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U.S. Postal Service To Develop 'Intelligent Mail'

securitas writes "The President's Commission on the U.S. Postal Service's final report (PDF) has recommended that the USPS and the Department of Homeland Security develop sender identification technology for all U.S. mail. The commission said Intelligent Mail could bolster security and let consumers track the progress of all mail they send, which has been a top consumer demand in surveys. The report released July 31 reads, "Each piece of Intelligent Mail will carry a unique, machine-readable barcode (or other indicia) that will identify, at a minimum, the sender, the destination, and the class of mail... Intelligent Mail will allow the real-time tracking of individual mail pieces." Privacy advocates like the EFF and Center for Democracy & Technology are understandably concerned. The Final Recommendations are available in PDF format. More at Direct Marketers News and pro-privacy/civil liberties magazine Counterpunch." Jamie adds: This confuses me, because I read a news story in late 2001 which matter-of-factly explained that authorities would be contacting recipients of letters which went through a particular post office around the same time as an anthrax envelope. The implication, which I haven't seen any discussion of then or since, is that records are kept of every letter's travels through every post office. Anyone know anything about that? Update: mec does.

9 of 345 comments (clear)

  1. Inconvenience is overwhelming by capt.Hij · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I didn't realize that I have a right to send anonymous mail. The practical aspects are the killer for me. If I can't just drop a letter in a mail bin then the US postal service is too restrictive for me to use. I'm not going to go to the post office, stand in line, get ID'ed just to send a letter. I can pay my bills on-line. This seems like a great way to put the USPS out of business.

  2. Remember folks... eternal vigilance is the price.. by Dutchmaan · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The more tracking information we allow to be used, the technological conveniences we embrace, the greater the need to keep watch to make sure they are not abused. Technology is a good thing, but like fire, it must be carefully watched.

    If we turn lazy and complacent, the price will be our own freedom.

  3. Re:Now all they need are by Lord_Slepnir · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The problem isn't stupid PO Employees, its the fact that PO employees are so bound down by beurocratic rules and regulations that they can't do anything outside of exactly what they're supposted to do. It's not stupid employees per se, it's stupid people at the top making the rules

  4. Re:UK mail by dotwaffle · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Americans often get "scared" by things like this, as they're unconstitutional and whatever, but is it really worth getting worried about? Check your email with telnet next time you are expecting mail. You notice there will be a recipient address, a postors address, and all the servers is has passed through... Sound familiar? And yes, British post is registered to the point that you can track a piece of mail as it gets lost (sorry... gets delivered). Well, business/franked mail anyway. Obviously most mail can't be traced to the source, just the first Post Office it passes through...

  5. So what? Oh, wait... by CBNobi · · Score: 5, Insightful

    My initial reaction to reading this was, 'so what?' After all, UPS and FedEx do this to their packages, and it's particularly useful for online purchases.

    From page xvii of the report:
    "Intelligent Mail could allow the Postal Service to permit mail-tracking and other in-demand services via a robust website..."

    So it seems like they're going the UPS/FedEx route, and making it a useful tool for users of the postal system.

    However, later on in the report (pp. 147-148):
    "Intelligent Mail's Security Applications Should be Aggressively Pursued" ...
    "Requiring all mail to identify its sender would likely have a negligible impact on most users...[they] would consider such a requirement a relatively modest concession to ensure their safety"

    They're using the same flawed argument that they used in many post-9/11 dealings, including the Patriot Act. Great.

  6. I am a US Postal Employee by Crazieeman · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The biggest problem with mail arriving late lies with people unable to write, unable to address, and unable to even stamp mailpieces properly.

    How the badly addressed mail process works in short:

    Mail is brought to the General Mail Facility, where it is run through machines that attempt to read the addresses. The software isn't perfect, quite a few aren't readable to it. The digital image is sent to various Remote Encoding Sites in which people (like me) try to decipher the addresses and input them properly. The information is sent back to the GMF, barcode is printed on, and the piece goes its way. If we cannot decipher it, the image gets rejected, and the mailpiece goes to manual sorting.

    Why it takes so long sometimes

    A tremendous amount of people do not know how to address. They do not include directionals. They do not include street suffixes. Transposition of zip codes, or downright incorrect ones in contrast to the city destination. If you want your mail to get somewhere fast, place a Zip+4 and make sure it is correct. That is the first number we look at.

    Directionals and suffixes are important. An especially frustrating case is the Kansas City metro area. Where there can be a 31st Street, Place, Avenue, Road, Circle, Court, Terrace. On top of that, North/South/East/West.

    Abbreviation of streets and cities is another frustrating issue. I work in Wichita, KS. We receive images from facilities in Kansas, Nebraska, South Dakota, North Dakota, Minnesota, Illinois, Wisconsin, Iowa, Missouri, and New York. Some street in Minneapolis with a long name that is routinely abbreviated by residents is foreign to those 800 miles away. Please write the street in full.

    Zip Codes. These are very important. The computers read these first. We read these first. An irritating tendancy for people in the northeast is to drop off the 0 in their 5 digit zips. This is especially true in Connecticut. Ever wonder why sometimes it really takes 7-9 days for something to go across town? Because its getting sent to Kansas City and run through the system before it gets straightened out and sent back.

    Lastly, bad handwriting. Try to be careful about 5 and S, Zero and O, and 9 and 4.

    1. Re:I am a US Postal Employee by dogfart · · Score: 4, Insightful
      This sounds like the making of a FAQ. Seriously. Should be posted in post offices and on mail boxes. Should be printed on the back of sheets of stamps.

      What about kiosks at post ofices where you can enter an address and it either asks for clarification (did you mean Main Street or Main Boulevard? Is is South Main Street or North Main Street) or gives you the zip+5

      --

      "dope will get you through times of no money better than money will get you through times of no dope"

  7. Sigh... by Kaa · · Score: 3, Insightful
    The Washington Post article contains this gem:

    The Postal Service estimates that it delivers about 670 million pieces of mail to more than 138 million addresses daily, leading to concerns among law enforcement and government officials that it is too easy to use the system for criminal or terrorist activity.

    Boggle.

    I am waiting for the moment when it occurs to these people that it's too easy to use the USA road system for criminal or terrorist activity. Or just sidewalks, for that matter.

    Thank god that they don't have any idea that computer networks exist. If they are that apprehensive about a postal system, just imagine the hysterics they'll have when they discover the Internet...
    --

    Kaa
    Kaa's Law: In any sufficiently large group of people most are idiots.
  8. Re:In other news... by Latent+IT · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Third, where does this notion that postal rates are high come from? First class postage was raised to 13 cents in 1975. It's roughly tripled in about 30 years. Do you know what cars cost in 1975? Besides, it's 37 cents!

    EXACTLY. You hit the nail on the head.

    Seriously, look at it this way - I need you to take these pieces of paper, deliver them across the country, in less than a week, to Upper Moosejaw, Montana. My uncle Steve's house.

    He lives at the end of a dirt road, somewhere. I think. Past the shell station, on the left?

    So, yeah. To do this, I'll give you $.37.

    Hey, I consider that a deal. =)