadow · · Score: 3, Informative

      DMV security is a joke. I have a friend who is 19. At 17, she went down to the DMV, told them that she was her 23 year-old cousin (Who looks nothing like her), and she got a nice 23-year old's license with her picture on it. The DMV essentially created her bar-hopping fake for her.

      What's scary is how little checking the DMV does on who you really are. Biometrics would definately prevent this kind of thing. What scares me is that anyone could, upon procuring my SSN, walk into the DMV, say they're me, get a license, proceed to get points on said license, and get me arrested next time I get pulled over because according to my record, I have 4 DUIs, a slew of speeding tickets, etc.

      And then there's the issue of using said ID for loans, cars, various purchases, etc. Scary.

      Yeah, it makes you more identifiable. This is a Good Thing (tm) as far as I can see. It's not like the card is transmitting your stats to anyone within 15 feet - it just provides an extra layer of security.

    3. Re:Biometric ID can fight identity theft. by Spazmania · · Score: 1

      Then the crook took her drivers license, somehow mangled it, and got the her picture on the front and my wife's name. [...] The moral of the story is that it is easy to impersonate someone, causing harm to that person because there is no biometric element at any point in the US ID system.

      If a crook can successfully mangle one part of an ID then he can mangle another... Especially with biometric recording tools mass-produced and training available to minimum-wage employees at the DMV.

      Bah. Why don't just put Verisign in charge and get it over with.

      --
      Moderating "-1, Disagree" is simple censorship. Have the guts to post your opinion.
    4. Re:Biometric ID can fight identity theft. by seabreezemm · · Score: 1

      You are very short sighted friend. Here is how it will go.. 1) national id 2) mark on the forehead or hand (666) 3) one world gov! 4) forget america, forget your rights, forget your freedoms..these are no longer! little by little, bit by bit they are tearing away at our basic freedoms and rights...oppression breeds the crime not the freedoms! While there is a need for rules and laws, the rights of the many should never be infrindged on to suppress the crimes of the few! When we do this we become nothing more than a new Russia!!!! wake up fool!

      --
      Karma: a simple way of silencing those with unpopular views regardless how correct or just that view might be.
    5. Re:Biometric ID can fight identity theft. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And so when someone steals the digital retina pattern embedded in your card, where you going to go to get new eyes?

    6. Re:Biometric ID can fight identity theft. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your SSN will still be in 1000 poorly secured databases, ripe for the taking. The only thing a biometric ID will do is make it harder to impersonate someone else.

      Sounds like "your privacy is already gone; forget about it".

      Had he not blown his cool, a lot of people could have died.

      I say it is high time we get ID that works.


      Are you a CIA agent doing psychological operations on slashdot? Come on, what are the odds that there AREN'T spooks posting to this large, impressionable audience?

    7. Re:Biometric ID can fight identity theft. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Then the crook took her drivers license, somehow mangled it, and got the her picture on the front and my wife's name.


      Why is it that you think a picture of a face is not a biometric, while a picture of a retina is?

      If you can fake one, you can probably fake the other.
    8. Re:Biometric ID can fight identity theft. by jeffy124 · · Score: 1

      wow. i just read through all the comments that were +4 or better, and for once there was actually a sane and practical view of the system. especially in pointing out data trails we already have. thank you.

      --
      The One Rule Of Chess You'll Ever Need: Don't play someone who carries a kit in their bookbag.
  80. Easy solution, but nobody sees it by ZenJabba1 · · Score: 1
    Senator Dianne Feinstein, an original drafter of the proposal, recently explained in a Capitol Hill magazine that it is her intention to see Congress immediately implement a national identity system where every American is required to carry a card with a "magnetic strip on which the bearer's unique voice, retina pattern, or fingerprint is digitally encoded." May 10, 1995
    http://www.totse.com/en/privacy/privacy/bioidcrd.h tml

    All you do is stop voting this Dianne Feinstein into office, and this will stop happening! She is intent on doing this and now has been doing it for over 7 years. Maybe its time to wake up and smell the roses those people in CA. I think people will ignore her, just like that have for the last 7 years

    --
    `find / -name "*your_base*" -exec chown us:us {} \;`
  81. So what's the big deal? by Dixie_Flatline · · Score: 2

    They need a way to identify everyone in the country uniquely, so a retinal scan seems like a fine idea. They already have all sorts of data on you. How will this change things? You're looking at fewer administrative costs due to things like duplicate SSNs (which I've heard of, but I'm not American, so I can't really verify or cite references of where I've heard such things.) Plus, identity theft, which is a big deal, isn't quite so straight forward.

    What I REALLY don't understand is how everyone thinks this removes privacy. First of all: What privacy? Secondly: It's no different now, except maybe you won't have to give out your SSN for things that are ludicrous to give it out for. In Canada, we are within our legal rights to refuse giving out our SIN (the equivalent) to anyone except the government, our employer, and anyone that may have to pay money over to us (like a bank, if I'm making interest on money. It's all for tax purposes.) From what I hear, you basically have to give out your SSNs for EVERY little effing thing. Correct me if I'm wrong.

    So, in short, what's changing? You'd move from a system that assigns a number to you, and is only tenuously unique (ie. it's possible to fabricate a card with the same SSN on it, despite the 'uniqueness' of the number) to a system that doesn't bother with the number business, and uses something that is ACTUALLY unique to you.

    But hey, I'm just a Canuck. I don't really care how much info my government has on me, frankly. Despite my government making moronic decisions now and then about CDR tariffs, I basically trust them.

    1. Re:So what's the big deal? by aminorex · · Score: 2

      In the U.S. you are not obligated to have an SSN,
      or to give it out to anyone under any circumstances,
      with the exception of a court order,
      if you do have one.

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
    2. Re:So what's the big deal? by Dixie_Flatline · · Score: 2

      You aren't TECHNICALLY required to, but what's the reality? I mean, people give out their SINs here for no reason, too. How many places 'require' you to give over an SSN? When my parents moved to the states, I seem to recall the bank 'requiring' an SSN to open an account.

    3. Re:So what's the big deal? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The reality is you do't have to give it out to anyone other than "employers" or the governent.

      Any interest made on bank accounts has to be reported to the IRS. Therefore a SSN is required just as it it to have a job.

    4. Re:So what's the big deal? by JimBobJoe · · Score: 3, Insightful

      They need a way to identify everyone in the country uniquely, so a retinal scan seems like a fine idea.

      If you already are of this opinion...then I could see why you would say that there is no privacy. There are a lot of people who believe that there is no need to identify everyone uniquely--the only time that is required is when someone is arrested, and when they are, there are systems in place to identify them at that time. Otherwise, as has been established in the common law countries, like the US, NZ and Canada, you are not required to *document* yourself simply by existing.

      Canada does take that a bit more seriously...for instance, photo driver's licenses are much newer there and were fought much harder (and, at least two provinces I can think of, Quebec and New Brunswick, leave the photo as being optional. The yearly report of the Societe de l'assurance from Quebec says that about 11-13% of Quebecois decline to have the photo on their license. Clearly not a majority, but those are people who clearly value the idea that they do not want nor need a photographic identifier.)In fact, no Canadian provincial legislature has ever mandated that a photo be on a license (even in Ontario, it's the minister or transportation that has ordered the photo license, and the minister of health that has ordered the photo health insurance plan card.)

      The SSN and SIN are related...but there are indeed duplicate SIN's as well as duplicate SSNs. And people do get new SSN's occasionally. This proposal is not meant as a replacement for the SSN, or even to augment the SSN...it is actually meant to add security to the driver's license, which may or may not be linked to the SSN in a verifiable way. (While SSN's are commonly collected for driver's licensing, they are not necessarily confirmed--at least, not in all states.)

      Do you give your SSN out for every little thing? That depends...the SSN has, regrettably, become the lookup key to a person's credit history. If the credit history can be looked up by name and address, than the SSN lookup is not necessary.

      Funny, I've always been convinced that retinal/iris scan will be the least likely biometric they would move to. Why? Because the damn retina changes with time. In particular, those with cataracts and macular degeneration also have changing retinal/iris patterns. Furthermore, there are prescription medications, designed to help those suffering from macular degeneration, which cause very quick and complex changes in the retinal structure.

    5. Re:So what's the big deal? by dadragon · · Score: 1


      Canada does take that a bit more seriously...for instance, photo driver's licenses are much newer there and were fought much harder (and, at least two provinces I can think of, Quebec and New Brunswick, leave the photo as being optional. The yearly report of the Societe de l'assurance from Quebec says that about 11-13% of Quebecois decline to have the photo on their license. Clearly not a majority, but those are people who clearly value the idea that they do not want nor need a photographic identifier.)In fact, no Canadian provincial legislature has ever mandated that a photo be on a license (even in Ontario, it's the minister or transportation that has ordered the photo license, and the minister of health that has ordered the photo health insurance plan card.)


      Saskatchewan also does not have a manditory photo licence. But we will by June/03. I didn't refuse, because we need photo ID to buy booze here, but still....

      --
      God save our Queen, and Heaven bless The Maple Leaf Forever!
    6. Re:So what's the big deal? by Vegeta99 · · Score: 2

      Government agencies can require it if they give reason. NOT giving it then is a crime. Banks need it because they must tell the IRS how much you've made.

    7. Re:So what's the big deal? by The+Darkness · · Score: 1
      You're looking at fewer administrative costs due to things like duplicate SSNs (which I've heard of, but I'm not American, so I can't really verify or cite references of where I've heard such things.)

      The Social Security Card is the equivalent of the statement: "This person belongs to this SSN." Notice I didn't say: "This SSN belongs to this person," because that isn't necessarily true. The SSN by itself is not a unique identifier. However, the SSN and the person's last name together are (or at least, should be) unique.

      --
      There are two kinds of people: 1) those that need closure
  82. I never knew privacy was so simple by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    from the article: "Drummond said the card would actually help protect the privacy of the U.S. public by moving people away from the use of Social Security numbers for identification. Once a criminal gets a person's Social Security number, a host of information about the individual can be stolen."

    the implication: And if they just have YOUR FUCKING FINGERPRINTS AND EYEBALLPRINTS then they can't steal anything at all. What a happy world it will be.

  83. hacking the cards Re:hmm by swschrad · · Score: 1

    that's ALL I need, having my Adobe FingerPrint (tm) or MS Eyeball(c) hacked off the card after I hand it to my waitron to confirm the Domestic Security Agency has no objection to my having a beer with supper, and posted on a goons site at some religious retreat in the Afghani mountains.

    read my lips: NO, GODDAMMIT! in fact, pass a law that my SSN be taken off every database in the country except the FBI and SS systems, and nobody can ever ask for it again who is not from SS. or I'll dump your tea off the dock!

    --
    if this is supposed to be a new economy, how come they still want my old fashioned money?
  84. I smell... bacon. by supabeast! · · Score: 2

    All I have to say is "pork project." I only wish I had the free time to find out what company put them up to this so I could put the CEOs email on Slashdot.

    1. Re:I smell... bacon. by Amazing+Quantum+Man · · Score: 2

      Probably Oracle.

      --
      Fascism starts when the efficiency of the government becomes more important than the rights of the people.
  85. Meh by dfn5 · · Score: 1

    It is not like they are asking for biometric information that can be left at a crime scene, unless I accidentally leave my retinas there. Therefore I don't really care.

    --
    -- Thou hast strayed far from the path of the Avatar.
  86. Viewpoint by 4of12 · · Score: 2

    Well, to have any semblance of control over the process of proving one's identity, I think smart cards are a better than just keeping all the retina patterns, fingerprints, DNA signatures in a database. If no one can positively identify me unless I carry the smart card that correlates the biometric data with all of the other information, then I have control. If the authorities can just transmit the scanned retinal image over the network to some big database to search, then a card is irrelevant.

    You can see that the "card" is pretty much for off-line use.

    Practically, face-recognition software will be used more and more, not just for "anti-terrorist" measures at the airport ticket counter, but for "targeted demographic profiling" at your Costco, Walmart, BestBuy, etc.

    I'm just glad that I have a constitution with some provisions for my protection in it and for my ability to vote to change my government.

    Imagine this technology being applied in Iraq, North Korea and China. Their "problems" of political dissent will be substantially reduced by the introduction of this kind of technology.

    --
    "Provided by the management for your protection."
  87. I think... by aminorex · · Score: 2

    ...it's time to hunt me some scumbag congressmen.

    --
    -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
    1. Re:I think... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't you mean congress-men? ;)

  88. Equipment Only - No consumables by JohnDenver · · Score: 2

    I worked in the plastic card industry writing firmware for PVC card printers/encoders. Assume 100 DMVs per state (5000 DMVs total), comes to about $63,000 in equipment (biometrics + printer/encoder), and I think I'm being a little generous with the DMVs, especially with states like Delaware.

    Consumables (cards, color ribbons) are another thing. (Smartcards are pretty cheap at about or less than $1 a card if memory serves me right)

    --
    "Communism is like having one [local] phone company " - Lenny Bruce
    1. Re:Equipment Only - No consumables by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, but a system that size is going to need a database of some kind and you didn't account for the $95 million in un-necessary Oracle licenses.

      *ducks*

    2. Re:Equipment Only - No consumables by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Smart cards that cost only a dollar aint smart, and way too easy to forge. Ask the satellite/cable TV companies. Imprinting CDrom storage would be better and cheaper, notwistanding that there is no problem .

  89. Doesn't bother me... by nick_davison · · Score: 2

    It doesn't bother me: being English but living in America, they've already kindly attached my biometic info to my greencard.

    I guess no one remembered to pay attention when they went for the immigrants as an easy first target. What's that poem about, "When they came for the Jews, I didn't stand up because I wasn't a Jew..... And when they came for me, there was no one left to stand up."?

    On the positive side, it shouldn't bother you either: The INS has spent millions putting funky holographic strips on to greencards, border passes, etc..... and then ran out of money to buy the actual readers. Government spending being as intelligent as it is, you probably don't need to worry about them ever being able to actually use the information they spent so much gaining.

  90. Re:Easy to replicate.. by evilpaul13 · · Score: 2

    It need only be stolen from the vulnerable and highly enticing gov't system that holds it in a database.

  91. I've got a problem with this by WMNelis · · Score: 1

    One of the problems with the use of the Social Security Numbers is that they are intended for use with contributing to and collecting from Social Security, and thus have information attatched to them about Social Security. The problem is, they are used as a generic form of identification (or authentication). Any time someone asks for your SSN to verify who you are, they are that much closer to the private personal information associated with your SSN. This same problem will occur with the driver's licenses.

    I am against a National ID Card, but I would PREFER it to a national driver's license that would be effectively used for the same purpose.

    --

    Sig free since 2/6/2002
  92. Read Schneier's "Secrets and Lies" by gizmo_mathboy · · Score: 1

    Where to begin...

    What makes this a GOOD idea is that identity theft would be much more difficult

    So the reward for identity theft is that much higher. Sort of like keeping a lot of credit card numbers in one place.

    On the other hand, a retinal scan, as I said above, makes an excellent ID/password, because it is so difficult to duplicate.

    They don't have to duplicate it just sub in another retinal scan for yours and now they are for all intents and purposes you. What if they took your retinal scan record and subbed it for Charles Manson or some other nogoodnik? Can you prove whom you are if your retinal scan is linked to a criminal record?

    Do yourself a favor and read _Secrets and Lies_. Schneier does a good job of explaining the dangers of biometric identification.

  93. The Costs of Security by seinethinker · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Admittedly, I have mixed feelings. On one hand, I don't want people to steal my identity and ruin my life nor do I want the Government to give my personal convictions and actions to anyone with enough influence or money.

    I live in Virginia. We already have a barcode imprinted on the back of our Driver's License. I am only thankful that it doesn't seem to be a system in wide use (as far as I know).

    While I am supportive to find a way to protect our identity and interests, this type of proprosal will ultimately infringe be our doom as it seems of late that we're giving up more and more of our freedoms.

    The Government doesn't seem to be ruled by the people but the Corporations. I am not the first to make this connection, and it isn't an epiphany. This situation just stinks.

    Like others have stated, I don't want my neighbor to know what medications I am on. They don't need to know that me and my husband (if I were married) are in marriage counseling nor what I had for dinner last night. I also don't want anyone to reveal my spiritual beliefs, medical history, or financial status to anyone else.

    I don't think this is an adequate resolution to our crisis with Identity Theft. Unfortunately, I have thought of a solution to counteract ideas like this personally.

    I don't want to see a future like Gattaca nor a world where we are marked like the Jews & other prisoners taken by Nazis in WWII. Perhaps, these are some harsh examples, but I think they are necessary to illustrate the threat to our civil liberty and freedom.

    With this type of marking, it truly voids the statement that Thomas Jefferson made in the Declaration of Independence that "we are all created equal.." We won't be equals anymore but our differences will be heavily prominated in front of face. Is military rule in our future?

    --
    Truth like surgery, may hurt, but it cures. - Han Suyin, Chinese Physician and Writer
  94. Re:$315 Million? Simple! by TClevenger · · Score: 1

    They'll just do like California does with its driver license: Charge $10 every four years for a new card, and $10 any time you lose your card. After all, if it's levied as a new fee, and doesn't come out of existing taxes, it isn't new spending, right? Right??

  95. Great idea! (sarcasm) by Renraku · · Score: 2

    Lets take an almost totally unique biometric pattern, and put it on a card! Now thieves and terrorists don't have to remove your skull to have access to your identity.

    --
    Job? I don't have time to get a job! Who will sit around and bitch about being broke and unemployed then?
  96. Another two words by gambit3 · · Score: 3, Funny

    My Condolences

  97. Two parts to this problem by coyote-san · · Score: 2

    There are two parts to this problem. The first is somebody else impersonating you, something biometrics can address.

    The second is your right to remain anonymous. Or, at least, to avoid having information from one transaction being brought into an unrelated one. We're seeing this now (e.g., many insurance companies now raise rates for drivers with bad credit ratings, but you can get a "bad" rating if you're a careful shopper and visit many local car dealerships who (technically illegal, but common practice) run a credit check on everyone who seems to be a serious buyer.

    --
    For every complex problem there is an answer that is clear, simple, and wrong. -- H L Mencken
  98. Yup by wurp · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I've said it before and I'll say it again: a far better authentication system would be to have your biometric information, picture, and name on the card, but have it digitally signed by multiple private keys held by the government in different places. Duplication would be virtually impossible, since you would have to get access to the biometry (not that hard), then get it signed by all of the keys (very hard).

    Anyone could validate that you are you by verifying the digital signatures and checking the picture or biometry. Since the name, picture and biometry are signed as a unit, there's no way to create a card with your biometry and another person's name and picture without cracking all of the keys.

    1. Re:Yup by realdpk · · Score: 2

      Sure, it's easy once the card is created - but how do you get the data to create the card? How do you ensure that it is valid? Is this something we'd have to subject our kids to upon birth so we know they are who they are? (then again, what do you do about births outside of official facilities)

    2. Re:Yup by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem with this, people are just lazy, they are not interested in doing too much work. Anything that requires significan expense and effort will just be overlooked and ignored to the point it won't work anymore.

    3. Re:Yup by hey! · · Score: 2

      Well, nothing is perfect, but once detected you would have to have some means to revoke the credential. Perhaps a database of bad IDs. It wouldn't be any different in principle than declining an invalid credit card.

      What you get with any id (with or without biometrics) is the assertion that somebody showed up at a government office claiming to be you and providing a couple of minor bits of corroborating evidence. Cards with digitally signed biometrics wouldn't be that different, except they'd be harder to counterfeit.

      Personally, I think the novel idea is signing the biometric. The picture on your license is, after all, a primitive biometric. A cryptographic signature on the other hand would make counterfeiting or tampering harder. The other way for someone to steal your identity would be to misrepresent himself as you to the entity that issues the cards. This is where the revocation mechanism is important; if there is only one possible id for you in existence at a time, it means you will detect the imposture quickly (your ID will stop working) and can report it. The faulty ID can then be revoked and a new credential issued to you. Not a perfect system, but somewhat better than what we have now.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    4. Re:Yup by wurp · · Score: 2

      It's worth noting that, as pointed out by numerous other posters, using retinal scan is really pretty stupid. Thumbprint is a much better biometric. There's no reason I can think of not to put both on the card, though.

      And, in response to the "that looks like too much of a pain in the ass" response... all of this would be automated, of course. It wouldn't be any harder for the DMV folks to push the button and have the machine spit out a signed card than it would be to push the button and have it spit out an unsigned card. Likewise for validation.

  99. Thumbprints by Peapod · · Score: 1

    Already, they ask for thumbprints as a part of getting/renewing a license in Texas. You put your thumb on a red laser thing and it scans it. I don't think that it actually keeps in on the card, but it does have a magnetic strip. Among other things, the magnetic strip keeps your real age on the card. For example, people who try and forge their license will have the original age on the strip. The cops, especially the ones that commonly patrol the nightclub areas, have devices that scan them and display the age. If the displayed age does not match the printed age, they'll ticket them or some such.

    I'm not sure that I'd mind something unique to the individual as opposed to something arbitrarily chosen such as the SSN which, for all intents and proposes as far as colleges go, is your national ID. After all, a driver's license is statewide. Currently, if need be an out of state cop can run out of state check on a license. The only thing that keeping it at the state level does is.... keep it at the state level (in turn keeping more people off the national payroll, because we all know that bureaucracies are perfect).

    and yes, I sometimes ramble

    1. Re:Thumbprints by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I'm not sure that I'd mind something unique to the individual as opposed to something arbitrarily chosen such as the SSN which, for all intents and proposes as far as colleges go, is your national ID. After all, a driver's license is statewide. Currently, if need be an out of state cop can run out of state check on a license.



      Yep. For me to run an out-of-state DL is an extra four keystrokes for the dispatcher. I believe that Canadian licenses can also be checked for validity although it hasn't been an issue for me.



      Mexican licenses cannot be checked easily within the US. However, I can still run them by name and date of birth and description. If they come up as having been revoked in the US, then it doesn't really matter that they're legal to drive in Mexico.



      Sticking to the point, though...there's almost no standardization from state to state. 99.9% of them will have a photo somewhere, but that's the best you can hope for. (I believe that New Jersey still issues non-photo licenses for people with religious issues). And the photos are not viewable by officers in other states.



      The only thing that keeping it at the state level does is.... keep it at the state level (in turn keeping more people off the national payroll, because we all know that bureaucracies are perfect).



      Yep. Nobody is smarter, more efficient, and better-organized than the Colorado DMV.

  100. Is a retinal scan safe? by Giro+d'Italia · · Score: 1

    Is there any risk to the eyes?

  101. Humm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Would there be any EULA on it?

    I'm so coward...

  102. In argentina... by TulioSerpio · · Score: 1

    all the people get the DNI (National identification document, but in spanish :) ), and there is a photo and one finger and a sign (they keep in a building the all ten fingers, don't know how to say it, the image of the finger, actualy, some policeman argentino invented that)
    In case the police want to know if you are you, they send the image to the capital and in 24 hs, they said yes, and they let you out of the police deparment.
    it's rare now, but in the past years It was a common practice here.

    It's no a good idea to live here, but in one way or other we will change that.

    --

    I'm from Argentina: Tango, Asado, Mate, Gaucho, Maradona, YPF

  103. what if I need to change my password? by smartfart · · Score: 1

    Don't laugh... what happens when the database that houses all this biomentric database gets hacked (because it's using passport for authentication, perhaps)? Anyone can spoof my retinal data (or whatever), and I can't ask the admin in charge to reset my password, can I?

  104. They "eyes" have it..... by subsolar2 · · Score: 2

    What does the Slashdot community think about having your retinal pattern embedded on a smart card?

    And what about people that don't have eyes??
    1. Re:They "eyes" have it..... by thelexx · · Score: 2

      "And what about people that don't have eyes??"

      They don't drive much anyway, I hope. Oh, this isn't just about licenses... :)

      LEXX

      --
      "Gold still represents the ultimate form of payment in the world." - Alan Greenspan, 1999
    2. Re:They "eyes" have it..... by subsolar2 · · Score: 2
      Yep :^) I know many people that don't or can't drive that have state photo IDs ... gotten from the DOT.

  105. religious exemption by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    It is time to get some of that old-tyme religion. Start claiming that every government identifier is the "Mark of the Beast" and let the 1st Amendment do the rest...

    The Supreme Court has held that states MUST provide a religious exemption to persons who do not wish to provide a photograph for religious reasons. This case law finds that the free exercise clause of the constitution prohibits states from uniformly requiring photographs on driver licenses. Quaring v. Peterson, 728 F.2d 1121 (8th Cir. 1984), cert. granted, 469 U.S. 815, 105 S. Ct. 79, 83 L. Ed. 2d 27 (1984) and judgment aff'd, 472 U.S. 478, 105 S. Ct. 3492, 86 L. Ed. 2d 383 (1985) (also holding that allowing an applicant with such beliefs to have a license without a photo does not violate the establishment clause).
    (http://www.networkusa.org/fingerprint/page4/dot-r eg-wisconsin.htm)

    The department may require applicants for drivers' licenses to submit fingerprints by means of an inkless fingerprint scanning device upon application; provided, however, that this subsection shall not apply to any person who objects to being fingerprinted on the ground that such activity conflicts with his or her religious beliefs.
    (http://www.legis.state.ga.us/Legis/1997_98/leg/fu lltext/sb439.htm)

    Remember, anonymity is guaranteed privacy!

  106. ha ha.... NOT by Tangurena · · Score: 1
    Let's see, if some one steals my driver's license, I can get another.

    If someone steals my credit card number, I can get a new number.

    If someone steals my biometric information, where can I get new fingers and eyes?

    Most people cannot understand that using biometric information for validation is like holding up photographs to a camera. When you can explain it to them like that, they immediately understand the failures in the system and how to defeat such defective technology.

    Alas, it will take years for the mentally crippled to get cleaned out of political office. Until then, we have nonsense like this to deal with.

  107. Do I have a choice... by sirgoran · · Score: 1

    Of which biometric data goes on this card?

    What happens if I'm in a car accident and loose my eye or hand?

    When it's all said and done I really don't like the idea of anyone knowing my movements around the country, but this just seems too much like one way for the Govn't to keep tabs on you.

    -Goran

    --
    Carpe Scrotum - The only way to deal with your competition.
  108. Armed Pilots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So, what is the problem? Terrorism? The 9/11 terrorists HAD legal id. Having their DNS sequence on the card would not have stopped them.

    No but had the airline captains and copilots been armed all we would have had were a small number of dead arab hijackers and perhaps a few in federal custody after the planes landed instead of what we have now.

    1. Re:Armed Pilots by danro · · Score: 2

      No but had the airline captains and copilots been armed all we would have had were a small number of dead arab hijackers and perhaps a few in federal custody after the planes landed instead of what we have now.

      I'm not sure it is such a good idea to have bullets compromising your hull at 30 000 feet.
      Chanses are you go down anyway (though not hitting a major target)

      And if the initially unarmed hijackers manage to overpower one of the armed crewmembers. (not too hard if one acts as a decoy and three other jumps the crewmember when he is focused on the distraction) You now have hijackers with guns, in a firefight they will probably win, since they don't care who they hit or if the plane go down, and the remaining crewmembers certainly does.

      And this time there is no way for passagers to stop the hijackers, holding a cockpit with one or more guns is easy. They would probably average more than one attacking passager per shot in their "killing zone"...

      I actually think an armed crew makes you an easier target for suicidal hijackers.
      Not for "normal" hijackings though. But on the other hand those seldom have a high bodycount. Probably not worth risking the the entire plane in the afforementioned firefight.

      Just my 0.02 kr.
      You are welcome to rebutt if you like.

      --

      "First lesson," Jon said. "Stick them with the pointy end."
    2. Re:Armed Pilots by Cenam · · Score: 0

      why the hell would you put real bullets on a plane, just use rubber bullets, disable em and tie them up until the plane lands.

      --

      The Truth: There is no string:)
    3. Re:Armed Pilots by danro · · Score: 2

      Rubber bullets isn't half as nice as they sound!
      They consist of a steel core surrounded by a rubber jacket (propelled by a weaker than usual charge).
      They leave nasty wounds, kill or maim at close distances and would most certainly break a plane window.

      There are indeed however wheapons capable of disabling people without breaching the hull, they are often refered to as "remote batons" or "sandbag guns" but they are to cumbersome to be practical in a crowded plane.

      --

      "First lesson," Jon said. "Stick them with the pointy end."
  109. Re:Biometric ID canNOT fight identity theft. by visualight · · Score: 2

    Presently: The identity thief (after discovering your name, address, etc.) makes a driver's license but places his/her photo instead of yours on it.

    Biometrics: The identity thief does the same as above but places his/her biometric information on/in the card.

    Results are the same either way. The solution to the above problem is to distribute your biometric information to everyone on the planet who may need to identify you. That's a great idea - not. This biometric solves no old problems but does create many new ones.

    This is either political pork, or a clumsy attempt at doing an "endrun" around the national id issue. I wish I could bitchslap congressmen and senators when they come up with dumb shit like this.

    --
    Samsung took back my unlocked bootloader because Google wants me to rent movies. They're both evil.
  110. Achtung! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Georgia already has this....

    Achtung!
    Zeigen Sie mir Ihre Papiere, y'all.

    1. Re:Achtung! by Bolen · · Score: 1

      Die Antwort ist "Kiss my grits!". :-)

      But really, how is asking for papers any different than asking for a driver's license?

      BTW, in Georgia, it's not a retinal scan; rather, you place the pad of each index finger on a biometric scanner, in the order specified. The information is combined into a barcode-like pattern on the back of the license.

      And no, I don't know what happens if you are missing one or more index fingers.

  111. Oops! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Must have left my wallet my really big speaker

  112. And if the system is hacked... by A.Soze · · Score: 2, Funny

    How do I change my id number? Do I get new retinas? What about thumbprints? I like my thumbs the way they are. I don't want to have re-burn new prints every time someone hacks the Windows XP++ bio-server...

    --
    "Goodness, how did you people live long enough to invent tools?" -Hobbes (the tiger, not the philosopher)
  113. IBM's 5 computers by Mr.Mustard · · Score: 1
    nitpick

    Oh btw, just like 640k was sooo enough for everyone; and the world market only had demand for about a thousand (or a hundred, i forget which) computers (some IBM head-huncho back in the 60s) retinal scans are very difficult to replicate.

    "I think there is a world market for maybe five computers." - Thomas Watson, chairman of IBM, 1943

    funny stuff.

    --
    fnord
  114. the Alarmists worry me more than the GOVT! by Alzheimers · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Now, I don't want to get off on a rant here, but...

    I can't help but wonder what exactly you think you're giving up by having a biometric print on your driver's license, instead of a 9-digit number. Do you honestly think that by having the (assumed) Encrypted Permutation of the measurements of the veins in your eye on the DMV computer system, that you'll suddenly be some Arnold Schwarzenegger'd character fleeing the Borg Uberpolice in some post-armageddon techno-dictatorship?

    Lets face it...there are some areas where privacy is important (medical records, for example)...but we already have LAWS against unauthorized access to said materials. Isn't this the whole debate with the SSSCA or whatever it's called now? That we're looking to legislate things that are ALREADY ILLEGAL? If an insurance company can't get your info now, they won't be able to if you're records are locked biometrically! It's a different key for the same lock.

    And, to be honest, there are things that SHOULD NOT BE PRIVATE. Convicted sex offenders should be branded across the forehead -- but we live in a civilized society, where a "DO NOT TRUST WITH YOUR 6-YEAR OLDS!" mark on their record, available to law enforcement and grade school HR departments, would do the trick. Likewise, "Known Terrorist" or "Most Wanted" notices are GOOD THINGS for airport checkin personel to see.

    That you have AIDS, or that you're secretly dressing in women's panties, are secrets best kept to yourself. That you have served twenty years for deflowering an Alterboy or have trained in an Al Qaida camp should be open to the world. And I, for one, don't have a problem with that.

    1. Re:the Alarmists worry me more than the GOVT! by Todd+Knarr · · Score: 2

      Only one problem: it'd only flag what's on the record. The ex-priest who got nailed in San Diego for child abuse back on the East Coast had no record. The guys who flew the planes into the WTC had no records. A national ID card, biometric or otherwise, wouldn't have done a damned thing to identify or stop any of them.

      And their weasel doesn't fly. 50 cross-linked and cross-checkable databases are equivalent to a Federal database, and saying they aren't doesn't make it so. I see no compelling reason to give the government a one-stop record of everyone who isn't a threat but may be inconvenient or "undesirable", when doing so won't serve any of the purposes it's being put forward for.

    2. Re:the Alarmists worry me more than the GOVT! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lets face it...there are some areas where privacy is important (medical records, for example)...but we already have LAWS against unauthorized access to said materials.

      Would you consider having an invasive eye test to be part of your private medical records. That's just what a retinal scan does. It tests whether your an actual biologically living being. Who knows what other bioinformation is gleened and input into some database someplace besides just your retinal print.

    3. Re:the Alarmists worry me more than the GOVT! by Vegeta99 · · Score: 2

      That you have AIDS? No way! I would QUITE like my partner to be informed of the risk, especially when some states consider it murder for transmitting the disease when you KNEW you had it.

    4. Re:the Alarmists worry me more than the GOVT! by Loundry · · Score: 2

      Over 190 Million people have been killed by their own governments in the past 150 years. How many have been killed by "the alarmists"?

      --
      I don't make the rules. I just make fun of them.
    5. Re:the Alarmists worry me more than the GOVT! by Loki_1929 · · Score: 2

      Of all the things I'd like to say in an infinitesimally small period of time as I sit here shaking my head, the best I can come up with is... wow.

      Ok, now let's try and take this slowly here, one by one; deep breaths. Stand back folks, this comment is about to be disassembled, burned, stomped on, crumpled up, and tossed into a fiery trashcan-hell which our tiny human minds cannot begin to fathom.

      "I can't help but wonder what exactly you think you're giving up by having a biometric print on your driver's license, instead of a 9-digit number."

      Well first of all, I'd like to mention that the Social Security Act of 1935, which was the act under which the social security number was created, never gave any authority for this number to ever be used for identification. Secondly, on each social security card for the first few decades they were issued, there were two things printed that have since been removed. Specifically, it was printed that the number was "Not for Identification Purposes" and that you should never give the number out to anyone except an official from the Social Security Administration. Why? Because the lawmakers of the time recognized the value in not having each person reduced to a number. I have a problem with the number being used anywhere except where it is specifically needed for the SSA, especially on a license. Here is why: suppose you are stopped for a traffic offense, or at a police checkpoint (meaning you've done nothing wrong, yet are still stopped). Now, the officer is going to ask you for your license. Assuming the license has your SSN (social security number), this violates the 1974 Privacy Act. This act "states that no person will be denied service by a government agency for failure to disclose their SSN, except for some exceptions. In addition, it states that a government agency which does request the SSN must disclose whether it be voluntary or obligatory, and if it is obligatory, what law requires it, and what use will be made of it." Therefore, if the officer wants my SSN, he best begin by answering some of my questions. Such as, "Is it really necessary?", and "Exactly which law and/or statue gives you the authority to request my SSN?", and "What exactly will you be doing with my SSN officer?" As (s)he is an official of the federal, state, or local law enforcement agency, he is bound by the law, yet if I were to ask for the information to which I am, under the law, entitled, I doubt I'd get an answer I'd like, if any at all. But I digress.

      So your question was what do we lose? Well, we are reduced to nothing more than an entry in a database. (ie. I'm no longer John Smith, I'm now Citizen #192,114,983) What is the problem with this you ask? It's dehumanizing. I, for one, am not a 'zombie'. I am a human being, and expect and demand to be treated as such; especially by my government. To have myself and my life reduced to a small pile of information is both degrading and insulting. Since that idea doesn't bother you, why not submit to having a barcode tattood on your forehead? If the idea of a barcode on your forehead bothers you, perhaps you should ask yourself why.

      "Do you honestly think that by having the (assumed) Encrypted Permutation of the measurements of the veins in your eye on the DMV computer system, that you'll suddenly be some Arnold Schwarzenegger'd character fleeing the Borg Uberpolice in some post-armageddon techno-dictatorship? "

      Suddenly? No. But I think that even the most totalitarian regime had to start somewhere, and reducing all citizens to numbers, then tracking their every move seems like a good start. Legitimizing the practice by legislating it keeps the revolution at bay until everyone gets a bit more used to the idea. Uberpolice you ask? Well, when the police can tell me where I was on the morning of April 3, 2001, what I had for breakfast, where I went, what I did, if I bought a paper of withdrew money from an ATM, bounced a check, paid my bills, etc, then I say to you, I live in a police state from which there is no escape. Do I care if the DMV of NJ knows what my eye looks like? Not in the least bit. But when they want to tie in every database from every federal and state agency to compile a list of everything I do every minute of every day, then I say the DMV gets my retinal scan when they autopsy my cold dead body. To hell with any nation or government which actively polices it's own citizens. Motto of the great State of New Hampshire: Live Free or Die.

      "Lets face it...there are some areas where privacy is important (medical records, for example)...but we already have LAWS against unauthorized access to said materials. "

      Let's be clear about one thing: Privacy is important in ALL areas. Let's ask a simple question, would you have a problem with your name, telephone number, address, children's names and ages, your past sexual history, your purchasing habits, daily life, reading habits, religion, and other such information being collected and stored by corporations and the government for whatever use they see fit? (From marketing by companies, to searches by police of your house and property because you fit the profile of someone 'likely to commit a crime'. (See also: racial profiling) The list of possibilities for use of information that you're willing to give up is staggering. What worries me isn't so much what I can think of in terms of misuse, it's all the things I can't think of right now. Do you think that the authors of the DMCA ever imagined a scientific research paper wouldn't be published because of legal threats stemming from the DMCA?

      "Isn't this the whole debate with the SSSCA or whatever it's called now? That we're looking to legislate things that are ALREADY ILLEGAL?"

      Boy, that's just funny; that's what that is. The CBDTPA (formerly the SSSCA) would force every single piece of software or hardware produced after the bill is enacted into law to have embedded technologies that conform to government-mandated standards to eliminate unauthorized copying of copyrighted materials. That's what it does on it's face, now let's look at the consequences. All open source software would then need to be pretty much re-written. Everything from the Windows Media Player to the 'cp' command in future editions of *nix's/Linux would have to have standards-compliant code (with all its bugs and bloat) making many perfectly legal activities impossible. Forget making backups of your computers at that point. Assuming they contain software with the 'dont copy' bit, it isn't going to work. Forget making a mix CD from the CD's you bought last week, it's not going to work. These are all 'fair use' activities and perfectly legal. They'll still be legal, they just won't be possible, as you'd have to circumvent the copy-protection technology (which is illegal) to do it.

      Think of it this way: right now, it's perfectly legal for you to walk to the house facing yours. It's a right recognized by everyone, and you do so frequently. Last week, a paved road (ie. 'street') was put in between your house and the one facing yours. It's still legal to go there, but now you must cross this street, so you do. Now, Senator Hollings wants to pass a bill saying it's perfectly legal to visit the house facing yours, but you may not cross the street to get there. (no jokes about flying above, tunneling under, etc please). So let's think about this for a moment, it's legal to visit the house, it's just that the only way to get there is illegal. The street isn't necessary, travel was fine before it was paved, but you cannot cross it just the same.

      For those who think "hey, the cp command was around before this bill, it's grandfathered, right?" Right, until you want to release the next version of the software. FreeBSD 5.0 would probably be ok, but FreeBSD 6.0 would probably be legally forced to re-write anything capable of copying or displaying any digital content with standards-compliant code added. Then you get to re-write just about every application in existence when you want to release the next version, and now your hardware will cost a bit more thanks to the R&D for the embedded technology and added cost of making the product work right with it. Those who develop software in their free time should be screaming about this. Anyone who's ever written even a simple text editor should realize that if they wrote it post CBDTPA, it would have to comply with government standards on copy protection. (Those who don't write software, please don't chime in here, you don't know what you're talking about.)

      "It's a different key for the same lock."

      It's a universal key. Someone cracks it, they have everything. Right now, they need some luck along with your SSN, etc. Using a single key for everything is no different than using one password for everything. Think about it, if you use a 17 character password with numbers, upper/lower-case letters, symbols, (a really good password) for everything, then you're in trouble if anyone gets ahold of it. Doesn't matter how good it is, someone will break it. If it takes 20 years for someone to break it, they will, and when they do, your entire life belongs to them. You can say there's no way, and I'll just smile and nod and point you to the MPAA, who said CSS would never be cracked. It's not the biometrics that's a problem, it's the authentication that can be cracked, the databases that can be cracked, etc.

      "Convicted sex offenders should be branded across the forehead"

      What a great idea. Let's take a human being and burn their head with a hot plate of iron so they'll be ridiculed and beaten the rest of their lives. But you know what? I seem to remember some crazy guys a while back who wrote something to the effect that, "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness." Gee, those silly creators of our country, what were they thinking?

      Ok, now that we're done with the sarcasm, let's think about this for a moment. first off, go read a book called The Scarlet Letter. Secondly, this most certainly qualifies as "cruel and unusual punishment". I'm one who's all for the rights of the victims. TRUST ME when I say I know first hand exactly what it feels like to have someone you love fall victim to a 'sex offender'. Your first instinct is to kill them; at least mine was. Unfortunately, we don't have the tools necessary to ensure this type of thing never happens in our society, but what we do have is a fairly good criminal justice system, which, while not perfect, is constantly being reviewed and changed to better serve the public. Branding someone's forehead does nothing to ensure that they're able to become productive citizens. Megan's law, while nice on paper and hard to argue with ("you don't want a law that protects people?") does nothing to get a person the help they need. Instead, putting someone out like that makes them feel isolated and hated. Indeed, it has brought ruin to many convicted offenders' lives. When someone is unable to live a normal life, they eventually start looking for the next best thing, which might put your wife or kids in danger. I have no problem with a sex offender being fairly heavily monitored by law enforcement, but once they've served their time, they ought be allowed to live some sort of life.

      ""DO NOT TRUST WITH YOUR 6-YEAR OLDS!" mark on their record, available to law enforcement and grade school HR departments"

      We have this, it is known as a criminal record. Criminal records are (with the exception of children) a matter of public record. If a school does not do a criminal record check on its employees, they have a problem in their administration.

      "Likewise, "Known Terrorist" or "Most Wanted" notices are GOOD THINGS for airport checkin personel to see. ""That you have AIDS, or that you're secretly dressing in women's panties, are secrets best kept to yourself. That you have served twenty years for deflowering an Alterboy or have trained in an Al Qaida camp should be open to the world. And I, for one, don't have a problem with that."

      This is the way things are, and if you're happy, why did you post? AIDS positive tests are a matter of medical records, which are regulated by law. That you dress in women's panties is not tracked by anyone (well, maybe spam companies) and is also usually private. If you had sex with a child, you have a criminal record, which can be checked. If you are a well-known terrorist, you are on the State Department's terrorist watch list.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
  115. Another Two words (kinda) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    51st state

  116. Alternative data sources? by pmz · · Score: 2

    What happens if, after I get my retina-encoded license, I lose both my eyes and my fingertips in an accicent?

    Will I be able to get a new license with something else on it, like my toe prints?

  117. I have to admit... by ironfroggy · · Score: 1
    ...that I actually like this idea. Provided, of course, that it is done right. Put a little chip in there with your retinal scan, finger prints, perhaps even DNA when we get the technology to do it well enough. No one else could use it if they cant match their prints to the one on the card.

    We would need a secure enough protocol to transfer the data over networks, for voting online and such.

    There could be a password based on a combination of finger prints (left thumb, right index, right thumb, left pinky)...

    I dunno, I think it could work... It would be harder to steal identities. As long as you show up in person and they keep the data secure and backed up.

    1. Re:I have to admit... by SecurityGuy · · Score: 2

      We would need a secure enough protocol ...


      You'd need a secure enough a lot of things, and that's where it always falls apart. You'd need readers that can't be compromised, a central database that can't be compromised, development staff who can't be compromised and won't backdoor the thing, maintainers who can't be compromised. In the end, the question becomes not can it be compromised, but when will it be. More likely, was it ever NOT compromised. Actually when you factor in things like the witness protection program, it becomes a given that there's a backdoor. I guess we're back to the old security dilemma. There is no secure, there's only secure from who, using what tools, in what timeframe, etc.
    2. Re:I have to admit... by niall2 · · Score: 1

      Why not do a two key version of this. The card has a key and your eye/finger/toe/ear print can be used to produce the other key. And if you have something happen to one of the two keys, you can go somewhere where, using something more secure than your mothers Maden name (which is what scares me most about credit card verification today) you can have a new one issued.

      Would this end 9/11 stuff...no. Would it make verifying who I am more secure. Yes. Infallable...no, but as I said, guessing where I was born or my home zip code is much worse than what could be done with this.

      --
      Today is a gift. Save the receipt.
    3. Re:I have to admit... by SecurityGuy · · Score: 2

      Sure, why not. It doesn't address any of the vulnerabilities, but knock yourself out.

  118. My opinion on embedding biometrics by WillSeattle · · Score: 1

    I love the idea. Let's start by embedding the eyes of all the members of Congress and the Senate on such cards. Not the scans, the actual eyes.

    I'll help.

    --
    --- Will in Seattle - What are you doing to fight the War?
  119. Biometrics no panacea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Biometrics aren't any magically more secure than smart cards, they're just convenient. There are still plenty of attacks that can be performed to break such systems. Here's a short list:

    1) Hurray, you won the 1 in a million jackpot and your eye patterns match someone else's. Congratulations, you can now steal their identity.

    2) Don't bother with the scan at all, just hack up a reader to claim you're someone else. Buy lots of stuff.

    So let's take a look at your example, and tell me in what way it would be different if her eye pattern measurement had been stolen instead of her driver's license? Ahh, here it is. You cannot cancel your eye, mark it bad, and go get a new one when it gets stolen.

  120. Two words by Eryq · · Score: 2

    Identical twins.

    --
    I'm a bloodsucking fiend! Look at my outfit!
  121. Re:Two words. (-1 joking, but nobody gets it) by ShinGouki · · Score: 1

    No it's not an oxymoron--running dog. dink

    really? wow...
    ya learn something new every day

    ugh

    --
    -dk
    Dream with the feathers of angels stuffed beneath your head.
  122. Time to move.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Time to move to russia where I am still free...

  123. PIN me down, but not my vote? by DoctorFrog · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Why is it that there's such tremendous opposition to standardizing voting methods, which has obvious practical advantages and almost no potential for abuse, and yet there's always another proposal to make my personal identification nationally "transparent", which has few really practical advantages but huge potential for abuse?

    1. Re:PIN me down, but not my vote? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Probably because one gives power to the people while the other gives power to the government.

      Which do you think our current government is more likely to pursue, especially in today's political climate?

    2. Re:PIN me down, but not my vote? by Darby · · Score: 1

      which has obvious practical advantages and almost no potential for abuse,

      It has plenty of potential for abuse. No standardized voting methods would have stopped the coup in November. How would a stsndardized voting method prevent one of the candidate's brothers who just happens to be a state governor from illegally striking 100,000 voters from the roles because they were registered voters in the other party?
      Also, even with non standard voting methods and the problems caused by this, Gore still won on the recount. How would a standardized voting method have prevented the Bush Organized Crime Family from overthrowing the US government?

  124. Canada vs US - implications of national IDs by WillSeattle · · Score: 1

    Well, you're right, we have less privacy and fewer privacy rights in the US than in Canada.

    We sold out our rights.

    And as a Canuck, you tend to trust government. Here, only rubes trust government.

    But what do I know, I'm a dual citizen of both countries ...
    -

    --
    --- Will in Seattle - What are you doing to fight the War?
  125. It's already there... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Look at your license. It's got some biometric data on it already: age, height, weight, gender, special restrictions. More than that, it's got a picture of you, which you could think of as a low resolution facial scan. The point of putting all this stuff on the card is so that a cop, sales clerk, etc. can look at the card, look at you, and feel confident that the card represents the person presenting it. That's not such a bad thing, and I'm not all that opposed to adding more information that would prevent someone else from pretending to be me.

    On the other hand, I'm very opposed to gathering a bunch of data that uniquely identifies me and putting it into some government computer where the gov't can search through it on a whim, or even sell it to anyone who's willing to pay the price. I don't want my fingerprints on file at the local grocery store, thanks very much, and I don't want to receive spam from some company I've never done business with that says "we notice that you've been to the airport 8 times in the last two weeks, and have we got a deal for you...."

    The answer, I think, is to build a system where biometric information can be stored on a drivers license or other card. The issuing authority would not get to store that information. Instead, the issuing authority gets to store some sort of hash (MD5?) of all the information on the card. The biometric information on the card can be compared to my person to prove that the card is mine. The hash can be compared to the value stored by the issuing authority to prove that it's valid. The gov't gets a more reliable license, and I get to keep control over detailed information about me.

    And one more thing: the whole thing is optional. The "National ID card" notion implies that everyone will have to carry one of these things all the time. The "license" concept is much better: you don't have to get one at all if you don't want to. If you choose to drive, you need to get a license, but you can't be compelled to have it on your person at all times.

  126. here we go again by sdgscott · · Score: 0

    as ive said b4, this is only proof that we are moving close to the end times predicted in revelations. a good idea, i think not. think about it if one person got control of the main id system then he could control most of the money in the country i 4 one will not b signing up 4 one of these things anytime soon.

    --
    sdgscott
  127. Sounds like a plan... by Pollux · · Score: 2

    What does the Slashdot community think about having your retinal pattern embedded on a smart card?

    Sounds good. Let's have our entire identity based on one card. And while we're at it, let's build in some kind of wireless transmitter into this smart card as well...yea, there we go. But let's not make it encrypted...that would only make it more difficult for people to steal our only form of identity.

    Why not save us all the trouble and just have everyone write their SS# in permanent marker on their foreheads?

  128. Re:Ummm.... NO. - No. by The+Original+Bobski · · Score: 2

    I don't see how a retinal scan would be a problem. You already have your photo on the driver's license. It's the same thing - only really close up.

    --
    satire, n: 1) witty language used to convey insults or scorn; 2) a form of humor lost on most slashdot moderators.
  129. Tighten up immigration first. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ridge's new biometric licenses would not have prevented 9/11. All they might have done is allow us to verify for absolute sure that Mohammed Atta and Marwan Al Shehi and the rest of them really were the ones. Although, given the lack of pilots' retinas recovered from the rubble, we'd have had to rely on the records of the ID check computer at the gate.

    Let's tighten up immigration before we go invading our citizens' privacy. No wogs allowed!

  130. Two Minutes Hate by sulli · · Score: 1

    c'mon, this has got to be a red-meat article thrown out to get everyone angry, posting, and using up pageviews!

    --

    sulli
    RTFJ.
  131. Not just biometrics-- corporations too by mdecerbo · · Score: 5, Insightful
    There's a better article from UPI with more juicy tidbits on the new licenses they want to saddle us with.

    Apparently the bill "directs that the chip [on the license] be capable of accepting software for other applications, including those of private companies".

    This isn't about security, it's a taxpayer-funded giveaway of your privacy to big corporations. It'll save them a few bucks lost to fraud and make this even more of an electronic nanny state.

    Luckily the EFF spokesman pointed out that "The real thrust... is so that the ID card or driver's license will be even more useful to commercial entities in terms of tracking consumers, doing consumer profiling, telemarketing -- all those kinds of things that people currently consider to be an invasion of privacy."

    And the Center for Democracy and Technology calls it a "honeypot".

    This has to be fought on the retail level. Hopefully Joe and Jane Public have enough love of freedom left to be skeptical of the government fingerprinting them at the DMV. If it turns out they don't, I'm ashamed of-- and afraid for-- my country.

    1. Re:Not just biometrics-- corporations too by Nautilus · · Score: 2, Informative

      California already requires a thumbprint when getting a driver's license. Driving is a privilege, not a right, so if you don't want to give them your thumb print, you don't get your driver's license.

      It may be too late in some ways in some places.

    2. Re:Not just biometrics-- corporations too by Fixer · · Score: 1
      Driving is a privilege, eh? I suppose flying is, too. Oh, and riding. Heck, even walking, depending on where you walk.

      Does it not strike you a little strange that many modes of travel are considered privileges and not rights? Not even a little?

      --
      "Avast! Prepare for the rodgering!" THWACK! "Arrr.. me nards.."
    3. Re:Not just biometrics-- corporations too by binarytoaster · · Score: 1

      Driving is a privilege, eh? I suppose flying is, too. Oh, and riding. Heck, even walking, depending on where you walk.

      Driving is most definitely a privilege. I challenge you to show me in the Constitution where it says I have the right to drive. A police officer can determine me unable to drive safely and therefore revoke my license, with proper court authorization. And do I have the right to fly? No. A security guard can tell me no, I endanger the lives of people on the plane. Same with riding - if I'm endangering lives, a police officer can tell me I need to stop.

      I don't see where you get your walking bit, except that if you're trespassing, you can be arrested - but that's not being arrested for walking, that's being arrested for being someplace you're not supposed to be.

      No, it does not strike me strange at all that many modes of travel are considered privileges - I'm driving a ton of metal here, it could very easily kill many many people if I'm not using it correctly. Need I remind you what someone on a plane with a weapon can do? And a bike can do some damage, too, though far less.

      I'm aware that guns also have the capability to kill people - but then, are known felons allowed to carry guns? It's the same with driving a car. Thank you, this has been your conspiracy theorist debunking of the day.

    4. Re:Not just biometrics-- corporations too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Damnit if your going to mention the constition at least get the damn point of it right. The constitiion GIVES you no rights. It gives the feds limited rights and then goes on to say things the feds can't do.

  132. Score +5 Insightful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm a lumberjack and I'm okay...

    By the way, that was two dollars *Canadian*. Just so's you don't think you're gonna be able to spend two dollars *American* down on the street corner for some blow. 'Cause that's all the pusher'll take, he don't want now fucking worthless Canadian money that goes down in value three or four percent between the time that you jam it up your ass and when you shit it out later on that day.

  133. Extremly Bad Idea - Here's Why by kenp2002 · · Score: 1

    I like the idea of a more secure version of my social security card. The danger always lies in how the card is used. If it is the same as a SS card fine. But here is the problem and it was actually brought up in the movie Dracula 2000. If I encode the biometric data into the card and the card is stolen it is possible at the rate technology is moving to create say.. a glass eye that would satisfy a retinal scanner (as presented in the movie). A thumb print can be faked (Take elmer's glue on your thumb. Let dry clear. Peel off and place on a thumb scanner. I fooled two cheap scanning units during a presentation on my NOT to but cheap scanning units). And with the rate of technology moving so fast whar guarantee do we have that the biometic data we encode today can't be exploited in the near future? How about a latex mask with pinpoint thermal units embedded to defeat the facial thermal rec. units people are so high and might about these days in hardened security? Not possible today? Fine. What about tomorrow? My 2 bits. later

    Ken
    P.S Yes I know I spell like a butter knife cut oak.

    --
    -=[ Who Is John Galt? ]=-
  134. NOT Better than SSN by ccmann · · Score: 1
    Identity theft may be more difficult with biometrics, but it also would be harder to recover from if it happened.

    Biometrics in general has a number of well-known problems, of which the most alarming (to me, anyway) is the question of what happens when, as is inevitable, somebody manages to steal your credentials (not by taking your finger or eye themselves, but hacking the Oracle database that will surely be at the heart of this thing.) From then on you may never be able to use your biometrics again, because now there's two of you out there. When your credit card number is stolen, you can get another one pretty easily. But, unfortunately, there is no easy way to get a new biometric ID -- it's your thumb, right?

    Bruce Schneier has some smart remarks about this here.

  135. What's wrong with National ID's? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I suppose I'll get flamed for this, but seriously, how does national ID's infringe on your privacy?
    The rest of the world has been using them for ages.

    1. Re:What's wrong with National ID's? by acceleriter · · Score: 2
      No infringement at all. So long as there's law prohibiting the presentation of such an ID being required for commerce of any kind (e.g. cashing a check, checking into a hotel, renting a car, borrowing a book) and that it carries sufficient civil penalties (7 figures) to be an effective deterrent.

      Not that it isn't enough to fear the government, but the real threat is from the capitalist kleptocracy that really runs the country.

      --

      CEE5210S The signal SIGHUP was received.

  136. National Biometric ID's by witchman · · Score: 1

    Bad Idea!

    Welcome to the United Fascist States of America.

  137. The Panopticon was designed as a PRISON by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not as a free society.

  138. Fire in my Eyes by Toxxy · · Score: 1

    I'm not sure why everybody's getting all excited about invasion of privacy issues. I can't think of anything more benign than a retinal scan for identification. What's so private about your eyes? My only issue would be making sure the data isn't easily accessable through a magstrip (like a credit card) and then having the ability to make a retinal copy. Is that what everyone's all hyped up about? I'm honest when I say I don't understand what the big deal is.

    --

    1. Re:Fire in my Eyes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The big deal is that many organizations, governmental and otherwise, develop and maintain information about people (customers, voters, criminals, librarians, etc.). A national id system would only make this much easier, and would facilitate the compilation of these databases into very detailed profiles on each and every person in the US. Things are bad enough right now with the SSN and drivers license numbers; there's no need to make the development of this sort of information even easier.

  139. Voter ID. by Ungrounded+Lightning · · Score: 2
    A rider I want to see on the bill:

    The ID card will carry a check-box and date: "Elegibility to vote in Federal elections demonstrated on [date]." Proving elegibility (i.e. citizenship, non-convicted-felon status where applicable) is not required to obtain the ID, but is required to get the box checked.

    The ID, or its number, WITH the box checked, will be required to vote, or obtain an absentee ballot to vote, in any election where a federal office is on the ballot.

    The ID number will be collected during the registration process. It will be checked for uniqueness of registration and for disqualifications since the certification date. (For states that allow at-poll registration the voter's ballot will be sequestered and not counted until the number has been checked.)

    If implemented this would go a long way toward eliminating certain classes of (rampant!) voter fraud. So putting the rider on the bill will create significant opposition to the bill by politicians who currently benefit from the fraud.

    Thus the rider would make the bill more likely to fail, and if it DOES pass at least it gives us SOME benefit to mitigate the damage to our privacy.

    Just think: If the politicians actually had to get REAL votes from REAL voters, one each, they might be a bit more responsive to those voters' concerns. Like privacy, for instance. B-)

    --
    Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
    1. Re:Voter ID. by JimBobJoe · · Score: 2

      Thankfully, the evidence does not seem to support that idea--unless the evidence is being read by the few people out there who wanna see photo voter ID cards. (They are out there...though your post appears to be tongue in cheek.)

      If anything, fraudulent voter registrations (but not necessarily people fraudulently voting) went up when "motor voter" passed...because some state DMV's...never known for competence...started willy nilly registering any bloody person to vote when they have a driver's license. (I've got an acquitaince in Georgia who was registered to vote when he got his license, even though he has EU citizenship. Morever, it proved to be a bitch to get off the voting rolls.)

      Oath based/addressed based voter registration works very well in this country...and there is no need to change it. The idea of needing a photo ID to vote is deeply offensive to liberty.

      Incidentally, I have been a pollworker (which is an outstanding way to serve your community, and make a little bit of money on the side) and I will be a pollworker in the election coming up this next Tuesday.

      What we do on my state is when a person comes up to vote, they sign the poll book next to the signature from when they registered. If the signatures match, we let them vote. Sometimes they wanna show ID...and we refuse it. I've had this conversation before:

      "don't you wanna see my ID?"

      "No...we are not permitted to do so by law, and furthermore, I have no idea if it's fake or not. How do I know if the license is fake?"

      "well you don't know if the license is fake...all you can do is believe me when I say it isn't, and I present it to you."

      "then in that instance, instead of arguing about some cheap plastic card, I'll just believe you when you claim to be who you are the first time around, and you can enter the polling booth."

    2. Re:Voter ID. by Ungrounded+Lightning · · Score: 2
      Thankfully, the evidence does not seem to support that idea--unless the evidence is being read by the few people out there who wanna see photo voter ID cards.

      I'm sorry, but at least the part of California I'm in has so much voter fraud (and other screwups) that it's not funny. Examples:

      My next-door neighbor's mother died a few years ago. She keeps getting voter info, and keeps going to the clerk to get her mother removed from the rolls. After mommy popped back a couple times the registrar flat out refused to take her off again because "she was still voting".

      On election day vans full of people show up at the polls to register-and-vote. The neighbors have never seen these people before. Then the van goes to another polling place, and another...

      Over four thousand absentee ballots were addressed to the same house in Berkeley.

      and I could go on.

      Fake voters and multiple voting are not the only forms of of election fraud. But they're currently the easiest. Anyone who has ever hacked or defended a system can understand the effect of the following combination:

      You can register by mail without showing I.D. or any other proof of elegibility, citizenship, or even existence.

      You can request an absentee ballot at any time - including first time and every time - for no reason and showing no hardship. By mail.

      Your ballot can be sent to any mailing address. It will not be checked against the boundaries of your district or against other absentee ballots' addresses.

      (I've twice found myself double-registered because I changed party affiliation and the clerk typoed my name and the computer entered it as a new voter.)

      I DON'T want voter photo I.D. - or any national I.D. card. But by damn, if they're going to force a national I.D. card down our throats, I want to see it used to insure that non-citizens, zombies, crooks, and computer-generated pseudo-people aren't selecting our legislators and other government officials and amending our state constitutions.

      And I want to put the people pushing such an I.D. card (whom I perceive to be the same ones benefiting from voter fraud) to have to think twice before they finally vote on it.

      Elections are why a Republic is stable: The losing side of the election won't try to reverse the result by civil war, because they know they'd lose. This holds true even if the election is close and there was SOME fraud - because the winners would be joined by the people who don't like sore losers. But if the election process becomes SO corrupt that people stop believing it predicts a Civil War's outcome, some people will be willing to take the chance.

      --
      Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
    3. Re:Voter ID. by JimBobJoe · · Score: 2

      Actually...I shall defer to you on this issue...because I have to admit, I have heard of weird situations in the California Republic that have caught my attention.

      I do also admit that states aren't doing as good of a job as they should be with correlating death certificates to voter registration.

      And I also agree that, in the case of California, voter fraud perpetuates the current government, so there is little interest in changing it.

    4. Re:Voter ID. by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 2
      I'm sorry, but at least the part of California I'm in has so much voter fraud (and other screwups) that it's not funny. Examples:
      • My next-door neighbor's mother died a few years ago. She keeps getting voter info, and keeps going to the clerk to get her mother removed from the rolls.
      • On election day vans full of people show up at the polls to register-and-vote.
      • Then the van goes to another polling place, and another...
      • Over four thousand absentee ballots were addressed to the same house in Berkeley.
      Sounds just like the elections in Québec! Last time, the (big-money loving) liberals got nailed for big time election fraud. So, in return, the (socialist) government passes a law to make compulsory the production of ID prior to vote, if there is the slightest doubt about the voter's identity. The only ones bitching about it are the liberals and big-business...
    5. Re:Voter ID. by ProfMoriarty · · Score: 2
      Ok .. this is on a serious note ... can a smartcard be "shorted out"?

      Meaning that the data on it is no longer valid? ...

      If it can't the aformentioned article gets scary.

      --
      Karma? Karma? I don't need no stinkin' karma.
    6. Re:Voter ID. by tutal · · Score: 1

      The ID card will carry a check-box and date: "Elegibility to vote in Federal elections demonstrated on [date]." Proving elegibility (i.e. citizenship, non-convicted-felon status where applicable) is not required to obtain the ID, but is required to get the box checked.

      Just as long as there aren't any arrows pointing to the correct checkbox... that may be too confusing ;)

  140. Time to Stop Driving by PotatoMan · · Score: 1

    This may be the final impetus to prompt widespread adoption of mass transportation.

  141. Re:state licences are NOT citizenship verification by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    IDs.
    If you want a national ID, use a passport.
    Just issue one to every citizen.

    Why put the burden on the states?

  142. War is Peace! by sxe_p06 · · Score: 1

    Enough said, I hope.

    --
    -- p06 "On religious wars: They're essentially wars over whoo's imaginary friend is better"
    1. Re:War is Peace! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Freedom is Slavery
      Ignorance is Strength

  143. 5-10% of the population can't do a retinal scan. by Target+Drone · · Score: 1
    I'm not sure if the senators know this but to register for a retinal scan a person has to hold their eye very still for about 45 seconds, however not everyone is able to do this. From the Biometric Group web site:

    No reliable statistics are available regarding the Failure to Enroll rate, or the number of users who are simply unable to perform an acceptable enrollment. Based on experience, it is fair to conclude that a statistically significant number of people, perhaps 5-10%, may be unable to perform a satisfactory enrollment.

  144. OT, but what the hell... by Amazing+Quantum+Man · · Score: 1

    , but you can get a "bad" rating if you're a careful shopper and visit many local car dealerships who (technically illegal, but common practice) run a credit check on everyone who seems to be a serious buyer

    How can they run a credit check if you don't give them any financial info? If you're still comparison shopping, why are you giving them enough info to run a credit check?

    --
    Fascism starts when the efficiency of the government becomes more important than the rights of the people.
  145. Just one thing to say... by mrBoB · · Score: 1

    Over my COLD DEAD hands!!!

  146. thumb print door access by nikkatsu · · Score: 1

    where i work we need to put our thumbs on a small scanner to enter the office.

    i could get no assurance from the PHBs that this info would be kept under lock and key...

  147. Freedom, Identity, Responsibility by jigokukoinu · · Score: 1

    The only thing a person would lose with a firmer attachment of legal identity to oneself would be the freedom to easily do things anonymously AND in person. If that.

  148. Ill figure out some way by DeltaBlaster · · Score: 1

    Ill figure out some way to fake every single biometrical piece of info they tried to get of me heh, theres somethings I dont ever want the government to have heh.

    --
    (This Space For Rent) ....($50 A Month).... (Contact The Voices In Your Head)
  149. retinal patterns by djdead · · Score: 1

    having your retinal pattern embedded on a smart card

    i doubt that they would let retinal patterns be used. your retinal patterns change when you get pregnant. and it's considered an invasion of privacy for women if they have to tell people that they need to change their retinal pattern 'imprint/image' or whatever b/c they're pregnant. IIRC the navy and most of the gov't has stopped using this technology for this reason.

    --
    -1: flamebait should really be -1: inciteful
  150. Re:Biometric ID canNOT fight identity theft. by issachar · · Score: 1
    Biometrics: The identity thief does the same as above but places his/her biometric information on/in the card Results are the same either way.

    Except that biometric data is more easily compared to a central database because it can be done completely automatically. If they swap the biometrics, the card won't match the database and if they don't swap the biometrics the card won't match them.

    The same could be done with photos, but it's not as easy because people can grow beards, dye their hair, lose/gain weight etc. Last I checked I couldn't rip out my retinas and get them replaced. Checking the biometrics is easy. "Excuse me sir, please look into this while I scan your ID..."

    --
    . --- If you're looking for free e-mail you won't find it here! http://www.noemailhere.com
  151. Re:Biometric ID canNOT fight identity theft. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    The solution to the above problem is to distribute your biometric information to everyone on the planet who may need to identify you.

    What we need is a way to "escrow" a biometric certificate of identity.

    I should be able to go to a trusted third party (not the state, and there should me a market of these entities) with all various my various existing IDs, and maybe a witness or two to vouch that I am who I say I am, and have this third party hold a copy of my biometric data. If I ever need to prove my identity, I authenticate to them.

    Hmmm...Identities R Us. Two or three years ago, with enough bullshitting I could have gotten a few million in venture capital to develop this idea... :-)

  152. mod this up! universal identifiers explained by JimBobJoe · · Score: 2

    In case the police want to know if you are you, they send the image to the capital and in 24 hs, they said yes, and they let you out of the police deparment.

    Countries with national ID cards look at the whole idea of innocence very differently that those without.

    See, in the US, Canada, UK, NZ, et cetera, if you're being arrested, and the only reason you get arrested is for a crime, or because the belief is you would be perpetrating a serious crime if you weren't arrested...then you are identified in a complex manner.

    However, if you're just stopped, then you are let go...and what should happen is the officer will believe you when you claim to be. Remember...to not believe who you claim to be is essentially them convicting you of the crime of misrepresentation...before you even had the chance to misrepresent yourself. But here, innocence before guilt prevails. We believe who you claim to be.

    But the Argentines, or the Greeks, or the Belgians, or the Indonesians, are not happy with that. Not only must you prove who you are, but sometimes, you'll be dragged in, with or without a crime under suspicion, and the government has the ability to hold you under arrest, for a certain amount of time, so that they can prove, to their satisfaction, that you are whom you claim to be.

    Countries with ID cards are simply, ID happy. They ask for it wherever you go, for no good reason. Does it prove who you are...well, in context, it proves that you have a name and an address. What exactly does that prove? I think the officer coulda figured out that you had a name and an address before he saw you. I'm starting to see more ID happiness here in the US...and I'm getting pretty bothered by it.

  153. A boon for criminals by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A duplicate of someone else's ID, with Criminal's picture and biometrics hacked in: Criminal is never stopped at a police checkpoint looking for Criminal, because the ID says this person is not Criminal.

  154. Is it non-revokable? by Corvus · · Score: 1

    Once my biometric data is stored as my credentials, how do I revoke it if it gets compromised? That seems to be a problem with using biometrics in general.

    Unless you can get a new set of eyeballs.

  155. THIS TOTALLY KICK ASS! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I can't wait for sphicter imprints as well!

  156. Move to AZ, my license expires 2019 by maxwells_deamon · · Score: 1

    In AZ you have the option of getting a "lifetime" drivers license. Of course it is not really a "lifetime" license but I have had mine for several years now and it expires in 2019. When I am 60.

    They have gone through three design changes since I got mine. So I have no bar code.

    How can they force me to get scanned if my license has not expired?

    Actually it is a bit of a lie,[by the state] I have to go in in a couple of years and get a new picture and pay a small fee if I want to continue to drive in Arizona. But the date on the card is 2019!

    This was a silly law passed mostly to appeal to the stupid. When the people need to come in and get a new photo there will be no way for the aveRage user to realize they have reached the limit! Will be a big stink when they realize it is a problem.

  157. Easily thwarted... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    After a few moments time spent in the microwave oven, this "smart" card driver's license will be functionally equivalent to my current "dumb" card driver's license that had it's magnetic strip information toasted when I accidentally left it in my pocket and walked by a 9.4 Tesla magnet in the NMR lab.

    Seriously, who do they really think they're kidding? Why would anyone willingly tote around a bunch of data (data that you, as an individual citizen, cannot read to verify that the government is only keeping the data that they claimed they would keep and that the information is accurate) for the benefit of our beloved government?

  158. my eyes! by Cenam · · Score: 0

    so now if i get mugged in some ally they will take my eyes too? i don't think i like this idea

    --

    The Truth: There is no string:)
  159. Kiss my shiny metal ass! by knownzero · · Score: 1

    You've got to be kidding, that even more invasive than a national id with your picture and SSN. What the hell is going on? Really, when is this going to stop? A revolution? Is that what its going to take?

    --
    quod me nutrit me destruit
  160. I THINK IT IS A GREAT IDEA by H-1B_visas_suck · · Score: 0

    This country is our place of business. This is where we make our livelihood. People are ripping off right and left. People are being hurt in our cities every day. We not only need biometric IDs, but we need scanners to pick up where we are all the time, plus cameras. The only people who fear technology taking care of us are those who are ripping us off and hurting other people. If you are not that kind of person, you have nothing to fear, and if you think the govt will abuse that power, then maybe you need to get your ass down to the ballot box and take care of your business, like I do.

    --

    This post is protected under the DMTA (Digital Millemium Trolling Act). It is illegal to moderate it as a troll.

  161. Those are Movies, Dumbass! by H-1B_visas_suck · · Score: 0

    Try thinking for yourself

    --

    This post is protected under the DMTA (Digital Millemium Trolling Act). It is illegal to moderate it as a troll.

  162. biometrics aren't that great--especially on a card by MegaFur · · Score: 1
    "What does the Slashdot community think about having your retinal pattern embedded on a smart card?"

    The same thing I thought last time, Pinky: http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=29575&cid=3176 281.

    --
    Furry cows moo and decompress.
  163. Don't need it, don't want it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't want any biometric info about me stored on a card. A card that can be hacked, cloned, stolen, lost, or that can malfunction. What happens if the card spits out the wrong data and now I'm considered Public Enemy #1? It's not me! Yes sir, but the card is never wrong.. all hail the mighty card... Now I have to *prove* that I'm not a crook!

    Then again, I wonder what would happen if the chip wasn't readable... Just put the card between two pieces of wood and start whacking with a hammer... No obvious damage prints, but the thing doesn't work... OR how about putting it in a glass of water, and then putting the whole thing in a microwave oven for a bit... Would that fry the chip? Excessive voltage on the chip? Excessive flexing?

    These congresscritters are morons... anyone who believes that an "ID" would have kept a terrorist from flying a plane into a building is completely high...

  164. is there a real risk? by daevt · · Score: 1

    I don't follow these biometics threads too often. Is there some kind of risk involved, in having some bit of information on a driver's license, that proves you are the person to whom it was issued? As far as I'm concerned, this is bad if its not your license, and good if it is. I for one, have had my license turned down because I cut my hair; denied services because my apperance changed enough over the course of five years, for people to be unsure that I was who I calmed to be.

    Yes, people will forge this stuff, and there will still be theft of information, and this stuff getting sold, but is there any NEW danger to having this sort of information included with your picture, height, and weight?

    I will, unless somebody can show me a downside to this, welcome it. I will never be anonymous, but I still manage to lead a private life, and I think that a large amount of this overreaction, is due to people not realising that these are two very different concepts.

    I will never wear gloves in public because I am affraid somebody might know what my fingerprints look like.

  165. Re:Hand and forehead (religious exemption) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    See comment #3459983.

  166. US gov. not very good at preventing forgeries by johnlcallaway · · Score: 1

    Why does the US govt. think that technology will reduce forgeries?? Several local BurgerKings and McDonalds (Portland, Maine) will only take fifty or hundred dollar bills with a drivers license because of all the counterfits showing up? I thought all those high tech gimmicks in the 50s and 100s were supposed to make counterfiting impossible?

    Anti-forgery measures are only as good as the buffons that have to validate them. How many times has a clerk validated your signature against your credit card?? If it is anything like mine, the two rarely even match, yet they still accept the card.

    Is every mom-and-pop store in country going to install retinal scanners? Doubtful.

    So take comfort. When you go to the airport, they can verify who you are. But what about the other 99.9% of the places you go? Terrorists are very good at finding new ways to kill people.

    --
    I rarely read replies, it's my opinion and if you thought about your opinion a little more, I'm OK with that.
  167. stolen identities, etc... by nido · · Score: 1

    I like your post, but how would the notion of stolen identities play into this? what really happened has links to stories that a number of the supposed "saudi suicide terrorists" were turning up still living - i.e., they'd had their identity usurped. Specifically, why would someone want to implicate saudi arabians in the attacks? (genuine question, i'm just thinking out loud here)

    --
    Learn the rules so you know how to break them properly.
    www.teslabox.com
  168. 2nd Amendment... by Dr.+Network · · Score: 1

    As long as the National ID card doubles as a permit to carry a firearm, I've got no problems with it at all.

  169. As long as Ford by pyros · · Score: 1

    doesn't get hold of my Identiteez (sp?) I'm fine with it. Maybe they should put the biometrics on my American Express card instead.

  170. The point? by cir77787 · · Score: 1

    Why is it that the stupidest work in DC? Believe it or not, we only knew that 2 of the 19 9-11 hijackers were terrorists. What we need to fix is the INS(if that's possible), our intelligience(THAT won't happen in Washington anytime soon!), and our airport security. Your only as safe as your most insecure link, strengthening an already strong link does nothing except waste taxpayer's money.

  171. Scenerio still relies on DMV integrity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Pick a government office at random, and you've got a Real Good(tm) chance of finding ethics that would normally be associated with casinos(or other government offices). Look at all the shredding going on over the Oracle scam.

    Authentication is only as good as it's weakest link, and the government has some serious integrity problems, and that would just be the cherry on top of a pile of other reasons.

    If there is money to be made in accessing biometric information, you better believe the government is gonna start leaking information faster than a swiss cheese boat carring starved rats on a world tour.

    Now that your biometric information is out in the wild, for sale, what will happen to you, if someone steals it? You're going to be totally fucked. It's one thing to claim identity theft for a regular license but for a Super Duper Bio Pro authentication, that everyone is in awe of?
    Lots of luck.

    Why are women so trusting of government?

  172. Re:Who are you? What are you doing? by Darby · · Score: 1

    Sorry, but last time I checked the United States was a FREE COUNTRY

    You apparently haven't checked lately. We had a coup in November and the country is now run by the Bush Organized Crime Family.
    You apparently are not a paranoid leftist. You are not even "paranoid" enough to be a realist in today's world.

  173. Retinas change and are probably not unique by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My eyes used to be brown/green, now they're almost completely green.
    Same goes for almost any other part of the body, I can't see biometry working reliably that way.

    Also, people just ASSUME your retina is unique to you, but i doubt that has been empirically tested in the real world. I think this US licence card will be the first big test of this kind.

    If your retinal scanning and checking is too strict, you will run into trouble when (not if) your retina changes (or when the light is different in the room), you will get false negatives, off to the slammer for you.

    If your retinal scanning is too "loose", you will create false positives, or identify someone as being another person.

    The US is not the worst place to live in but it's getting to the point where you people don't deserve to call it the "Land of the free" anymore.

  174. Try it on the congresscritters first by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Don't you think the congressmen should be the first to surrender all their weapons, as well as the first to get the mark of the beast tatooed on their foreheads? Let's let them use this system for, say, 20 years or so to see how they like it, before they force it on the rest of us...

  175. Retinal problems... by Kirkoff · · Score: 3, Informative

    Not that this'll really get read (it's too late in the story really), but what about people like me with retinal problems. I can still hold a valid driver's license, and drive safely. As time goes on however, my retina will degrade, and that will change. In the intum, my retinal print will look different all the time. In my case, I have large pigmented areas on my retina. The same will be true of other people with simular diseases.

    The people behind the desks at places like the DMV are rather feckless. They won't understand what that is. I will never scan out to be me, I'll always be an "unknown user." Oh, unknown user would probably be constude as not a citizen or, oh say, enemy of the state.

    Blah!

    --Josh

    --
    There are exactly 42,935,718 letter sized sheets in a square mile.
  176. Military ID's... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Try buying a case of beer with a "non-driver identification card" some time. Or god forbid, a passport

    Try using the Geneva Convention card. No one (except maybe some bouncers in strip bars) has seen them. Lots of fun in Canada.

  177. How about joining people in the real world ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why are people in the US so terrified of being registered in a central government database ? I come from Scandinavia, everyone has an ID and the database is accessible by anyone! The only reasons I can think of for not wanting such a database are: 1. You are a criminal 2. You are afraid that this information will be used for advertising. In any case it comes down to not trusting your own government enough to handle this information. What wonderfull freedom it is to not even being able to trust your own government! If you want to know the benefits here are some examples: 1. I do my tax income return online, and the fields are already filled out. 2. I pay all my bills online, what is snailmail ? 3. My entire medical history is available to any doctor I visit. 4. Cash, what is that, I have not used cash for several years, I pay everything with a debit card. Even the guy on the corner with the hotdog stand has a GSM linked card machine. 5. If I want to transfer money from my bank account to my friends account in another bank I log on and the transfer is completed in less than a minute. 6. Any rental (car, video and such) I go to already has all the information needed so I only hand them my debit/credit card. 7. Any time I need a passport, drivers license, debit/credit card or membership card my photo is already in the database. My card/passport/ID is always ready in 2 days, I can order it by phone or online. (All credit/debit cards have photos) 8. Every bank branch has access to the DB and your photo, it is impossible to fake your identity. Checks are no longer used, replaced by debit cards. I think I have more freedom than most. Go watch another episode of X-Files and for all means, buy another gun.

  178. The Public Servant's Contempt For His Master by Steve+B · · Score: 2
    They're trying to avoid the controversial 'national ID' issue by creating what would be new drivers licenses with biometric information embedded.

    In other words, they think that the issues magically go away if they use a different name.

    Evidently, they think the public is as dumb as a bag of rocks. (Hey, we elected them -- what more proof do they need?)

    --
    /. If the government wants us to respect the law, it should set a better example.
  179. DMV was a runner up... by Broadcatch · · Score: 1

    ...for a Big Brother Award bestowed during this year's Computers, Freedom and Privacy conference.

    --

    The antidote for misuse of freedom of speech is more freedom of speech.
    -- Molly Ivins

  180. Smart cards by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes.. that is a great Idea. Smart cards are wonderful.. They have protected Satilite systems from piracy for years.. I'm sure they will do just as well in matters of national identification

  181. The other way to is worse by TheConfusedOne · · Score: 1

    What does the Slashdot community think about having your retinal pattern embedded on a smart card? Well, I'm not too crazy about it but I will have to say that it's better than having a smart card embedded in your retinal pattern.

    --
    --- I wish I could hear the soundtrack to my life. That way I'd know when to duck.
  182. Re:Two letters: OT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    wow: a self righteous dip shit poster who's opinion is OT, and irrelevant.

    you know what they say opinions are like, don't you?

    right, canada is truly free and the rest of us are blind fools living in a dictatorship masqueraded as a democracy because, well, ...you say so.
    you must be the one who is the only person who sees the truth, the rest of the people in the universe are ignorant clods -- what a rare thing to encounter on this site. you're an original.

    your mother is calling you down for dinner yokel...

  183. One word by Old+Uncle+Bill · · Score: 1

    What does the Slashdot community think about having your retinal pattern embedded on a smart card?

    One word: Fucking Terrified
    Oh, wait, that's two words.
    How about: Really Fucking Terrified

    --
    Yes, I am an agent of Satan, but my duties are largely ceremonial.
  184. 666? I think not... by dacarr · · Score: 1
    Frankly, there are people who are to declare this the mark of the beast. Yet, after having seen various friends have their identities stolen through various means, I would personally not mind biometric identification - hell, the military does it on their ID's. Clearly anonymity is removed, however if somebody asks for your identification, they are asking about who you are.

    If it's privacy you want, that's why you have locks on your door or (hopefully) a really obscure password. If it's anonymity you want, change your name.

    --
    This sig no verb.
  185. Association of data by MikeBabcock · · Score: 2

    There's a difference between a physical signature on a document, and a well-made digital one; the digital one shows that the digital key in question was used to sign _that_ document (assuming a lack of hash collisions). A paper signature doesn't do that, although multiple signators, etc. usually helps.

    With an ID card, there's a difference between embedding both retinal data on the card to associate me with the card, and using that data somehow to prove that it is associated with the other data on the card. Just as 'anyone' can put a new photo ID on a card, 'anyone' can put their retinal data on a card. The real question is what kind of math they're going to use to inter-associate the other data on the card with the retinal scan information (which should be aquired real-time, not embedded on the card).

    --
    - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
  186. Degradation ... by ProfMoriarty · · Score: 2
    Ok ... I've worked with smart cards and biometrics (moreso biometrics ...) ... and the problem with this is that over time, the fingerprint gets degraded, simply due to wear and tear on the fingerprint.

    Storing this on a smartcard is not what we want, but a "history" of the fingerprint.

    This way, over time, the print will be "refreshed" on the card, and reject the oldest, lowest scoring print.

    --
    Karma? Karma? I don't need no stinkin' karma.
  187. That's the plan, and it's too dangerous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Obviously, more reliable ID isn't going to help if you're letting known terrorists on the plane, but it might help if done in conjunction with checking names against lists of known terrorists.

    How is this going to help? Are we going to stop 'suspected terrorists' from getting on planes? If so, you allow the government to persecute anyone that any government official places on a 'suspected terrorist' list.

    In the U.S., the government is not supposed to punish people until they have been given and fair trial and convicted. The terrorists in the 9/11 case had not been convicted of any major crimes.

  188. Retinal Pattern? by stungod · · Score: 1

    What does the Slashdot community think about having your retinal pattern embedded on a smart card?

    How about embedding the taste of my ass on the card so Congress can be sure it's mine they're kissing?

  189. Re:state licences are NOT citizenship verification by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why put the burden on the states?

    Because the constition limits the power of the feds. No clause in the constition can support an ID program

  190. Re:Driving is a privilege by bobv-pillars-net · · Score: 2, Informative
    Tongue-in-cheek summary of the parent post:
    Travelling is a privilege; it may be extended or revoked by any official representative of the government.

    "Papers, citizen?"

    Seriously, though, you seem to think that the government is authorized to regulate any potentially dangerous activity, simply because there is potential for wrongdoing. This viewpoint is called "marital law", or "maritime law", or "the law of the sea." There was a time in the history of this country when such a mindset was considered perfectly suitable for the administration of a seagoing vessel (hence the name, "maritime law") but outrageously inappropriate for governing a free people on their own lands.

    You also seem to be confused about the difference between "rights" with "privileges." Allow me to step on my soapbox for a moment:

    • Rights are inherently yours, by virtue of your existence as a human being with independent volition (a.k.a. self-will, or freedom). Some rights are alienable. You have the right to procreate. You can give up that right by getting an operation, such as a vasectomy or a hysterectomy. But people who have done so can remain independent, self-willed, self-directed people. That is, they can remain free. Other rights are inalienable. You have the right to travel. If you are refused that right (by being placed under house arrest, for instance) it changes the nature of your being. You would no longer be an independent, self-willed, self-directed (free) person. You would then become a prisoner or a slave.
    • Privileges, on the other hand, are granted (usually selectively) by an authoritative body. They are gifts from that authority which you could not have acquired on your own. For instance, you have the right to learn, (by virtue of being a thinking human being), but if you live in certain states, you have the privilege of attending a state college, free of charge, funded by state taxes.
    Some people argue that since roads are (usually) built by a government, and driving (on those roads) would not be possible without that government, therefore driving is a privilege extended by that government.

    Others counter that any roadways paid for by public funds belong to the common trust, and no government has the right to selectively refuse access to them.

    Whatever the viewpoint, there are certainly many places in the United States where, if you limit yourself to walking, you won't be able to travel very far without either trespassing or violating some ordinance. Most highways, bridges, and tunnels have signs specifically forbidding pedestrians.

    Realistically, if you can't legally drive, (or hire somebody to drive for you), then you are effectively forbidden to travel beyond a certain range. In that sense, you would arguably become a prisoner of the state, under a limited form of "house arrest."

    --
    The Web is like Usenet, but
    the elephants are untrained.
  191. Re:entitled by bobv-pillars-net · · Score: 1
    ... entitled to certain rights.

    I hope I'm not the only one who sufficiently comprehends the English language to appreciate how oxymoronic that was.

    --
    The Web is like Usenet, but
    the elephants are untrained.
  192. biometrics - buah by yalla · · Score: 1

    We in Germany have the same discussion at the moment, with one difference: We allready have a national ID-card. There where privacy issues in the eigthies when the government introduced the first fully machine-readable id-card, but it was introduced anyway.
    There is also a nation-wide register of places of birth and current residence, so the whole id-card issue is nonsense. The ID-card is just a thing that proves your identity.
    By the way, they (the government of Germany) want to introduce bio as well, but consultants told them, that the false positive/negative and real positive ratio is to bad at the moment. I hope they listen to them...

    Cheers, Alex.

    --
    You look like a million dollars. All green and wrinkled.
  193. Unconstitutional by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Last time I checked the U.S. Constitution, one of the enumerated powers granted to the federal government did not include regulating State licensing operations. Since the 10th amendment makes it abundantly clear that powers not specifically granted to the federales are reserved to the States and the people, this proposed law is just another unconstitutional and hence illegal mandate by a federal government that has gotten way out of control.

    If I'm not mistaken, it was a federal government agency, the INS, that explicity approved the entry of at least 15 of the 19 terrorists into the country in the first place. Why would a State motor vehicle division deny a qualified applicant a license when they already have the seal of approval from our wonderfully efficient INS?

    I also don't remember the Constitution granting power to the federal government to track the citizens of the several states without their explicit consent or to empower any other entity to do so. Perhaps if we had a government that actually operated within the limitations of it's Constitution and individuals that took more responsibility for their own safety, security, and identity - we wouldn't have these problems to begin with.

    Drivers licenses are for proving one's ability to drive safely - hence the term drivers license. They were never intended, nor should they be used as a form of general identification. Want to read more? Check out Claire Wolfe's article on this subject at:

    http://www.backwoodshome.com/columns/wolfe0111.h tm l

    Tired of this kind of crap becoming the law of the land - then get off your butt and vote the jerks who sponsor these bills out of office.

  194. This sounds almost like a good idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This would be a good idea to prevent fake ID's. as comsumer tech gets better the cost of makeing the current ID's will become nice and cheap. Of course it would be cooler to have a database with everones thumprint/DNA/eye scan with open access. Then we wont need ID. Just give them our thumb prints/DNA like thay do on StarTrek to charcg us.

  195. Privacy is overrated anyways... by StarBar · · Score: 1

    In sweden we have had computer registered ID #:s for decades, it is simply your birth day plus four digits. Before that all churches registered births, marriages, deaths and such matters for many hundred years. The problem is not the information itself but the authentication of persons causing and using it. Unless one have something to hide privacy is not the problem.

  196. Right... by Iberian · · Score: 1

    People are always looking for the end of the world. Trust me (or actually Revelations, Daniel, etc) it will be pretty obvious.

  197. It's not needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A National ID will help to identify the bodies. It will not make it easier or more difficult for terroists. The 9/11 hijackers were in this country legally, they obtained drivers licenses legaly and they bought aitline tickets legaly. What we have here is simply another hugely expensive boondoggle that will make someone wealthy and waste tremendous amounts of taxpayer money while appearing to legislate an answer. Want congress to legislate morales next?

  198. make munchies a pain by ffub · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    the way i see it the government could stop the widespread use of cannabis across the nation's youth with retinal scans. A large majority of the drug's smokers simply have few places they can safely smoke the drug and so smoke it on the streets: alleys, deserted residential roads, anywhere quite and aware from attention. without a food suuply these people are forced to buy their munchies from various petrol stations and newsagents. when they are asked for the routine money verication (the government simply steps up the usage of the cards) the stoner realises his ultimate fear: staring at a camera of some sort with blazing red eye...

  199. Why these... by SparafucileMan · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    fascists!

  200. No, it's time to actually *use* our ID system by rakeswell · · Score: 1
    I say it is high time we get ID that works.

    No, it's time for people to actually *use* the ID system we currently have.

    I too had some checks stolen over a year ago. The people who were racking up the thousands of dollars with my checks were apparently never even *asked* for ID from the merchants.

    This is increadible. Someone writes a check for a thousand bucks at Audio King or Best Buy, and the forged check is accepted without being requested to present ID. Then, of course, *I* get nasty letters from these merchants asking to me submit a notarized affidavit attesting to the claim that these checks were fraudulent.

    I sympathise to an extent with the merchants who were defrauded, but then again, had they bothered to verify someone's ID using our *current* system, they (and I) would not have suffered any loss.

    The people who were using my checks were eventually caught, and by golly, none of them had gone through the trouble to forge a Driver's Licence in my name. Go figure.

    Our current system is good enough. We just need to start actually using it.

    BTW, I take the blame for not securing my own checks well enough, though I believe that they were inadvertantly thrown out by my girlfriend (long story).

    --
    All one has to do is hit the right keys at the right time and the instrument plays itself. - Johann Sebastian Bach
  201. Retinal Pattern by howardholton · · Score: 1

    The state of California has for years been collecting fingerprint data when issuing licenses. Lets just hope that these congress men have found a solution to the problems facing retinal scanning in anything but a controlled environment. Several years ago retinal scanners were installed in the capitan's lounge of an international airport with two way security (scans on entry and exit). The pilots would have a couple of drinks in the lounge and their retina would change enough to no longer be recognised as the same eye by the sanner and they were locked in! As a biometric solution the retinal scan was never reliable. Hopefully they have fixed the problems or too many people will not be able to reenter the country after international flights and cruise's that are already a hastle.

    Welcome to 1984 - please submit fingerprint, retinal, stool, urine and blood. All your freedom belong to us!!!!

    --
    Everyone is Ignorant, just in different subjects.
  202. *Ahem* by http101 · · Score: 0

    Has anyone seen the movie, "Runaway" with Tom Seleck? If you haven't, brief summary. Robots go crazy with infected/contaminated chip programming and start killing people. Featured weapon: "Smart Bullet" powered by a fuel-cell rocket. Woohoo. And the fact that the bad guy made an exact replica of Tom's retina pattern from a file he obtained in his employer's database. Funny part is, his employer is the police department. Even funnier, the bad guy got into the police department, disguised as a cop of course, and accessed an unsecured terminal. If that seems too hard to do, look, *chop* I have your thumb. The only way to get around this crap we're facing is to go about living like people. PEOPLE, NOT NUMBERED DATABASE ENTRIES! For example, my friend, Matt likes mountain biking and is a friendly outgoing person. Versus... Number Z-80BB-0395G.80, 440C, made a purchase at Bob's Bike Hut. See, no name, no characteristics, nothing. Matt has been stripped of being a person. Congratulations. If Congress succeeds in this National Biometric ID plan, we're screwed. George Orwell, "1984". Good book, read it.

    --
    -- Game Developers: Stop porting badly-textured games from crappy console systems!
  203. Re:Who are you? What are you doing? by Sean+Clifford · · Score: 2
    You apparently are not a paranoid leftist. You are not even "paranoid" enough to be a realist in today's world.

    Damn, you're right. Time to boost my paranoia to straight-jacket levels! I wholeheartedly agree with your assessment of the Bush gang and the coup in December of 2000 (fraudulent 'election' in November, Supreme Court supported coup in December).

    I'm so incredibly tired of this bullshit 'War on Terrorism' where the definition of a terrorist gets expanded on a daily basis to include anyone who disagrees with the Bush administration. To paraphrase Ari Fleicher says 'Americans better watch what they do and what they say' and Ashcroft 'Either you're with us, or with the terrorists'.

  204. I can always pick a new PIN. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Gettingn a new thumbprint, retinal pattern, excrement signature is another matter entirely!

    It's a lot easier to re-create the digital bits that comprise my thumbprint than it is to chop off my thumb. These stuffs won't work. To paraphrase: "Good passwords for some, crappy passwords for others, minature American flags for everyone!"

  205. Re:Who are you? What are you doing? by Darby · · Score: 1

    I wholeheartedly agree with your assessment of the Bush gang and the coup in December of 2000 (fraudulent 'election' in November, Supreme Court supported coup in December).

    In point of fact, the real dirty work happened several months before the election.
    Good old Jeb stripped 100,000 democratic voters of their right to vote. This was actually published in the mainstream media in The Washington Post. The sad thing is that even though this is probably the biggest story in the history of the country they decided to print the story months after it was submitted on page 8.

    Look it up.

    While you're at it, do a search on the phrase, "Accept this carpet of gold or we will bury you under a carpet of bombs", for the reasons behind the war.

  206. US military already doing this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They have been implementing a smart card that contains fingerprint,blood type, SSN, encrypted and requiring a PIN.

    Now the stupid part, the card does not have your signature on it so some places on military bases are not accepting the card as identification for cashing check, credit cards, etc.

  207. No prob, thank you. (NT) by Darby · · Score: 1

    nothing here.