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Passport Required To Buy Mobile Phones In the UK

David Gerard points out a Times Online story that says: "Everyone [in the UK] who buys a mobile telephone will be forced to register their identity on a national database under government plans to extend massively the powers of state surveillance. Phone buyers would have to present a passport or other official form of identification at the point of purchase. Privacy campaigners fear it marks the latest government move to create a surveillance society. A compulsory national register for the owners of all 72m mobile phones in Britain would be part of a much bigger database to combat terrorism and crime. Whitehall officials have raised the idea of a register containing the names and addresses of everyone who buys a phone in recent talks with Vodafone and other telephone companies, insiders say." We've recently discussed other methods the UK government is using to keep track of people within its borders, such as ID cards for foreigners and comprehensive email surveillance.

21 of 388 comments (clear)

  1. It's always been required... by wellard1981 · · Score: 5, Informative

    When signing up for a new mobile phone contract, you're pretty much asked for two forms of identifications, such as a driving license, passport, utility bills, etc. so this is nothing new. The new part is the national surveillance database. Thank god I'm moving out of this country.

    1. Re:It's always been required... by sakdoctor · · Score: 5, Insightful

      1. Buy a PAYG phone
      2. Don't bother registering it
      3. Buy top-ups using cash
      4. Anonymity

      Irrelevant in the grand scheme of things. The most powerful vote you have is indeed to leave.

    2. Re:It's always been required... by 91degrees · · Score: 4, Insightful

      They're talking about pre-pay phones.

      As a result, terrorists are going to run up some hefty roaming charges as they buy foreign pre-pay phones, or just stolen/cloned ones.

    3. Re:It's always been required... by xaxa · · Score: 4, Informative

      They've always wanted some form of ID for contract phones -- to do a credit check for a start.

      The news is that it's been suggested pay-as-you-go phones should require ID to purchase. This might catch some stupid criminals, but it's not going to stop terrorists (who will steal a phone, use a foreign one, or buy one second hand).

    4. Re:It's always been required... by Bert64 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Criminals will go back to using payphones and face to face meetings to discuss their criminal activities.
      And stealing phones, since they're already criminals having to steal a phone isn't much of a deterrent.

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    5. Re:It's always been required... by legirons · · Score: 4, Insightful

      When signing up for a new mobile phone contract, you're pretty much asked for two forms of identifications, such as a driving license, passport, utility bills, etc. so this is nothing new.

      That's because the mobile phone contract will be collecting money from you for the next 2 years and if you disappear they lose out so they want to know who you are.

      By contrast, you can buy a SIM card with cash with nobody asking who you are (unless the shop is trying its chances at getting an address for their spam mail) because you pay in advance therefore you don't owe any further money to the shop, therefore they don't need to know who you are.

      So...

      (1) THIS *IS* NEW (contrary to your attempts to deny it by comparison with what private companies choose to do when they give you credit)

      (2) Why in every civil-liberties story is there always someone to pop-up with a justification based on government's previous bad behaviour?

      * "this isn't so much worse than what they have already" - one step at a time

      * "they were already doing that but illegally, so this isn't new"

      * "some other government is already doing this, so it isn't new"

      * "the other political party agrees with them, so anyone who complains is a hypocrite"

      * "the government did this before [during a war], so it isn't new"

      Just because something resembles authoritarian behaviour of the past doesn't mean it should be accepted, quite the opposite.

  2. Ridiculous by CRCulver · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I had a similar problem when I wanted to by a SIM card in provincial Russia last month. The clerk wouldn't give me one, claiming that not only would I have to show a passport, but a Russian passport. I then just asked a friend to buy the damn thing for me. I thought it was stupid considering how, in most of the civilized world, travelers buy a SIM card from a local kiosk as a matter of course. It's sad to see the UK limiting the ease of travel, then.

  3. no privacy here, no privacy there by v1 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Are the USA and the UK in some sort of competition to see who can do the more thorough job of obliterating their citizens' rights to privacy?

    Lately there's been a morbid tit-for-tat article exchange going on here on slash, like the USA and UK are trying to outdo one another. Just when you think the USA or UK is as bad as it gets, there's a reply.

    --
    I work for the Department of Redundancy Department.
    1. Re:no privacy here, no privacy there by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I just don't understand it.

      Both countries have rich and deep histories of democratic values.

      Where is this coming from? The wealthy? Have they "won the game" and now want to lock it in?

      Or has the military/security complex gotten too big?

      These are now a much bigger threat than terrorism- which might at most kill a few thousand people. If the government goes bad while possessing all these powers, the death count will be much higher. And then you add in the "torture is okay/not really torture" right wing meme that's been building (Thanks! Liberals behind "24" for helping too with that!) -- it gets damn scary.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    2. Re:no privacy here, no privacy there by OriginalArlen · · Score: 4, Insightful

      No need to appeal to maliciousness to explain that which can easily be explained by incompetence (the reciprocal of "cockup over conspiracy".) It's a combination of simple-minded headline grabbing by unprincipled politicians (which isn't actually ALL of them, quite yet), plus an infuriatingly vacuous, knee-jerk, reactionary tabloid press which sets the agenda for all mainstream political debate. It's depressing, pathetic, outrageous.

      However as a long-time observer of the UK domestic political scene over the last thirty years or so, I see a lot of straws in the wind suggesting that the tide is turning (pardon the mixed metaphors.) When the shadow Home Secretary resigned to protest a particular high profile issue (42 days in jail without charges), and the "surveillance state" issues in general (CCTV, ID cards, criminal record checks, ubiquitous state databases on the population, security theatre in response to 9/11, etc etc) you KNOW something's up. I noticed that Times story on their front page; it's bagged up so I could only read a couple of lines above the fold, but they managed to get "raising fears amongst privacy campaigners of the surveillance state" in there. Interestingly, a lot of this stuff is actually being picked up by the very same reactionary tabloids that howled about paedophiles, immigrants, crime, terrorism and so on, as a stick to beat the Labour government with! This strikes me as beautifully poetic justice. Brown's picked up a short-term lift on account of how he does look good wearing a dark tie and a solemn expression whilst appearing to save the world from economic catastrophe. However in six months' time, when it becomes apparent that avoiding catastrophe has not meant avoiding 2.5 or 3 million unemployed, that's going to be painted as "rescuing the fat cats". (Don't get me started on the sickening hypocrisy with which the "kick-a-banker" movement has got going over the last couple of months... )

      --

      Everything I needed to know about life, I learnt from Blake's Seven
  4. Simpler and cheaper solution... by denzacar · · Score: 4, Funny

    1. Wait in front of mobile-selling location.
    2. Spot mobile-buying victim.
    3. Follow victim for a while.
    4. Club victim on the head, grab bag, run.

    You get: one or more mobile phones and cards, one or more forms of ID, money, credit card(s), car and/or house key(s), one or more packet(s) of tissues, one or more packet(s) of gum, various other bonuses.

    Or are you perhaps one of those pussy terrorists that is afraid of hitting people on the head and only does suicide bombings?

    --
    Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens
  5. We told you so! by Lord+Kano · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It was over a decade ago when they were getting happy with CCTV cameras in London. We talked about how creepy that was and that they should be careful that they were not sliding down a slippery slope. We were dismissed, we were laughed at, and now look. We were right.

    LK

    --
    "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
  6. Jason Bourne by tangent3 · · Score: 4, Funny

    This would have prevented Jason Bourne from buying a phone and planting it on Simon Ross to talk to him covertly without the CIA being able to trace the call.

    My guess would be the UK government watched the movie and decided this loophole need to be closed.

  7. Cell phones and terrorists by qbzzt · · Score: 5, Insightful

    However, if you're planning $LARGE_SPECTACULAR_JIHADIST_ATTACK, and you steal a phone, it makes you a little more likely to be caught/fail.

    You don't. You get a sympathizer to buy one for you, and then claim it was stolen. Enough phones are stolen anyway that this won't look suspicious.

    Open societies are going to be vulnerable to terrorism. We can accept that, give up our freedoms, or be so scary nobody will want to mess with us.

    --
    -- Support a free market in the field of government
    1. Re:Cell phones and terrorists by ATMD · · Score: 5, Insightful

      > Open societies are going to be vulnerable to terrorism.

      Mod parent up, this is the most insightful thing I've seen on Slashdot in a good while. When you scale that familiar security/convenience trade-off up to national governments, it morphs into security/civil liberties. Since absolute security can never be achieved, (be it for computer or country), the march towards that end of the spectrum must be halted before citizens of the Western world have no more freedom than denizens of 1970s Cambodia.

      --
      Nobody else has this sig.
    2. Re:Cell phones and terrorists by sumdumass · · Score: 4, Interesting

      All they got to do is create a law/rule that says you must report your phone as stolen within X many hours of you noticing it. This will give plenty of manufactured evidence to pursue your connections with other people as well as make stolen phones only viable to a little less then a week.

      Suppose the rule is within 48 or 72 hours of noticing it is missing. If "Osama the Terrorist" is using it for 5 weeks, you lose your ability to claim ignorance and state the phone was stolen or lost. But if your do claim it within 48 or 72 hours, the government either monitors the calls or deactivates it. I'm sure there could be scenarios where you could legitimately lose a phone or have it stolen and not notice it for a week or longer, but it would give the law enforcement the opportunity to check out all your contacts and so on plus it might end up costing some serious cash to defend yourself after being charged.

    3. Re:Cell phones and terrorists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "Open societies are going to be vulnerable to terrorism. We can accept that, give up our freedoms, or be so scary nobody will want to mess with us."

      That is admitting our country is fearful and so we create a police state to suppress anyone who we fear. Yet we will still then have to live in fear. Its better to live without fear.

      Also what happens if the ones in power arrogantly decide to do something people disagree with?. In such a police state, the ones in power will use and abuse their powers, to force their point of view, on to everyone.

      This already keeps happening in the UK. E.g. They used anti-terror laws against Iceland, who are not at all terrorists. The ones in power have at times behaved with incredible arrogance. Their views are so often these days, utterly self righteous. They show narcissistic behaviour and contempt for anyone who disagrees with them, yet you want us to just keep giving them all more power. Freedom and democracy are constantly undermined by a minority of people in power, for their own gain. That is why democracy has to be defended. People who undermine democracy, are by definition, lacking empathy towards others. You want to let these people dictate terms to you? ... well you will be, if you give in to fear.

      The UK has fought two world wars to rid the world of narcissistic totalitarian dictators. Yet it looks like the lessons of history have not been learned.

    4. Re:Cell phones and terrorists by AmiMoJo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Open societies are going to be vulnerable to terrorism.

      Exactly. We make this loss of life to benefit judgement all the time. We sent troops overseas, knowing some will die but judging it a worthwhile sacrifice. People die in road accidents, but not enough to make us want to ban cars.

      In London, 52 people died in the 7/7 attacks. Unlike the examples I gave, that was a one-off event, not a yearly loss. Even in 11/9, only around 3,000 people died compared to over 11,000 a year from gun crime in the US, and again it was a one-off event. There is simply no way to argue that terrorism is deadly enough to warrant taking away fundamental freedoms from millions of innocent citizens.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
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    5. Re:Cell phones and terrorists by Peter+Greenwood · · Score: 5, Informative

      >>They used anti-terror laws against Iceland, who are not at all terrorists.

      >When? Do you have a cite on this?

      It's well known. Google "iceland terror" and - among lots of others - http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601085&sid=a9R6kEktPff0&refer=europe

      The government wound in some "independent" reviewer of anti-terror legislation to claim the bit of the Act they used wasn’t really anti-terror legislation. You can judge how independent he is by the fact that the same man stood up in Parliament a few days later to argue in favour of a (now defeated) proposal to allow the police to lock "terrorist suspects" up for 6 weeks at a stretch.

      We used to sneer at all those tinpot Balkan dictatorships where you had to carry identity papers everywhere, the police could lock anyone up on a whim, and the only telephones you could buy were designed to allow Them to monitor you. And they used to make unbelievably weird claims about the evils of foreign governments. Then we went and elected a Labour government ...

      --
      freedom, n. Allowing people you don't like to do things you disapprove of.
  8. Movie Plot Threats by stereoroid · · Score: 4, Funny

    Another belated movie plot threat response. Specifically, The Bourne Ultimatum, in which Bourne arrives at London's Waterloo station and immediately purchases a pre-paid cellphone to give to his journalist contact. If he had to show a passport to buy that phone... he could have been delayed by a couple of seconds, while he decided which of his fake passports to use. Gee.

    --
    (this is not a .sig)
  9. Typewriters by AliasMarlowe · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Anyone remember when typewriters had to be registered in several Eastern European countries? Being mechanical devices, each had its own unique signature (character shapes, weights, and so forth). The idea was to be able to track the origin of unapproved newsletters etc. which were typically produced via typewriter and stencil or carbon paper. This was all rendered irrelevant by the arrival of PC-based communications (a rear-guard action was fought over printers, faxes, and so forth).

    Looks like the UK has just revised those old Soviet-era laws for current technology. Anonymous communication must be considered to be really subversive in the UK.

    --
    Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities. - Voltaire