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Big Brother Calls 'Shotgun' In Illinois

Reader kackle joins the army of free and accepted Slashdot submitters with this eyebrow-raising story: "I received a form letter from the Illinois State Toll Highway Authority saying that my first-generation 'IPASS' transponder needs to be replaced because the battery is old. I called them for clarification since the first-generation transponders obviously have user-replaceable batteries, and I wanted to keep this version because it beeps when a toll is paid. (This notifies drivers that their battery is still good, unlike the silent second-generation version, which informs them of a dead battery by sending a ticket in the mail.) The woman on the phone explained that they were replacing them just because the electronics are old. This uninformed answer made me research the device. I found that the manufacturer has recently filed a patent application for a new transponder that has a camera in it — a camera pointed inward at the occupants. How long before they make it illegal to cover that camera with tape?"

475 comments

  1. So don't cover it with tape by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Take a picture of the inside of your car, shrink it down, and attach it to the camera. They'll be so confused about the driverless car that they won't worry about what laws you might be breaking.

    1. Re:So don't cover it with tape by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

      No, they'll see something dark and out-of-focus. You should learn how light and optics work before you post about the topic.

    2. Re:So don't cover it with tape by v1 · · Score: 1

      They'll be so confused about the driverless car

      Oh come on, you can be more creative than that! How about photoshopping in Hitler, George Bush, Big Bird, or your dalmation?

      I really don't see why it matters though, the ticket is tied to the license plate, hence the owner of the car, regardless of who's at the wheel.

      --
      I work for the Department of Redundancy Department.
    3. Re:So don't cover it with tape by erroneus · · Score: 1

      That is unless they want positive ID of a person. Most of these automated citations have not taken their cases to criminal traffic courts because of the problem of positive identification. If they are trying to make positive identification more clear or obvious, you can bet they are trying to use the criminal/traffic courts to collect fines instead of using civil courts.

    4. Re:So don't cover it with tape by ByOhTek · · Score: 2

      Better yet, cover it in the blood of your enemies!

      --
      Self proclaimed typo king, and inventor of the bear destroying coffee table (patent not pending).
    5. Re:So don't cover it with tape by djdanlib · · Score: 2, Informative

      I don't see how this is flamebait - it's a valid point.

      If you put a picture flush onto a camera lens, that's going to be too close for the camera to focus on the image, so there will be no detail - probably one giant blur. Also, it will block any light from entering the system, so there's nothing to reflect off the photo back into the lens.

      You can try it with your own eye or even your glasses, it works about the same. Look at your palm. Now put your palm right over your eye. Can't see anything, right?

      However, the idea has comedic merit. Perhaps one could find a way to make this work anyway... maybe mount it in the glovebox, with one of those electronic picture frames that are oh so popular on Black Friday, and play videos of in-car footage of accidents all day.

    6. Re:So don't cover it with tape by batquux · · Score: 3, Insightful

      What's the point, anyway? If the device is working, then the toll gets paid. If it's not, they aren't going to get an image from it.

    7. Re:So don't cover it with tape by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your ideas intrigue me and I wish to subscribe to your newsletter.

    8. Re:So don't cover it with tape by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I modded you funny because slashdot doesn't have 'awesome' as a selection.

    9. Re:So don't cover it with tape by hedwards · · Score: 1

      They don't take it to court because they'd have to send somebody to court to testify. If needing a positive ID to issue a citation were necessary nobody would ever get a parking ticket that wasn't caught getting into or out of the improperly parked car.

    10. Re:So don't cover it with tape by pixelpusher220 · · Score: 2

      the 'point' is when you have 'tolls' that get paid if you only have one passenger and tolls that you're exempt from if you're HOV.

      HOT lanes are being built in DC and exist in a number of other places. This device is tailor made for HOT lanes...and of course massive privacy invasion, but that's just icing on the cake I'm sure ;-)

      --
      People in cars cause accidents....accidents in cars cause people :-D
    11. Re:So don't cover it with tape by kimvette · · Score: 1

      Not necessarily. Even if the lens is an f/2.8 or f/2.2, the depth of field is really, really deep on a tiny sensor and in a vehicle the sharp focus point would have to be really close to the camera - less than a foot given some windshield designs and how some people mount their transponders. A photo of a driverless cockpit in front of the camera would be hilarious - even better would be erotic photos, or maybe flash cards featuring 1984 references.

      --
      The Christian Right is Neither (Christian nor right). See: Matthew 23, Matthew 25, Ezekiel 16:48-50
    12. Re:So don't cover it with tape by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, it's even more than that. My car is technically registered in my wife's name. I've gotten a couple automated tickets. One was a speed camera, the other was a red light camera. The red light camera was BS anyway. The first picture showed me behind the line with my brake lights ON. The second one, two seconds later, showed me starting to make a right turn. However, since my wife's name is on the registration and not mine, she just had to sign the portion that said she wasn't driving. The tickets were dropped. For some states, a moving violation requires that the driver is ticketed. If the owner of the car isn't driving, then no one gets a ticket.

    13. Re:So don't cover it with tape by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My enemies are corporations, while they are people, they have no blood except that which they have ripped from the bodies of their victims.

    14. Re:So don't cover it with tape by Frenzied+Apathy · · Score: 1, Funny

      No, they'll see something dark and out-of-focus. You should learn how light and optics work before you post about the topic.

      No, they'll see something dark and out-of-focus. You should learn how light and optics work before you post about the topic.

      NOT flamebait!

      --
      The cake is a lie.
    15. Re:So don't cover it with tape by mikael · · Score: 1

      You would need a magnifying lens to modify the focal length to a short distance. That shouldn't be too difficult to find. Jeweller, watchmaker, electronic technician and medical suppliers often have magnifying lenses/eyeglasses that are designed for close up work.

      --
      Vintage computer adverts: http://www.vintageadbrowser.com/computers-and-software-ads
    16. Re:So don't cover it with tape by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is why we attach them high-up on the window so that they are behind the rear view mirror. All they see is plastic.

    17. Re:So don't cover it with tape by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or just wear Black bar sunglasses

    18. Re:So don't cover it with tape by bennomatic · · Score: 2

      Ah, here's a subtle but distressing possibility:

      If you pass through more than one toll gate, they can determine your average speed between the toll gates, and if it's over the average posted limit, they can send you a ticket. If they have a picture of you driving at both check points, then they have proof it was you speeding.

      Further, if you're being investigated for some reason, your transponder may not be enough evidence ("Just because my car was parked outside that bank doesn't mean I was... I was nowhere *NEAR* that robbery!!"), getting pictures of you driving through toll gates at specific times may be enough to invalidate your alibi.

      It may sound like tin foil hats, but I think this is far more insidious than, say, the caching of cell tower data in iPhone/Android/Blackberry devices.

      --
      The CB App. What's your 20?
    19. Re:So don't cover it with tape by bennomatic · · Score: 1

      s/is more insidious/would be more insidious if they actually implemented it/

      --
      The CB App. What's your 20?
    20. Re:So don't cover it with tape by NathanWoodruff · · Score: 0

      Atlanta Georgia just got the HOT lanes October 1st. It was claimed that it would relieve the congestion. They changed over the HOV lane to now HOT lane. When it was the HOV lane I could see a number of cars using that lane and traffic flow on the other 7 lanes would move about 35 to 45 miles an hour the 10 miles or so of HOV lane.

      Monday afternoon was the first evening rush hour traffic now using the HOT lane. It took me almost 2 hours to drive that 10 miles of interstate and I think I counted 15 people using that HOT lane the entire 2 hours.

      Some brilliant person decided that taking an HOV lane that people would use to save money would now be willing to spend money to save money. There is now no incentive for people to car pool and instead use there own personal cars. Thus forcing more cars into the 7 lanes. I wonder who the genius was that decided that??? The cost to travel 7 miles???? $5.40.... Who is going to pay that everyday?

      Tuesday was the same way. After an hour and a half of sitting on the interstate, I decided to take back roads what almost a clogged now due to the traffic not moving on the interstate.

      Don't believe me, check this link starting about 4pm eastern time and watch as about 15 miles of interstate come to a halt. http://511ga.org/realtimetraffic.html

      Nathan

    21. Re:So don't cover it with tape by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That is the point, actually. The patent applicants profess not to care about the identity of the occupants, so long as they can be counted. And you pay LESS MONEY for higher occupancies, according to the patent.

      Just hanging a photo is not necessarily gonna do it, though. Claim 19 (IR camera) means you'll also need a heating element.

    22. Re:So don't cover it with tape by lgw · · Score: 2

      There's a stretch of highway near me in Silly Valley that's HOV or toll. Now that works great, lots of traffic in the lane, but if it gets too slow the toll drivers start to bail, keeping it fast.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    23. Re:So don't cover it with tape by interval1066 · · Score: 1
      Discussion The /. Way:
      1. Joke fodder: 65%
      2. Off-topic argument regarding minutia: 20%
      3. Serious, on-point discussion: 15%
      4. ???
      5. PROFIT!!!
      --
      Python: 'And then suddenly you have a language which says "we're all stuck with whatever the whiniest coder wants".'
    24. Re:So don't cover it with tape by SleazyRidr · · Score: 0

      You should learn how humour works before you post about the topic.

    25. Re:So don't cover it with tape by logjon · · Score: 0

      In Missouri, red light camera tickets were getting thrown out pretty much every time someone contested it. It came down to "prove I was driving."

      --
      The stories and info posted here are artistic works of fiction and falsehood.
      Only fools would take it as fact.
    26. Re:So don't cover it with tape by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      If they have a picture of you driving at both check points, then they have proof it was you speeding.

      No. They have only proof that you've been driving at the two check points. For example if you are two people in the car, you might have changed seats just after the first and just before the second check point.

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    27. Re:So don't cover it with tape by Aeros · · Score: 0

      jesus, lighten up. You were probably the kid who always waved down the teacher to let her know she forgot to hand out home-work right?

    28. Re:So don't cover it with tape by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      Oh, they have blood. It's just not red. It's usually called "money".

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    29. Re:So don't cover it with tape by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Better yet GoatSee!

    30. Re:So don't cover it with tape by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I bet you're the life of every party

    31. Re:So don't cover it with tape by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't see how this is flamebait - it's a valid point.

      If you put a picture flush onto a camera lens, that's going to be too close for the camera to focus on the image, so there will be no detail - probably one giant blur. Also, it will block any light from entering the system, so there's nothing to reflect off the photo back into the lens.

      You can try it with your own eye or even your glasses, it works about the same. Look at your palm. Now put your palm right over your eye. Can't see anything, right?

      However, the idea has comedic merit. Perhaps one could find a way to make this work anyway... maybe mount it in the glovebox, with one of those electronic picture frames that are oh so popular on Black Friday, and play videos of in-car footage of accidents all day.

      whoooooooooooosh

    32. Re:So don't cover it with tape by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      So attach the camera to a periscope pointing to a well lit unoccupied mini car interior.

    33. Re:So don't cover it with tape by Ritchie70 · · Score: 1

      Not in Illinois, though.

      --
      The preferred solution is to not have a problem.
    34. Re:So don't cover it with tape by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, you should get a sense of humor before you respond to a joke.

    35. Re:So don't cover it with tape by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I saw this work in The Fifth Element. If that movie isn't a treatise on physics, I don't know what is.

    36. Re:So don't cover it with tape by bryan1945 · · Score: 1

      Nah, just stick some Silly Putty all over it. If they come after you, "Hey, my kid was playing in the car, what ya want?"

      --
      Vote monkeys into Congress. They are cheaper and more trustworthy.
    37. Re:So don't cover it with tape by pkinetics · · Score: 1

      Highly doubtful you would be able to change drivers in a short enough time to exceed the speed limit between toll gate A and B.

    38. Re:So don't cover it with tape by GameboyRMH · · Score: 2

      I fucking hate that kid >_<

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    39. Re:So don't cover it with tape by kcitren · · Score: 1

      There's a stretch of highway near me in Silly Valley that's HOV or toll

      That's what a HOT (HOV or Toll) lane is.

    40. Re:So don't cover it with tape by pixelpusher220 · · Score: 1

      googling "Illinois HOT Lanes" brought back quite a few results. Example from 2008...

      --
      People in cars cause accidents....accidents in cars cause people :-D
    41. Re:So don't cover it with tape by Lumpy · · Score: 2

      Ok then use your reprap to print a correction lens sand and polish it, then take a photo from that angle with the right lens view and convert it to a 1200 dpi transparency that you put in front of a diffuser that has a color corrected led light source to compensate for it.

      That does not sound as funny as taping a photo.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    42. Re:So don't cover it with tape by SharpFang · · Score: 1

      Goddamnit, be creative! Set up a netbook or portable DVD player or something like that, with autoplay of motherless.com set to a choice of channels like gore, scat, vomit, elderly porn etc, placing it just in focus of the camera.

      --
      45 5F E1 04 22 CA 29 C4 93 3F 95 05 2B 79 2A B2
    43. Re:So don't cover it with tape by Lumpy · · Score: 1

      Thre is no way in hell you can speed between iPASS gates in chicago.. In fact there is no way in hell you can do the average speed limit between them. Traffic is so screwed up you end up with an average speed of 35mph.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    44. Re:So don't cover it with tape by Ritchie70 · · Score: 1

      I do not believe they actually exist on Illinois toll roads. I certainly have never seen one and I've been on most of the major toll roads in the area.

      --
      The preferred solution is to not have a problem.
    45. Re:So don't cover it with tape by superdave80 · · Score: 1

      HOT (High Occupancy Toll, not HOV Or Toll) HOV (High Occupancy Vehicle) They are two separate types of lanes.

    46. Re:So don't cover it with tape by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      We are getting these in Austin. Rather than attempt to fix anything transportation-wise in this town (no major highway construction has been done in 25 years except for 1-2 bridges which have been in the half finished state for decades), our esteemed city planners want to add HOT lanes, or just convert roads to tollways, so the same traffic jam can cost everyone $5.

      However, this is a city council that spent almost half $90 million of a bond for traffic improvements building a bike path and closing down parts of major downtown roads "for the bicyclists". Great for the occasional university student, but pissy for the 99.99% of everyone else who lives there.

      This is MHO, but if given the chance, I'm sure if the city council here could put cameras in the HOT transponders and sell that info to any marketer who asks (assuming a good kickback, of course) they would jump at that chance. They are doing a great job at trashing what tatters remain of the downtown nightclub scene by closing parking lots and jacking up parking fees.

      Massive privacy invasion to us, but $$$ for people being paid big bucks to foist these devices on the populace.

    47. Re:So don't cover it with tape by Golddess · · Score: 1

      Ew, hate acronyms within acronyms. Still, thanks for clearing that up, was real confusing what the difference was.

      --
      "I'm not sure I like the fugnutish tone you used in your post!" -RogL (608926)-
    48. Re:So don't cover it with tape by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      its called speeding for a reason. set speed limit is say 55 MPH, okay so you get out after the first toll gate and then have your friend do 185mph to the next toll gate, just before you go through it you get out and switch again. You didn't speed and made it to the next gate faster then setting at 55 MPH the whole way. of course this would require the roads to be mostly empty.

    49. Re:So don't cover it with tape by shoehornjob · · Score: 1

      Yeah but it's not likely that they would invest that kind of money in optics like that for an ez pass. If they ever start pulling that bullshit in my state I guess I'll be paying cash. Big brother does not have my permission to photograph me in my car when I'm breaking the speed limit and email me a ticket. That's bullshit.

      --
      "We are just a war away from Amerikastan. When god vs god the undoing of man." Dave Mustaine
    50. Re:So don't cover it with tape by Kozar_The_Malignant · · Score: 1

      How about burning out the camera with a laser pointer?

      --
      Some mornings it's hardly worth chewing through the restraints to get out of bed.
    51. Re:So don't cover it with tape by NiteShaed · · Score: 1

      Oh come on, you can be more creative than that! How about photoshopping in Hitler

      Hitler driving a car in Illinois? I hate Illinois Nazis.....

      --
      Some bring out the best in others, some the worst. Some bring out far more.
    52. Re:So don't cover it with tape by grangerg · · Score: 2

      Instead of that (for reasons enumerated elsewhere), just get the lens dirty. A "well-placed" smudge makes the image all but useless for enforcement. Consider a "back-up camera" on a car after a good rain; same idea, different source of dirt. I bet if they implement a camera on the device, the lens will get dirty all the time, and rarely on purpose.

    53. Re:So don't cover it with tape by Culture20 · · Score: 1

      If they have a picture of you driving at both check points, then they have proof it was you speeding.

      No. They have only proof that you've been driving at the two check points. For example if you are two people in the car, you might have changed seats just after the first and just before the second check point.

      Aha! Then the larger fine for stopping on the tollway takes effect!

    54. Re:So don't cover it with tape by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Damn, there goes my corpse idea..

    55. Re:So don't cover it with tape by _0xd0ad · · Score: 1

      The red light camera was BS anyway. The first picture showed me behind the line with my brake lights ON. The second one, two seconds later, showed me starting to make a right turn.

      Um, brake lights on != a complete stop.

      Anyway, all the red-light cameras I'm aware of will also record a video. There's a website you can go to, punch in the code on your ticket, and watch your vehicle very clearly not coming to a stop before turning, complete with burned-in timestamp. The only thing they're missing is the photo that proves you were driving it. And some of them have a second camera set up to get that photo.

    56. Re:So don't cover it with tape by gumbi+west · · Score: 1

      Isn't that why running a red light / speeding are not moving violations (boggles the mind, yes) now when photo enforced.

    57. Re:So don't cover it with tape by gumbi+west · · Score: 1

      That can't possibly be. You could drive 200 MPH so long as you registered your car in your spouse's name.

      I got one while my car was stolen and I was able to say I wasn't driving only if I then snitched on who WAS driving.

    58. Re:So don't cover it with tape by DarwinSurvivor · · Score: 1

      Or better yet, take the picture with your (or friend's) kid in the driver's seat.

    59. Re:So don't cover it with tape by Man+Eating+Duck · · Score: 1

      I really don't see why it matters though, the ticket is tied to the license plate, hence the owner of the car, regardless of who's at the wheel.

      Or, as you'd know if you read The Fine Links, the camera is obviously intended to count persons ("...and an evaluation unit connected down-line of the camera that detects and counts the passengers of the vehicle in the image recording"). So you'd wire in a looping video feed of your car full of people, since its purpose is very likely to give a discount if you don't drive alone (carpool). Go ahead and cover it up with tape, "they" will not give a shit, as you miss out on the discount. On a side note I'd probably do just that as I would've been uncomfortable with potential substantial privacy invasion in my car :)

      --
      Are you a grammar Nazi? I'm trying to improve my English; please correct my errors! :)
    60. Re:So don't cover it with tape by JTsyo · · Score: 1

      you need to review your memes.

    61. Re:So don't cover it with tape by interval1066 · · Score: 1

      No, I do not. Not only am I not required to review internet memes, I have a special license to adopt them to any purpose I wish.

      --
      Python: 'And then suddenly you have a language which says "we're all stuck with whatever the whiniest coder wants".'
    62. Re:So don't cover it with tape by anomaly256 · · Score: 1

      It's not like a fisheye lens is complex, expensive, or hard to procure. There really is nothing hurting the plausibility of this.
      And on the electronics side, a little MSP430 controller, short-range ZigBee radio that gets triggered when you go through some checkpoint, it could last quite a while with only a moderately beefier battery than what's already in them. And also quite cheap these days

    63. Re:So don't cover it with tape by Dr+Max · · Score: 1

      In Australia it's up to you to prove you weren't driving.

      --
      Rocket Surgeon.
    64. Re:So don't cover it with tape by adamdoyle · · Score: 1

      Video-enforced speeding tickets? Do they actually have that somewhere?

    65. Re:So don't cover it with tape by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I once drove from Philadelphia to Pittsburgh on the turnpike and averaged about 15 miles above the speed limit. I drive a lot through the tolls, and don't have an easy pass.

      So anyway, I get to the exit toll, the lady puts in the ticket, and the machine gives off this horrible sustained beep. The lady working the booth looks at me with eyes that tell me she knows what I did, shakes her head, and the tells me the amount due.

      So I feel like they track average speed already so that they can put police in locations that have the highest occurrence of speeding.

    66. Re:So don't cover it with tape by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The same way you can "adopt" the spelling or meaning of words to suit your purpose. Who cares if no one else understands you.

    67. Re:So don't cover it with tape by pclminion · · Score: 1

      Further, if you're being investigated for some reason, your transponder may not be enough evidence ("Just because my car was parked outside that bank doesn't mean I was... I was nowhere *NEAR* that robbery!!"), getting pictures of you driving through toll gates at specific times may be enough to invalidate your alibi.

      I'm confused. Given that you've been accused of a bank robbery, and given that you're innocent, and given that your attorney has advised you to answer questions and provide an alibi... Why would you give a FALSE alibi? WTF?

    68. Re:So don't cover it with tape by Kreigaffe · · Score: 1

      The loud beep was probably just a warning to her that the driver may be transporting Mr. Rendell, and that at only 15mph over the speed limit he is probably upset

      --
      ... still waiting for this free-as-in-beer free beer I keep hearing about. :|
    69. Re:So don't cover it with tape by lachlan76 · · Score: 1

      While I assume that they still use RADAR or LIDAR for the detection, in South Australia cameras at intersections normally handle both both red-light and speed.

    70. Re:So don't cover it with tape by Zappy · · Score: 1

      Why stop to change seats while speeding?

    71. Re:So don't cover it with tape by Bert64 · · Score: 1

      And when criminals realise that transponder evidence is being used against them, they will work out how to feed a false image to the camera and then have someone else drive their car through some toll roads hundreds of miles away from the bank they're robbing in a stolen car with the camera ripped out.

      --
      http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
    72. Re:So don't cover it with tape by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just point a high power UV led at it blind it .

    73. Re:So don't cover it with tape by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I really don't see why it matters though, the ticket is tied to the license plate, hence the owner of the car, regardless of who's at the wheel.

      Nope. The driver is the one who broke the law, not the person who owns the car. Sure, they'll send you a ticket, and most people just pay it instead of taking it to court where it will be thrown out if they can't prove who was at the wheel. Thus... the camera on the new version.

    74. Re:So don't cover it with tape by TheTurtlesMoves · · Score: 1

      I don't see how this is flamebait..

      The statement "You should learn how light and optics work before you post about the topic." Is clearly trolling. Its a personal attack that has *nothing* to do with his/her point or the topic at hand. Also its overly pedantic. It would not be so hard to set it up so its not out of focus or too dark. Esp considering that this will most likely be like a web cam with a short focal length with the focus set to infinity. If GP knows their optics they would also know this.

      Also this post is OT.

      --
      The Grey Goo disaster happened 3 billion years ago. This rock is covered in self replicating machines!
    75. Re:So don't cover it with tape by L4t3r4lu5 · · Score: 1

      I hate to point out the obvious, but... Why not stop speeding?

      --
      Finally had enough. Come see us over at https://soylentnews.org/
    76. Re:So don't cover it with tape by DZign · · Score: 1

      In Belgium (and a lot of other countries) too..
      speeding/red light/.. tickets just get sent to the person the car is registered to.
      On the reply form for the ticket you can provide details if someone else was driving at the time. If you refuse to do, you get the ticket..

    77. Re:So don't cover it with tape by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Go one better- make like in Speed, take a video of yourself driving the car and loop it into the device's video input.

    78. Re:So don't cover it with tape by databaseadmin · · Score: 1

      While, there are boulevards in Illinois, i.e. places where big trucks are forbidden. There are not traffic lanes for car-pooling, or certain special-cars/drivers.

    79. Re:So don't cover it with tape by dcw3 · · Score: 1

      Highly doubtful you would be able to change drivers in a short enough time to exceed the speed limit between toll gate A and B.

      You haven't seen how fast we drive.

      --
      Just another day in Paradise
  2. Jolly. by ackthpt · · Score: 4, Funny

    So now you won't even be able to enjoy a beer in the front seat without being caught on video.

    --

    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    1. Re:Jolly. by ByOhTek · · Score: 0

      Hey, in Texas, that beer will KEEP you from getting a ticket.

      Oh wait, TFS isn't about Texas.

      --
      Self proclaimed typo king, and inventor of the bear destroying coffee table (patent not pending).
    2. Re:Jolly. by somethingtoremember · · Score: 1

      Who ever mentioned it was a video camera?

  3. Are they even making the things yet? by jandrese · · Score: 5, Interesting

    From what I can tell, they have not manufactured a single device with a camera on it. Until they're actually in use somewhere, I'm not going to get my panties in a bunch. For all you know the camera equipped model is for specific edge cases like maybe charging cabs more if they have an occupant or something and won't be used 99% of the time.

    --

    I read the internet for the articles.
    1. Re:Are they even making the things yet? by Synerg1y · · Score: 2

      I agree, it's not a technical marvel to put a small consumer available camera in something like a transponder. There might be uses for it outside the average driver. If they do go through with it... the backlash and work arounds would be endless. Sounds like poster is a bit paranoid of the government :) which is very smart, but don't overdo it by jumping the gun.

    2. Re:Are they even making the things yet? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Could be an interesting form of reverse stop-light camera, individualized to take a pic when you run just a little too late into an intersection when the light is changing, would be a good money maker for the states/municipalities using it.

    3. Re:Are they even making the things yet? by jythie · · Score: 2

      I suspect some other motive too. Doing a quick bit of googling, it looks like in 1998 they recalled the first generation tags due to voltage problems causing silent failures, though I am not sure if those are the same 'first generation' units the OP is referring to.

    4. Re:Are they even making the things yet? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nope, completely wrong. If there's potentially even ONE bad use for a tool, the purpose of the entire existence of the tool is to bludgeon your rights. Obviously. It's just like the Betamax Doctrine, only since that's inconvenient for us sometimes, we get to invert it whenever it helps our case.

    5. Re:Are they even making the things yet? by tchuladdiass · · Score: 5, Informative

      From the Illinois Tollway site:
      The Tollway recommends that these transponders be replaced for two important reasons:

              The older transponder model is no longer being manufactured and, therefore, is no longer certified by the manufacturer.
              Our testing has shown that the older transponder model does not perform as well as the new transponders on the new open road tolling system.

      The first point means that if the tollway were to update the receiver equipment on the roads, they are not guaranteed to work with the old transponders. And I can vouch for the second point personally -- many problems with the first generation of transponders.

      The other main problem with the first gen transponders, is that the battery looks like a regular AA battery, but it is actually a 3.6 volt Lithium battery. Users were replacing them with a regular AA, and therefore getting the under voltage condition.

    6. Re:Are they even making the things yet? by jellomizer · · Score: 1

      A company patents an Idea it doesn't mean they will implement it... It also doesn't mean their customer will buy it if it is implemented... It also doesn't mean if the customer does buy it that they will use the feature... It also doesn't mean if the customer does use the feature that they will abuse it to squander our rights....

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    7. Re:Are they even making the things yet? by jythie · · Score: 2

      That sounds like a much more plausible reason then rolling out some new transponder with a camera in it that the manufacturer does not appear to actually make.

    8. Re:Are they even making the things yet? by chaboud · · Score: 1

      People won't pay for a transponder with the cost of camera hardware in it, and *Illinois* will *never* shoulder that burden on its own.

      I think we're safe just because so much of the tax revenue in Illinois is already directed to embezzlement, patronage, and fraud.

    9. Re:Are they even making the things yet? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the battery looks like a regular AA battery, but it is actually a 3.6 volt Lithium battery

      Reading that actually made me flinch.

    10. Re:Are they even making the things yet? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Furthermore, very few places locally carried the battery. Radio shack sells it for ~$12. I was happy to trade mine in.

    11. Re:Are they even making the things yet? by jank1887 · · Score: 1

      but that wouldn't make slashdot, now would it?

    12. Re:Are they even making the things yet? by kermidge · · Score: 1

      There had better be an over-arching demonstrable benefit - because any invasion of privacy is just that: an _invasion_ of privacy.

      c.f. http://groups.csail.mit.edu/mac/classes/6.805/articles/privacy/Privacy_brand_warr2.html

      wherein Warren and Brandeis refer to 'what Judge Cooley calls the right "to be let alone"'

      As for the lie told by the ISTHA, it's despicable, yet nowadays such behaviour by government and corporations has become ubiquitous and otherwise unremarkable.

    13. Re:Are they even making the things yet? by Hartree · · Score: 1

      God heavens, man! How can you bring facts into this?

      You might even keep it from getting two hundred outraged replies. ;)

      I've got the later model that doesn't beep. I've also wondered about how to tell when the battery dies. I only get to Chicago and use it every couple of months, so it could die for quite a while before I'd know.

      Up till now I just occasionally go through the non-openroad lanes and see if the blue toll paid indicator light comes on.

    14. Re:Are they even making the things yet? by bryan1945 · · Score: 1

      And it didn't mean when they first started issuing Social Security numbers that those numbers would be used as primary identifiers, either, yes? Those who don't know history....

      --
      Vote monkeys into Congress. They are cheaper and more trustworthy.
    15. Re:Are they even making the things yet? by Malties · · Score: 1

      Yeah, cause Illinois would never spend money on something unless it was absolutly in the public's best interest.

    16. Re:Are they even making the things yet? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The other main problem with the first gen transponders, is that the battery looks like a regular AA battery, but it is actually a 3.6 volt Lithium battery. Users were replacing them with a regular AA, and therefore getting the under voltage condition.

      You can get those replacement batteries at any local Radioshack.

    17. Re:Are they even making the things yet? by chaboud · · Score: 1

      There's just no upside to this.

      Nobody gets reelected as a result. Nobody gets paid. Nobody gets more money to siphon off to their nephew's company...

      That said, perhaps we can use the camera for some sort of insta-ticketing. Driving with phones, being asian, etc.

      Ah, Illinois, home of corruption innovation since 1818.

    18. Re:Are they even making the things yet? by NJRoadfan · · Score: 1

      I'm actually surprised to read that I-PASS had any tags with replaceable batteries. I-Pass uses the same tags as the rest of the E-ZPass system, namely Mark IV brand transponders. The Mark IV tags are normally sealed units with lithium batteries and no beeper/LED to indicate the tag was read. They did a similar tag recall a few years ago, as tags were reaching 10 years old and the batteries were starting to die. Newer electronic toll tags are simply RFID barcode stickers, no batteries, and cheap to buy. Sadly I don't think E-ZPass will be switching to that type of system anytime soon.

    19. Re:Are they even making the things yet? by LWATCDR · · Score: 2

      It is the new slashdot. Same editorial standards as the Midnight Sun. I do not even get why this is a story?

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    20. Re:Are they even making the things yet? by Sprouticus · · Score: 1

      yes, because Im totally ok with a picture of me drunk on a Saturday night floating around the State of Illinois' databases.....

    21. Re:Are they even making the things yet? by jandrese · · Score: 1

      And then people complained that they were being used as identifiers and most places stopped. I don't think any state still uses it as your drivers license number, and every school and bank that I knew about when to their own numbers. The only major exception so far is credit reporting companies (Equifax, et all...) and obviously the Government.

      --

      I read the internet for the articles.
    22. Re:Are they even making the things yet? by kenh · · Score: 1

      I found that the manufacturer has recently filed a patent application for a new transponder that has a camera in it — a camera pointed inward at the occupants. How long before they make it illegal to cover that camera with tape?"

      How long before they build and deploy the device with a camera in it?

      Patent does not lead to product in all cases...

      Besides, how will they off-load the image from the transponder? Given sufficient resolution to make the picture usable for anything "legal" (i.e. in a court of law) would generate a fairly large file (compared to a "This is my IDPASS ID number" packet), but since you spend an average of what, 1/4 second within reasonable range of a transponder/toll booth, they would have to employ some serious high-speed networking... And running this all off a battery inside the unit? Puh-lese!

      Can't see this happening, and if by some miracle it were to happen, I suspect you'd notice the camera lens...

      --
      Ken
    23. Re:Are they even making the things yet? by PoopMonkey · · Score: 1

      I hope not. It's a lot easier to move an EZPass from car to car than to scrape a sticker off the windshield.

    24. Re:Are they even making the things yet? by NJRoadfan · · Score: 1

      The stickers are pretty cheap at $5 a piece (the E-ZPass transponders are $25-30). If people need to move the sticker from car to car they just don't peel off the adhesive backing and attach it to the windshield with a piece of tape.

    25. Re:Are they even making the things yet? by PPH · · Score: 1

      Until they're actually in use somewhere, I'm not going to get my panties in a bunch.

      Fool them. Don't wear pants.

      --
      Have gnu, will travel.
    26. Re:Are they even making the things yet? by jamesh · · Score: 1

      I wonder if this is like the 'leaked' information that companies use to measure consumer backlash whilst still maintaining plausible deniability...

    27. Re:Are they even making the things yet? by bryan1945 · · Score: 1

      My point was it was the government that originally said they wouldn't never use SS #s as a primary identifier. Basically, what I meant was I don't trust any group/company in power that "promises" something. Now can I do anything about it.....?

      --
      Vote monkeys into Congress. They are cheaper and more trustworthy.
  4. Possibly just a bad idea by esocid · · Score: 1
    I'm all for pointing out glaring privacy issues, but this sort of sounds like someone had an idea for generating tolls based on occupants, and completely didn't think about the obvious issue with invasion of privacy. I would just hope it's never implemented.

    [...] detecting and counting the passengers of the vehicle by means of the evaluation unit of the onboard unit; and in the onboard unit, calculating a toll as a function of the number of passengers

    --
    Absolute power corrupts absolutely. indymedia
    1. Re:Possibly just a bad idea by mbone · · Score: 1

      You can't tell from a patent application, either way, as you tend to add on any conceivable use.

    2. Re:Possibly just a bad idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Which would discourage travelling together. Putting more cars on the road.

    3. Re:Possibly just a bad idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      $4.00 per car + $1.00 for each adult passanger (for example) would be cheaper than those people each driving their own car, as well as fuel costs.

      Unless you have "friends" who refuse to chip in, I guess.

  5. only a matter of degree by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    The police can already get your ezpass/fastpass/ipass records fairly easily, which makes it easy to see where you've been and when. The real solution is to not trade your privacy for a few seconds of convenience while driving.

    1. Re:only a matter of degree by grimmjeeper · · Score: 2

      They photograph your license plate at all manual toll collection points too. The police can get those records just as easily. Dropping the pass in favor of dropping coins in the slot doesn't help.

    2. Re:only a matter of degree by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It just costs you twice as much... cash tolls are double the iPass tolls.

    3. Re:only a matter of degree by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Well, you can either do that or accept the fact that you don't have a right to privacy when you're driving on a public road. And I don't know about IPass, but if you're talking ezpass and you're trying to drive into Manhattan, it can easily be a difference of 15-20 minutes or more, not a few seconds. And since they take a photograph of your license plate anyway, it doesn't really matter how you pay.

    4. Re:only a matter of degree by grimmjeeper · · Score: 1

      So manually paying the tolls is more expensive, takes you longer and doesn't do anything to improve your privacy. Sounds like the decision is a no-brainer to me.

    5. Re:only a matter of degree by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not on the Massachusetts Turnpike -- there are still cash only lanes without cameras.

    6. Re:only a matter of degree by Grishnakh · · Score: 2

      Others here says that the tolls cost double if you pay using the manual method, and that they photograph your license plate anyway. So if you want privacy, the answer is simple: don't drive on a toll road!!! I'm sure there's other roads that you can drive on, although they won't be as quick or direct.

    7. Re:only a matter of degree by grimmjeeper · · Score: 1

      I suppose there are a few that don't have cameras. But a lot of them do. Initially, it let them take the staff out of the booth (saving money) while still allowing for enforcement. But, as with any other tool of convenience, it only takes time for someone to want to misuse the system.

    8. Re:only a matter of degree by cayenne8 · · Score: 1

      They photograph your license plate at all manual toll collection points too.

      Could you not surround your license plate with some extremely high intensity IR LED's...and use that to blind the cameras...while keeping your plate perfectly readable by human eyes?

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    9. Re:only a matter of degree by rnturn · · Score: 1

      "...he tolls cost double if you pay using the manual method ... I'm sure there's other roads that you can drive on, although they won't be as quick or direct.

      The tolls are not quite double but they are higher if you use the manual toll lanes. (There was a recent announcement about hiking the tools so that may have changed now.) And, around Chicago, there are tons of alternatives that'll allow you to avoid the toll roads. I rarely use the toll roads for a couple of reasons. The traffic is crazy and if you're not driving 20 miles/hour over the speed limit you're getting tailgated or idiots who feel the need to drive 25-30 mi/hr over the limit are weaving in and out of traffic. And... I find that at those speeds, my gas mileage is so bad that I more than make up the difference in the tolls at my next fill-up. As I mentioned above, I rarely find a need to use the toll road because of the the places I need to travel to/from have other ways to get there. Lucky me, I guess. Now I do use them when the winter weather hits us hard since they're more likely to have been recently plowed than the surface streets that depend on individual towns to get the roads plowed.

      --
      CUR ALLOC 20195.....5804M
    10. Re:only a matter of degree by grimmjeeper · · Score: 1

      Depends on the jurisdiction. Deliberately obscuring your plate from law enforcement cameras is illegal in some states.

    11. Re:only a matter of degree by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Only in the places where judges ruled that the existing rules of "non-obscured plates" would allow polarized covers be added (with the explicit purpose of blocking speed cameras). In those places, they added laws to make the polarized covers illegal. Anywhere they aren't explicitly illegal, they are implicitly illegal by courts considering the act of adding something for the sole purpose of hiding the plate (even if only under a subset of conditions) was still illegally obscuring it. But in those places, additional lights wouldn't be illegal under that law, but likely would run afoul of rules specifying which lights are allowed on a car, and IR lights are not specified as allowed or denied anywhere, so depending on the exact rules, may or may not be legal.

  6. passive-backscatter? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I thought that such transponders used a passive-backscatter technology like RFID, not requiring batteries?

    1. Re:passive-backscatter? by nitehawk214 · · Score: 1

      I thought that such transponders used a passive-backscatter technology like RFID, not requiring batteries?

      I think the issue is that RFID doesnt work at the range these devices need to operate it. EZPass has high-speed lanes in PA where you go through the device as full highway speeds. The detectors are a good 20 feet away from a small car. Also I have heard they use older technology which isn't standard RFID.

      Most non-high-speed gates have a light that tells you if the device read in correctly or not.

      However putting a camera in it? WTF man, WTF.

      --
      I'm a good cook. I'm a fantastic eater. - Steven Brust
    2. Re:passive-backscatter? by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      That's what I thought as well...I know at least some of them use RFID.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    3. Re:passive-backscatter? by CompMD · · Score: 1

      The Kansas KTAG system uses RFID. The transponder is actually a sticker you affix to your windshield. You can see the huge antenna and little chip in the middle of the sticker. Unfortunately, these do not operate at highway speed, and you must slow down to 20mph or even stop since the KTAG lanes are gated.

    4. Re:passive-backscatter? by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Passive RFID doesn't have the range, but active RFID does... and it uses batteries.

      Not being RFID is a good reason why they might be replacing the hardware now. It would let them also scan for other active RFID tags.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    5. Re:passive-backscatter? by trout007 · · Score: 1

      In Florida we use an RFID sticker in the EPASS and Sunpass system.

      http://www.suncam.tv/images/sunpass/sunpass-girl.jpg

      --
      I love Jesus, except for his foreign policy.
    6. Re:passive-backscatter? by nitehawk214 · · Score: 1

      Nice, sadly the technology here is old as dirt. Also the EZPass website has all the ease of use of a government website, coupled with that wonderful web feel of 1996.

      --
      I'm a good cook. I'm a fantastic eater. - Steven Brust
    7. Re:passive-backscatter? by Megane · · Score: 1

      TxTag in Texas is an RFID sticker that operates at highway speeds. Plus, they also have license plate cameras so that they don't have to hire actual toll collectors (at least in the Austin area) for people without the tags. In particular, one stretch of a toll road added a couple of years ago didn't even have room for a toll plaza... then they realized that pay-by-mail worked well enough to get rid of the humans elsewhere.

      The best part is that TxTag was designed to be compatible with various older toll tag systems around the state. My tag is valid for all (with a few obscure exceptions) toll roads statewide.

      --
      #naabhaprzrag, #sverubfr-000, #agi-fcbafberq, negvpyr[pynff*=' negvpyr-ary-'] { qvfcynl: abar !vzcbegnag; }
  7. Can't you just..... by phantomfive · · Score: 1

    I have my own set of paranoia, one where some thief breaks the window of my car to steal my transponder. Unlikely, yes, but as a result, my transponder ends up in between the seats covered with paper. Can't you do something similar? Also, are you sure the transponder has a camera? Because that thing would run out of battery fast, and there's a difference (unfortunately) between patenting something and actually building it.

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    1. Re:Can't you just..... by Wizzo1138 · · Score: 1

      Actually, my whole car was stolen with the transponder stuck on the window. When the police recovered the car a couple of days later, the engine, wheels, and entire interior had been stripped out, but the transponder was just laying on the floor. I'm guessing that even the car thieves know the transponders make them pretty easy to track.

      --
      Always go to other people's funerals, otherwise they won't come to yours.
    2. Re:Can't you just..... by pnewhook · · Score: 1

      What idiot would steal a transponder? They have no value, they don't cost anything to get, they can be used to identify the car they are in if stolen and they can be invalidated remotely. There's absolutely no point in stealing one..

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
    3. Re:Can't you just..... by phantomfive · · Score: 0

      You do realize that if Tesla had become 'popular' and Edison not, your sig would read essentially the opposite, right?

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    4. Re:Can't you just..... by pnewhook · · Score: 1

      You do realize that if Tesla had become 'popular' and Edison not, your sig would read essentially the opposite, right?

      It's got nothing to do with popularity. Its got everything to do with Edison electrocuting dog, cats, and even elephants to try and prove his false belief that AC was the work of the devil.

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
    5. Re:Can't you just..... by Hyppy · · Score: 1

      You forgot the person that was electrocuted in Edison's new "Electric Chair" as the final demonstration of the "evil" of AC power. Yeah, it took him like 8 minutes to die as he was slowly cooking from the inside and screaming like a banshee.

    6. Re:Can't you just..... by pnewhook · · Score: 1

      That happened because Edison engineers used the same current they used on a large dog and forgot to scale it for a person. Regardless all those animals were innocent, and in many cases stolen family pets.

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
    7. Re:Can't you just..... by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      None of which changes the fact that there's a fine line between genius and insanity, and Tesla was on the straight-jacket side. IF he's a genius, so are Charles Manson and Hitler (both "did great things — terrible, yes, but great.")

    8. Re:Can't you just..... by pnewhook · · Score: 1

      Tesla was about 100 years ahead of his time. Only now are many of his ideas being proven as true. For instance he invented teleoperated robotics in the 1890s, and is also the true inventor of wireless radio. He invented AC, and the required transformers and generators. Without Tesla the world would be a far different place.

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
    9. Re:Can't you just..... by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      His ideas weren't "proven true" because it was a case of everyone looking at the ideas and saying "if all these ideas are true, are any of them actually useful?" and the answer has been "no" because Tesla was investigating things that had no commercial application, and did so without buy-in by any commercial organization. He died penniless because he was an insane idiot. Everyone agrees he's a genius, but only the fellow insane can't see his limitations.

    10. Re:Can't you just..... by pnewhook · · Score: 1

      He died penniless because people stole his ideas. He invented AC and all the related equipment but wasn't getting any royalties out of it. He invented wireless radio but Marconi got all the royalties not him. He wasn't poor because he was an idiot, but because he was a poor businessman and people like Edison were slandering him (and the American people believed the American Edison over the foreign Tesla).

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
    11. Re:Can't you just..... by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Like I said, an idiot. Why not file for the patents himself? Insane idiot. Edison and Marconi, with less technical talent, managed to be vastly more successful, mainly because they weren't insane.

      I don't know you personally, but I've never seen anyone who was a fan of Tesla who wasn't insane themselves. Your rigid adherence to defending his obvious faults as if they were virtues puts you in their company. Have fun with your insanity, but you'll never be able to convince me that Tesla is anything other than a crackpot.

    12. Re:Can't you just..... by pnewhook · · Score: 1

      We'll you seem to just be trolling. Tesla did file hundreds of patents - other people just stole them and he spent much of his time in litigation. Marconi 'inventions' were all ripped off of inventions of others. Edison didn't actually invent much himself - he had teams of engineers inventing things under the Edison Company name. Edison was the insane one. He thought AC was the work of the devil, and thought he was going to get rich by mining gold with magnets.

      Sure Tesla was a bit of a nut but he was also a genius. At least he didn't murder thousands of animals like Edison to try and discredit the competition.

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
    13. Re:Can't you just..... by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      He thought AC was the work of the devil,

      You are so insane you can't distinguish reality from your strong desires. You *want* Edison to be insane. But he wasn't. I've seen nothing to indicate that he thinks God and Satan got together and assigned AC to the evil side and DC to God. Instead, it's much more likely that he used hyperbole in marketing, and you are to insane to understand the difference.

    14. Re:Can't you just..... by pnewhook · · Score: 1

      And he murdered thousands of animals because he was perfectly sane, yes?

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
  8. Re:Damn by Skreems · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yeah! On the bus, the only cameras recording me are the 3 or 4 little black domes mounted on the ceiling!

    Wait...

    --
    Slashdot needs a "-1, Wrong" moderation option.
    The Urban Hippie
  9. Easy fix, no? by ArrowBay · · Score: 2

    Seems like a little bit of black tape ought to fix the camera, no?

    And how long will it be before somebody hacks it to transmit pictures of hentai (NSFW) back to the Illinois traffic HQ?

    Or, more likely: how long before somebody hacks it to pick up the camera feed from unauthorized recievers?

    --
    Domains, shared and dedicated hosting, SSL certs, and more: ArrowBay.net
    1. Re:Easy fix, no? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seems like a little bit of black tape ought to fix the camera, no?

      nah.. just a really greasy fingerprint on the lense.. say one dipped in petrolium jelly prior to application to lense..

    2. Re:Easy fix, no? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hentai? Why reinvent the wheel?

      Stick with the tried-and-true goatse.

  10. Sweet Invention! by pspahn · · Score: 1

    All you gotta do is put a camera on something? I'd like to patent Video Pants.

    --
    Someone flopped a steamer in the gene pool.
    1. Re:Sweet Invention! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Video Pants killed the Radio Pants Star.

    2. Re:Sweet Invention! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why don't you invent Video skirts instead ? That ought to be much more interesting...

    3. Re:Sweet Invention! by Yetihehe · · Score: 1
      --
      Extreme Programming - Redundant Array of Inexpensive Developers
    4. Re:Sweet Invention! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Too late. Prior art.

  11. Non-story by OverlordQ · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The next abstract part:

    and an evaluation unit connected down-line of the camera that detects and counts the passengers of the vehicle in the image recording.

    Sounds like a company that makes toll devices, are patenting a toll device that can enforce HOV Tolls by detecting if you actually have more then one person in the vehicle . . . . imagine that.

    which informs them of a dead battery by sending a ticket in the mail.

    Nothing in that first page had *anything* to do with a battery, it had to do with their billing system and having invalid license plate data.

    This uninformed answer made me research the device.

    And come up with the completely wrong conclusion.

    Jesus christ I know /. isn't what it used to be, but seriously is this the Daily Mail now?

    --
    Your hair look like poop, Bob! - Wanker.
    1. Re:Non-story by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

      This uninformed answer made me research the device.

      And come up with the completely wrong conclusion.

      Thanks for this... Even for the heavily tinfoil leaning Slashdot Demographic this was a spectacularly bad article.

    2. Re:Non-story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nothing in that first page had *anything* to do with a battery, it had to do with their billing system and having invalid license plate data.

      It was about someone whose device missed five consecutive tolls. The device must have been broken, or it must have had a dead battery.

    3. Re:Non-story by HeckRuler · · Score: 3, Insightful

      a toll device that can enforce HOV Tolls by detecting if you actually have more then one person in the vehicle . . . . imagine that.

      I am imagining it. And it's horrible. Think about this. As you drive down the road, they take a picture of you in your car using a camera in your car which is required to use the service. They send that to someone to check to see if you're breaking the rules.... That's a 1984 telescreen snooping on you.

      Now, of course, they only want to use it to enforce the commuter lanes. And as lame as it is, I'm going to invoke the slippery slope argument. If they can catch you for breaking one rule, you KNOW they're going to append the rules to bust drunks. Then video is going to be used as evidence in some horrible crash of a white male not paying attention as he slams into someone. It'll be contested. They'll win. And now you drive in a Panopticon.

      I'm all for people following the rules, but this is putting WAY too much trust in the toll road operators.

    4. Re:Non-story by mjr167 · · Score: 1

      shush. You are distracting from the FUD.

    5. Re:Non-story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And now I can't even wank or pick my nose in the car any more :(

    6. Re:Non-story by countertrolling · · Score: 1

      C'mon, man! Ad rates...

      --
      For justice, we must go to Don Corleone
    7. Re:Non-story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And now I can't even wank or pick my nose in the car any more :(

      Sounds like something I'd do just to spite them. Specifically I'd pick my nose with my middle finger every time I'd drive through a toll.

    8. Re:Non-story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Eventually Homeland security will add a server to the mix that can do facial recognition so they can locate "suspects" on the highway.

    9. Re:Non-story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually what tends to happen, at least in Chicago Illinois, is that these camera things are put in place for some "other" reason than police surveillance. Once they are installed someone "discovers" that police. can use it in investigations, etc. Police regularly begin using these camera systems and it takes a while for it to become public, but its usually publicized as helping to save the world from some "evil" scumbag that the public is happy to be rid of. Although civil liberties groups cry foul, until an actual winnable case comes up that shows how this is a violation of civil rights there are no challenges. Law enforcement and lawmakers know this and exploit systems as much as they can. They know they can exploit the laws for a good couple of years until some real legal challenge is filed and actually has a chance of winning. By the time the case is actually won, years have passed and the next new thing is already starting to be exploited. Law makers love them as much as police here because they share information and the city council has access to much of this data as well. Its not uncommon for city alder-critters to spy on the competition from time to time, just to help them with planning strategies.

    10. Re:Non-story by NemesisEnforcer · · Score: 1

      I'll slippery slope it for you very easily. Alphabet soup organization says they suspect this feature will help them fight terrorism, and the courts allow it because there is no reasonable expectation of privacy in a car. If I'm not mistaken (and I probably am considering how long ago I learned this), the reason the police have the right to search your vehicle without a warrant is because you are using a public road with no reasonable expectation of privacy.

      How can this be abused? A politician driving with a young man or woman that is not their significant other can easily be blackmailed. A private citizen could have the same thing done to them.

      I hope everyone makes a huge stink about this, and I hope the media covers it like a celebrity death. Then I hope that whoever was thinking about doing this is so ashamed of the negative publicity that they burn every last schematic, design, and prototype.

    11. Re:Non-story by 7-Vodka · · Score: 1
      Hey yo,

      I wanna put a camera in your bedroom, wait this is slashdot, your sister's bedrom. Trust me, I'm going to record images only when somebody breaks in and tries to rob the place. That way you'll be SAFER, er wait your sister will be safer.

      Wait, why not? But you're ok with their cameras in your car?

      Is it because you don't trust me? And you think the government is more trustworthy than I am? Hahaha.

      --

      Liberty.

    12. Re:Non-story by SmurfButcher+Bob · · Score: 1

      No, it won't be used against drunks.

      It'll simply snap a photo of the driver every mile that it sees you're over the speed limit, beep a warning that you're speeding, and file a traffic infraction with the time, place, speed, and your photo behind the wheel. A separate violation, every mile.

      --

      help me i've cloned myself and can't remember which one I am

    13. Re:Non-story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      wtf? Why on earth did the phrase "white male" slip into that argument?

    14. Re:Non-story by mgblst · · Score: 1

      Good, they should be getting drunks of the road. What sort of an idiot would have a problem with that.

      More people are killed in cars than any other man-made method. If you are driving a car, you are driving one of the most deadly machines ever made, you should be tracked.

    15. Re:Non-story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While I'm sure quite a few organizations would like to implement such a thing, I very much doubt a continuous video feed from every car would be feasible, bandwidth-wise. It would have to be fairly detailed, too, to determine something like "not paying attention" or "drunk".

      And why did you specify "white male"? Because they'd be given the benefit of the doubt otherwise? Why should they (we) be given that any more or less than some other group?

    16. Re:Non-story by Bert64 · · Score: 1

      Because cars are the most commonly used machines with large high speed moving parts, and which are operated by people with minimal training in public areas...
      Trains, buses and planes are driven by qualified people who had to undergo specific training for their job and yet people are still killed by these on a fairly regular basis.
      Horses have also always been fairly dangerous... Humans simply aren't designed to travel at very high speeds, and all the ways the exist for us to do so carry dangers.

      --
      http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
    17. Re:Non-story by RivenAleem · · Score: 1

      What if they have cameras at the toll station, that takes a picture through the front windscreen as you drive through.

      When has "Sitting in your Car" been a private place? How is this invasion of privacy?

      Do you really thing the camera will be on 100% of the time, transmitting live feed 24/7?

      How long do you think the battery will last? Transponder living in your glove box, covered in black tape or turned facing the wrong way totally invalidates this function with little or no difficulty.

      With so many Opt-out options, why do you get so worked up?

      This very likely is, as many posters above, for detecting if people have a passenger with them, in order to take advantage of toll-free for car pooling.

      Why is a transponder even needed? How come you can't just do like on the M50 in Ireland, where they just read the license plates as they drive along and send them the bill? (Automatically paid if you are registered with them)

    18. Re:Non-story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm all for people following the rules, but this is putting WAY too much trust in the toll road operators.

      Whereas you would never operate a toll road yourself? I mean they're not hiring arch-daemons to be toll road operators, it's just people like you. Do you distrust yourself to this degree?

    19. Re:Non-story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'll happily accept this if:

      1) Everyone involved with implementing these cameras and the associated legal and law-enforcement framework has them in their car, too; and

      2) The feeds from these cameras are available to the public. (And I mean feeds on the net for anyone who has a web browser; not available for a $500 handling fee after you've filled out a 20-page form.)

      If surveillance is going to exist, let's make sure it works both ways.

    20. Re:Non-story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      panopticar

    21. Re:Non-story by HeckRuler · · Score: 1

      Because of cultural issues with the judicial system, media, congress, and moral outrage among the public. If I was on the ball I'd have also said that he would crash into a van full of kids. This is politics playing in the legal realm. The forces that be; lawyer, district attorneys, police, politicians. They know that this sort of thing pushes back privacy. They're just doing their jobs and they want to catch the bad guy. And this is the exact sort of thing that hippies and slashdotters rally against. So they choose their fights (I probably should have opened with that). They choose the case that the public will support even though it's not the typical use-case-scenario.

      Same thing happened with Rosa Parks. Remember her? There were other black people that refused to give up their seat, but the heads of the civil rights movement didn't defend them. They chose to defend Rosa, in part, because she was a soft-spoken beautiful woman. It helps sway the public. Because in mass, people are stupid.

    22. Re:Non-story by HeckRuler · · Score: 1

      The Internet is by far the most useful tool for sedition, rabble-rousing, revolution and corrupting upstanding citizens. You simply MUST be tracked.
      I'm all for getting drunks off the road. I have an issue with losing my own privacy to do it.

    23. Re:Non-story by HeckRuler · · Score: 1

      Yeah, yeah, I was asked to imagine it and it invoked the slippery slope. You bring up good points about the legal issues, technical limitations, and ways around this device.

      But if violators can simply tape over the camera.... then why is it there? Really, it's about as useful as asking if someone is lying and trusting them not to lie to you.
      And I imagine that once it's used to capture drunks there will be a push to make it required in all cars, hooked into the battery. Hey man, I'm on the slippery slope. I know that's way down the line, but I'm really not worried about this device that's patented. It's the concept of installed survellence inside my vehicle.

      I'd actually prefer a camera next to the toll station that scans for passengers. It's the difference between a gas-station attendant looking at you when you come up to the counter, and an attendant following you around as you shop. Staring at you. Silently.

    24. Re:Non-story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      uh, Yeah?
      Are you really appealing to the general public's good sense of ethics? Really?
      Give me unrestricted access to spy on people unbeknownst to them and I'd probably peruse what they're doing. ESPECIALLY if I'm a bored toll road operator. Or more realistically, the IT guy/manager/scriptKiddy/IranianNationalist/or anyone who has access to the toll road's servers would harvest whatever they could and trawl through the data for anything they could use to make a buck, make a statement, or found funny enough to post online. It'd probably be useful to sociologists and car designers too.

      And it doesn't have to be someone as fine and upstanding as me. It really just takes a handful of people to abuse a service like this. Listen, when setting policy, you can't just assume everyone is going to play along and be nice. If your plan doesn't account for assholes, you don't really have a plan, you have a fantasy.

  12. What about the children? by ciderbrew · · Score: 1

    What if a baby (a baby) does a huge poop (they store that up for the car, I'm sure of it) and you have to change them in plain site of that evil camera. Why you would being filming and transmitting what is by all means scat child porn. I'd refuse on those grounds alone...
    a bit silly I know; but the law is the law.

    1. Re:What about the children? by spire3661 · · Score: 1

      This is straight logic diarrhea, stop thinking for yourself

      --
      Good-bye
    2. Re:What about the children? by pnewhook · · Score: 1

      That's the stupidest argument I've ever heard. Just because someone is naked doesn't make it porn. If that were true, breatfeeding in public would be considered porn.

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
    3. Re:What about the children? by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      And if you'd be following the news, you'd know that a lot of people consider breastfeeding in public to be disgusting, and call cops/file lawsuits around it.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    4. Re:What about the children? by networkBoy · · Score: 1

      Depending on who you ask, it is.
      My wife was 'charged' with indecent exposure. The police knew better and didn't even bother sending someone out, but that is one business we will never *ever* patronize again.
      -nb

      --
      whois gawk date unzip strip find touch finger mount join nice man top fsck grep eject more yes exit umount sleep dump
    5. Re:What about the children? by suutar · · Score: 1

      But this is someone under 18; they're not allowed to be naked on camera, ever.

    6. Re:What about the children? by mjr167 · · Score: 1

      I suppose that is why some states had to pass "right to breastfeed" type laws... And why every new mom is oh-so-eager to whip them out in public and you don't see women sitting in filthy restrooms breastfeeding their baby... And why there wasn't an uproar over the baby doll that instead of coming with a bottle, was supposed to be held to your chest to be fed. I guess all the 'nursing covers' they sell to new mothers are purly a fashion statement...

    7. Re:What about the children? by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

      There should be articles in the newspapers including photographs of the complainers just so that we will be able to publicly humiliate these idiots.

    8. Re:What about the children? by pnewhook · · Score: 1

      Here in Canada breastfeeding is a protected right, and can be performed anywhere and at anytime. Anyone that complains about it or tries to stop it can be charged (and rightfully so).

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
    9. Re:What about the children? by pnewhook · · Score: 1

      If that happened in Canada you could sue the restaurant. Breastfeeding is a right here.

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
    10. Re:What about the children? by pnewhook · · Score: 1

      Have you ever watched funniest home videos? Naked kids (blurred out though) on there all the time.

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
  13. Re:LOL .... by mr1911 · · Score: 2

    Rise up America, you're rapidly turning into the most apathetic people around when it comes to your rights. Which means the rest of us are completely fucked.

    It is funny to read you bashing America while admitting you are an even bigger pussy. If you want to fight, stand up and fight. If you want to stand behind and rant about it, put on a skirt and shake your pom-poms.

    --
    This post comes with a double-your-money-back guarantee!
    Any offense taken to this post is at your sole discretion.
  14. Worst slashdot article ever? by gad_zuki! · · Score: 5, Informative

    There is no camera in any ipass system nor any intention of doing so. Camera tech is ancient, this could have been implemented 10 years ago. I know this is the kind of manufactured controversy that gets ad impressions for slashdot, but please, there are real problems in the world, and this isn't one of them.

    1. Re:Worst slashdot article ever? by 0123456 · · Score: 1

      There is no camera in any ipass system nor any intention of doing so.

      Governments always claim there's 'no intention of doing so' until the day they do it.

    2. Re:Worst slashdot article ever? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Governments always claim there's 'no intention of doing so' until the day they do it.

      Yes, this is actually a government conspiracy.

      • First they post a non-story to /.
      • then they introduce the tech
      • Now, when folk post the story to /., people yell 'Dupe!' and no-one reads it

      Or, the OP might just be complaining about nothing.

    3. Re:Worst slashdot article ever? by YrWrstNtmr · · Score: 1

      Governments always claim there's 'no intention of doing so' until the day they do it.

      More accurately, 'until the day after they get caught doing it'.

    4. Re:Worst slashdot article ever? by safetyinnumbers · · Score: 1

      Yeah, the whole thing should be modded "+1 Toll".

    5. Re:Worst slashdot article ever? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      WARNING: THE ABOVE "COMMENTER" IS LIKELY AN ACTIVE "PUBLIC RELATIONS" (LOBBY) PERSON, INCLUDING THOSE WHO MODDED HIM UP!

      The fact are:
      1. I do not know if there is a camera in it, but:
      2. TFS links to a real patent application for exactly what TFS describes.
      3. Your comment did not include a single argument or anything I could check against anything. All you did is a statement. Not backed up by anything.
      4. Additionally, look at the state of mobile phone cameras in cheap phones 10 years ago, and you know what could have been implemented in cheap cards.

      In conclusion, the only possible way to explain why blatant bullshit like this could have been modded up, is because you were paid for it. (Because I refuse to fall for the usual "they must be so retarded to act that way" excuse.)

      I've put you on our lobby tracker now.

  15. Coins by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If it comes down to it Ill Just go get a couple rolls of dimes and call it a day... Ha found a flaw in you plan illinois.. And after living in IL my entire life I want out...

    1. Re:Coins by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Move to Michigan, it feels almost lawless here since you're so used to being picked on by IL cops.

      In Michigan we drive 85mph every day in our 70 zones without so much as a hint that there's a cop. They also don't pull U-turns just to follow young guys in sports cars like they do back in IL.

      I moved to Michigan in 2007 when the economy was crashing. It was still lightyears better than my entire life during good times in IL. Don't be fooled by how poor the state is.... That just means their slipping police numbers force them to concentrate on real crime. Stay out of the hood and you'll be fine.

      Look into a city like Troy.

    2. Re:Coins by spire3661 · · Score: 1

      The 696 freeway is hilarious for the morning commute, a solid WALL of cars moving at 80 MPH. The cops couldnt pull someone even if they wanted to. Troy is nice, i live in CA now and Irvine reminds me alot of Troy, Mi.

      --
      Good-bye
  16. Just put it away by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When I'm not using my EZPass transponder (SF Bay area), it's in a foil pouch in the glove box. I only take it out when I'm immediately passing though tolls.

  17. One good thing about NY by andymadigan · · Score: 1

    Here in NY we have EZ-Pass, which is also used by several other states (though I hear some of the other states charge fees for them). NY doesn't charge for the transponder itself, and they provide a faraday cage bag to keep it in when not in use (showing they realize people don't want a permanent transponder). It doesn't beep when a toll is paid, instead you wait for the light to turn green as you go through the toll booth. The only privacy issue is that the state could theoretically measure how long it takes you to get from one booth to another and try to automatically issue speeding tickets.

    I guess IPASS must be one of those "no-booth" systems where you don't have to slow down or stop (thus the need to beep), but I can't imagine why they would think they could get away with a camera. Though, just because the company filed a patent for the idea doesn't mean the transponder has one.

    --
    The right to protest the State is more sacred than the State.
    1. Re:One good thing about NY by djdanlib · · Score: 1

      Here in NY we have EZ-Pass (...) The only privacy issue is that the state could theoretically measure how long it takes you to get from one booth to another and try to automatically issue speeding tickets.

      They actually do that.

      It hasn't happened to me but it has happened to people I know.

    2. Re:One good thing about NY by avm · · Score: 1

      They do track time between EZPass hits, though enforcement is particularly focused on commercial vehicles.

    3. Re:One good thing about NY by jonnythan · · Score: 3, Informative

      This has never happened. They do not do this and the state has specifically said it will not.

    4. Re:One good thing about NY by pancake_lover · · Score: 1

      Actually I-Pass & EZ-Pass are pretty much the same thing. The HW looks the same, probably the same company makes them. And you can use the I-Pass in NY, and the EZ-Pass in IL.

      Only the really old I-Pass systems beeped. I think these over 10 years old.

      And I have to say, this is one of the dumbest slashdot discussions I've seen in a long time. There are no plans to put cameras in I-Pass transponders. This would be all over the local media if it was even proposed.

      --
      Homer no function beer well without.
    5. Re:One good thing about NY by burning-toast · · Score: 1

      Yeah, the toll booths we have what is called "open road tolling". We still have a handful of cash / iPass lanes on the side of the freeway (typically near on-off ramps) but then we get 3-4 lanes for straight through iPass traffic where you don't have to slow down at all from whatever normal freeway speeds you are driving at (most do slow down a little to avoid the occasional state patrol lurking near the ramps though).

      To top that off, the iPass cuts the cost of the tolls in half over the stated prices for cash users at each toll. So a $1.10 toll is then $0.55 for an iPass user. Transponders are $10 and come pre-charged with a minimum of $40 worth of tolls on them. You can link them to your checking account to automatically refill once you run out too.

      All in all they do save a very substantial amount of time and money for even casual drivers in IL. To top it off the amount on the pass does not expire either. I've bought a couple for my family (who lives out of state) so when they do come down here they don't need to get a ton of change from the bank before leaving or spend an extra 45-60 minutes in the toll lanes or accelerating / decelerating during peak driving times. Even if you only drive through the Chicago area two or three times a year it's worth it IMO.

    6. Re:One good thing about NY by djdanlib · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Ah, quite right, it appears. I had to ask again to make sure I got the story straight. The warnings they received were about speeding in the EZPass lane, not between the toll booths.

      I went and looked it up... http://www.snopes.com/autos/law/ezpass.asp

      And there is an image of the warning at http://www.nytrafficticket.com/blog/index.php/2009/04/17/speeding-in-the-ez-pass-lane/

      Carry on.

    7. Re:One good thing about NY by kobaz · · Score: 1

      They will issue a warning or cancel your ezpass if you speed through a booth area.

      --

      The goal of computer science is to build something that will last at least until we've finished building it.
    8. Re:One good thing about NY by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Any real world reference to this or more details other than "they do"? I assume this would depend on the individual state you are driving in. About 6 years ago, I picked up a NY EZ-Pass at some huge rest area in the center of the highway as I was passing through NY on my way to Niagra Falls. I haven't used it in the state of NY since that day but I do use it a lot in VA and PA. I'm surprised no one from NY highways or Easy-Pass has complained and told me to get one from my home state.

    9. Re:One good thing about NY by vlm · · Score: 1

      All in all they do save a very substantial amount of time and money for even casual drivers in IL.

      No, you'd save substantial money by getting rid of the entire gigantic billing system.

      --
      "Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
    10. Re:One good thing about NY by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      NY has started adding 20mph lanes on the western end of the 90. If you go through at 20mph, you will not see the light turn green, so everybody slows down to 5 anyway. I am not sure if you are supposed to go through and not see the light change.

    11. Re:One good thing about NY by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And the most important thing to remember is that normal tollway speeds is not the same as posted speed limits. The speed limit is 55, but if you aren't doing at least 70, even the cops will pass you. Our roads are ridiculously over-engineered (and don't get me started on the love of bridges... the I-55 / I-355 interchange is proof of that)

    12. Re:One good thing about NY by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It takes a human to sign a complaint, people keep forgetting that minor fact.
      A machine can't sign a complaint or act as a witness, people who don't fight
      this are fools, but I understand coercion is generally involved (and is not illegal).

    13. Re:One good thing about NY by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      It takes a human to sign a complaint, people keep forgetting that minor fact.

      And the minor fact you are forgetting is people can be trained to sign any stack of printouts.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2010_United_States_foreclosure_crisis#Robo-signing_controversy

      Don't think for a second the government wouldn't do it.

    14. Re:One good thing about NY by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      MD here. Buy an EZ-Pass for $$ but the $$ is your initial balance. $1.50/mo for the fee. Marginally worth it. Good for MD, VA, NJ, NY, PA, DE, etc. Not bad.

    15. Re:One good thing about NY by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess IPASS must be one of those "no-booth" systems where you don't have to slow down or stop (thus the need to beep), but I can't imagine why they would think they could get away with a camera. Though, just because the company filed a patent for the idea doesn't mean the transponder has one.

      Lanes like these also exist in EZ-Pass world, although they are not very popular. One of such places is the Mid-County Interchange in southeastern PA (where I-476 meets I-276). The speed limit is 45mph, there are no "gates", no indicators that the toll has been paid -- just lots of bright overhead lights, cameras and transponder sensors.

    16. Re:One good thing about NY by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, they'd save people who drive a lot money, by making people who don't drive a lot have to pay more, which presumably is in your interest.

    17. Re:One good thing about NY by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And you can take that to the bank.

    18. Re:One good thing about NY by Politburo · · Score: 1

      The lanes are quite popular. Perhaps you meant that they are not that common. That is mainly because the cost can only be justified at high-volume interchanges, such as Mid-County, or the ends of the NJ Turnpike. They are more frequent in Delaware, where tolling is not based on entry and exit points.

    19. Re:One good thing about NY by blackraven14250 · · Score: 1

      Not when there's a half hour of traffic at every toll on the road. EZPass is way better than cash/change tolls.

    20. Re:One good thing about NY by radish · · Score: 1

      There are an increasing number of the no-gate toll areas in the EZ-pass system, for example on the GSP in NJ. I've also heard they're considering the same for some of the Hudson river tunnels/bridges. They're actually really good - have improved traffic flow a great deal.

      --

      ---- Den ene knappen er powerknapp, den andre er Bender voice knapp "Bite My Shiny Metal Ass"

    21. Re:One good thing about NY by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I'd be careful with that "The state said it will not..." argument. Come on, you're not an idiot, I'm sure you know politicians and the government often say they will/won't do something and then do the opposite.
      An example involving cameras: London. City officials said those cameras would only be used as evidence after crimes had been committed, i.e. once the police know of a crime they check the tape for proof. And yet, these cameras today are used to issue speeding tickets and a few other things. It went from "we don't look at the tape until we know there's proof of a specific crime on it" to "we look at all tapes hoping to find felonies we don't know about".

      There are several examples of laws in the USA which's intent has been 'hijacked'. One such example is production of child pornography: the law was made to protect minors against adults who might exploit them sexually ("because minors don't understand fully what sex is and therefore can't consent"). These last few years, the law has been applied to jail teenagers who sent nude pics of themselves to their friends (so apparently, according to the police/prosecutor's logic, a minor can't understand sex, unless he's filming himself. But even if he understands sex, he still needs to be protected against it. And the best way to protect him is to put him in jail. I guess that answers what the authorities do with confiscated drugs).

    22. Re:One good thing about NY by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      But if you got rid of the tolls, why would people still be stopping where the booths used to be and throwing their money on the ground?

    23. Re:One good thing about NY by jonnythan · · Score: 1

      It can change in the future, absolutely.

      But it has never been done so far.

    24. Re:One good thing about NY by Culture20 · · Score: 1

      It can change in the future, absolutely. But it has never been done so far.

      Just imagine what the US would look like if the Constitutional Convention went like this:
      "[...] But what if the President uses executive authority to improperly execute the laws passed by Congress?"
      "Ah, ef it. It's too damn hot in here to worry about what ifs and may-bes."
      "Agreed. If something comes up, then that's why people have the right to keep and bear arms."
      "But that's not codified anywhere in the Constitution we've drafted today!"
      All: "STFU Madison!"

      A little caution is always warranted when dealing with vipers.

    25. Re:One good thing about NY by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It strikes me that it would be more cost effective to buy a LCD license plate cover. Just flip the switch when going through toll booths...

  18. When did Slashdot become Infowars? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Every day now I'm seeing conspiracy-theorist/libertarian/"angry white man" propaganda on what used to be a fairly useful IT news site.

    1. Re:When did Slashdot become Infowars? by umghhh · · Score: 1

      maybe because this was never a pure IT news site and life of stuff dealing with IT, computers, programing and what not has changed so dramatically over the years t hat the subjects we discuss and which interest us are so different than before? Also there is this small little thing: computers have been once domain of technocrats and required a monster cooling tower (exaggeration of course) and now we have a few of them around at all times, soon IP addresses (and possibly microphones & cameras) will be given to vibrators and other toys - technical progress make our life so much different that it used to be. yet there is almost no other forum where these issues are discussed. In Europe this may be canalized with pirate party (I think I will try it as others are either silly or corrupt or both) yet without meaningful discussion in many fora this is not going to bring anything. OC one may wonder if general level of discussion in /. is at all justifying our time spent but I guess this is what we have and discussion level among almost any group I came across in my lengthy life was similar. Life one may say or I just feel philosophical.

  19. Shady deals? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Maybe this is government corruption. The government could have bought lots of new transponders from a manufacturer that made large political donations and in order to get rid of them they force folks to replace their existing, perfectly functional, transponders.

  20. Ah... my state by Minter92 · · Score: 1

    Not a shock to see this in the People Republic of Illinois

    1. Re:Ah... my state by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Many other states are more lax. I left IL 6 years ago. The feeling of freedom outside the Chicagoland area was night and day. I don't know how people put up with that kind of constant surveilance and trickery. (Undercover cops and all)

  21. Aug Malfunction by NoSleepDemon · · Score: 1

    Has anyone been experiencing weird reboots with their augs lately? I got an email from the LIMB clinic saying I should get the control chip replaced, think I'm going to go...

    1. Re:Aug Malfunction by gknoy · · Score: 1

      It's a trap! :-)

    2. Re:Aug Malfunction by i.r.id10t · · Score: 1

      The Steyr AUG is very reliable, no issues. However, the American made knock offs...

      --
      Don't blame me, I voted for Kodos
  22. Lack of connection here by Fiznarp · · Score: 1

    Do you have any evidence that they are trying to replace your device with a new one that has a camera? Just because the manufacturer filed for some patent doesn't mean your state is using that technology, or that anyone would want to buy it for that matter. And then there's the tinfoil hat slippery slope conclusion that covering a camera might be illegal someday? Has anyone in your legislature proposed such an idea?

    1. Re:Lack of connection here by Jawnn · · Score: 1

      Do you have any evidence that they are trying to replace your device with a new one that has a camera? Just because the manufacturer filed for some patent doesn't mean your state is using that technology, or that anyone would want to buy it for that matter. And then there's the tinfoil hat slippery slope conclusion that covering a camera might be illegal someday? Has anyone in your legislature proposed such an idea?

      Perhaps not, but then no one in the legislature proposed many of the things currently being done under the (claimed) authority of The Patriot Act. So clearly, here in the real world, it can not be argued that the absence of such a proposal is a guarantee that it won't happen.

  23. ticket for dead battery. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you follow the link about the ticket by mail, you will read that the problem was a plate mismatch. Presumably they have cameras at the booth like other states do, so if your battery dies they can look at the photo, match the plate, and send you a letter telling you that your battery died.

  24. Re:LOL .... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I wonder if the Occupy$places movement could mean that they're already rising up. It's not getting much mainstream news attention yet, which is odd because if this was happening in Middleeastistan the media would be all over it by now.

    That would be great, it usually takes many generations of crushing poverty for a civilization to revolt.

  25. Solution: remove from car by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1. Take the slow lane, get rid of transponder, don't let the gov't track your driving at all
    - or -
    2. Remove from cabin and store in metal lockbox in trunk when not in use

    Or take transit, bike, telecommute, carpool...

    1. Re:Solution: remove from car by pnewhook · · Score: 1

      And don't forget to take the tinfoil off your head when you go into public

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
  26. This is a Conspiracy Theory by rhkaloge · · Score: 1

    This post is a series of unrelated facts that come together in a paranoid conclusion. Nowhere in here would I conclude that the state is adding cameras to their EZ-Pass, only that there is a company that COULD do that. Posting this was a really dumb editorial call, /.

    1. Re:This is a Conspiracy Theory by Megaweapon · · Score: 1

      This post is a series of unrelated facts that come together in a paranoid conclusion. Nowhere in here would I conclude that the state is adding cameras to their EZ-Pass, only that there is a company that COULD do that. Posting this was a really dumb editorial call, /.

      It's just timothy trying to people rile up because he fails at life. And there is nothing even remotely "editorial" about anything on Slashdot.

      --
      I'm sure "SlashdotMedia" will improve on all the wonders that Dice Holdings blessed us all with
  27. Re:Damn by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    for now

  28. Re:LOL .... by rufty_tufty · · Score: 1

    Not really
    America has a public statement of principles that many other countries don't. Therefore it would be easier to raise issues like this that violate those principles.
    Not everyone is so lucky.

    --
    "The weirdest thing about a mind, is that every answer that you find, is the basis of a brand new cliche" -
  29. Re:Let's face it, by prgrmr · · Score: 2, Informative

    What's your problem with Kentucky?

  30. carpool discount, possible reason for the camera by joeaguy · · Score: 5, Informative

    In the NYC area there are many toll discount programs for call pools with ezpass. In order to get the discount, you must use a cash lane even though you have an ezpass, so an attendant can confirm you are driving with the required number of people for the discount. So you pay less, but you get stuck in traffic with all the people paying cash. If a transponder had an inward facing camera then it could provide a way of letting you use ezpass only lanes and still get the discounts.

    This application makes it no less freaky. I would only ever consider it if there were some technological privacy safeguard. For instance, a built in manually operated only door over the lens. When I approach a toll, I have to slide it open to allow the picture to be taken to get my discount. After the toll, I can slide it back closed.

    There are lots of people who keep their ezpass in the metal coated bag and only mount it when they are near a toll, and there are non-toll ezpass readers all over the place, with the stated goal of monitoring traffic flow. Wanting to pay tolls faster and get discounts should not mean having to submit to random and capricious tracking and a total loss of privacy when traveling.

  31. I don't really see what the issue is.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    From the Toll pass website:

    I have one of the old display model transponders that beeps. Can I keep replacing the battery instead of swapping it out for a new transponder?

    These older model transponders need to be replaced to ensure customers continue to receive the benefits of I-PASS and avoid toll violations. The Tollway recommends that these transponders be replaced for two important reasons:

    1. The older transponder model is no longer being manufactured and, therefore, is no longer certified by the manufacturer.
    2. Our testing has shown that the older transponder model does not perform as well as the new transponders on the new open road tolling system.

  32. Re:LOL .... by jythie · · Score: 1

    How much 'main stream attention' does it require to say it got 'main stream attention'? It has been front page of CNN for weeks now.

  33. Anthony Wiener by Fujisawa+Sensei · · Score: 1

    Put a picture of Anthony Wiener in front of the camera.

    --
    If someone is passing you on the right, you are an asshole for driving in the wrong lane.
    1. Re:Anthony Wiener by dkleinsc · · Score: 1

      Nah, this is Illinois, better use a picture of Rod Blagojevich.

      --
      I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
    2. Re:Anthony Wiener by QuantumLeaper · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't do that, since Blago will most likely be in Jail soon, it would great if they put in a cell next to Ryan (the last governor).

  34. Re:Possibly just a bad idea or worse? by dammy · · Score: 0

    Wait till they add GPS for real fun and excitement. Little store and forward of a picture of the driver's face once the GPS speed reading goes over the posted speed limit which is uploaded at the next toll plaza.

  35. It's time to get over this patent stuff by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Companies submit patents for many things they don't have any plans of ever implementing. I see it for Apple all the time for example and most of these things aren't done. I for example have several patents I invented for Apple and few of them are used.

    It's time to stop being alarmist. Don't get yourself overexcited over nothing.

    The right thing to do would be to get the 2nd generation pass. When you got it you would have noticed there is no camera on it. There's no need to instead get overexcited by giving out info that isn't turns out not to be true.

  36. Probably a bit more subtle.... by TheCarp · · Score: 1

    Actually... based on how they do it just over the line in MA, I bet there is a more subtle play going on.

    Here, if a transponder stops working, or there is an account problem (happened to me) they treat it just like any other unpaid toll. They take a picture, and send you a ticket in the mail. This part is key you see. Now you call them up, and the process is now dealing with a ticket. They can't help you, and have no incentive to because its not collected and dealt with by the same people.

    So I could call up, pay the tolls, and fix my account. However, I still had to, seperately, appeal the ticket... which they get to send via snail mail and put an unreasonably short time period on, at which point they get to tack on penalties which were intended for fraudulent users of the service.... and just because the original ticket was an account error thats been taken care of is, in their mind, no good reason to do away with the penalties for not paying them within 21 days.

    On top of all this, you must file a written appeal, and then.... call them back repeatedly to see if they have answered it yet.

    Basically....they have designed the system for maximum bilk, and the last thing they want is you getting an early warning that there is a red white and blue cock locked onto your ass.

    --
    "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    1. Re:Probably a bit more subtle.... by mcmonkey · · Score: 1

      Yeah, not so much.

      There was a time MA would send you a ticket if your transponder failed. If that happened, you just gave them your EZ Pass/Fastlane/whatever system account number and the ticket went away. I know, it happened to me.

      But that was years ago. Now they match up the license plate from the picture with the transponder account and you'd never get the ticket. Which makes me wonder, why have the transponders at all?

      I don't really how the scenario you describe could happen, unless you didn't have enough in your account to cover the toll. That could be due to an issue with the account, but it's not related a transponder not working.

    2. Re:Probably a bit more subtle.... by TheCarp · · Score: 1

      This was all of like 2 years ago.

      Let me try to explain it a different way. My credit card was no longer valid, and I never got the notice that was supposed to tell me this.

      So I get my notice in the mail, call them, and take care of the toll, fix the account. Honest mistake, all set right? Nope. Because then a month later, I get a notice that I never paid the fine, which has now been doubled.

      Of course, the obmudsman, in reply to my disgusted apeal, told me that thats what any company does if you don't pay them on time, you can't expect to keep the lights on without paying, and paying late fees if you don't pay on time.

      I am reminded of this now as.... just last month I lost my secondary wallet (bus pass and a credit card) on the bus and had to cancel a credit card. Turns out it was the card that my colocated server was charged on.

      Funny, they never shut me off, they just sent me a notice that the card was declined, and when I paid them, all done. I didn't have to pay them, then seperately appeal or deal with any fines. Not even a phone call to one person, just a web form. However, with the MA Fast Lane it was one call to one person, then I had to call a whole different number to deal with the fine... where they though tnothing of charging punative penalties on a fine that really, was little more than an already corrected honest mistake.

      Are they "Capital W Wrong?" no.... they make the rules, its their system but.... its bad customer service, and its a blatant attempt to capitalize on people's mistakes.

      Then again, maybe they changed it recently? It could very well have been me going off on the Ombudsman about the fact that they already were correlating incidents and cars and thus had everything they needed to streamline this that got them to do it? Beats me, I don't drive that much anymore.

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    3. Re:Probably a bit more subtle.... by mcmonkey · · Score: 1

      Yeah, that sucks.

      They seem to have their act together when it comes to transponder issues, maybe they decided to take it out on folks with account issues. Can't expect a government agency to be nice all the time, can we?

  37. Re:carpool discount, possible reason for the camer by idontgno · · Score: 3, Insightful

    When I approach a toll, I have to slide it open to allow the camera to image the picture of a fully occupied car I hold in front of the lens to get my discount. After the toll, I can slide it back closed.

    FTFY.

    Still, an inward-viewing camera inside the car? Monitored by a State agency? The reason doesn't matter. It's still creepy and wrong.

    --
    Welcome to the Panopticon. Used to be a prison, now it's your home.
  38. He's British by Colin+Smith · · Score: 1

    The British did the rise up thing in 1649... Didn't like it.
     

    --
    Deleted
  39. Re:LOL .... by readin · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The Tea Party was an attempt to rise up. So the corporate news organizations did everything they could to paint them as racists - and on pretty flimsy evidence. Now Herman Cain is one of the Tea Party favorites. The Tea Party has some clear goals - limit the power of government - follow the Constitution - cut government spending (and thus government control of the economy). What are the goals of these Wall Street demonstrators? If they really are trying to put limits on government what makes you think the corporate news orgs (who can afford lobbyists) will allow it?

    --
    I often don't like the choices people make, but I like the fact that people make choices. That's why I'm a conservative.
  40. Wickard v. Filburn by tepples · · Score: 1

    America has a public statement of principles

    This public statement of principles hasn't been worth the paper it's written on since the Supreme Court scratched "among the several states" from the commerce clause in Wickard v. Filburn in the 1940s.

  41. Re:LOL .... by ElectricTurtle · · Score: 1

    These people want to believe they are victims at all times regardless of facts. I wish their fantasies were true and the media were ignoring them so I wouldn't have to hear about their anarcho-syndicalist entitlement nonsense all the time now.

    --
    I support the Slashcott and will not be reading or commenting from 2/10/14 to 2/17/14. Beta is steaming pile of dog shit
  42. Terrible "Story" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This one guy on the internet got a ticket back in 2005 because his supposedly died. Wow. What fail-proof iron clad scientific evidence you have there. If there were a nobel prize for ground breaking research in the area of tollway transponders, you would have won several times by now.

  43. Re:LOL .... by Jawnn · · Score: 0

    Time was there's be a bunch of people talking about refreshing the tree of Liberty with the blood of patriots ...

    Oh, we still have those folks - the Tea Baggers. The problem is that their notion of what "liberty" means is usually the one that "...them Fox fellers on the teevee was sayin'..." Patriot Act? "Fuck yeah! Whatever it takes to catch them Ayrabs." With so many already so willing bend over, ramming it in a little further with something like this is hardly noticeable.

  44. Unsubstantiated Illogical Conclusions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Malory: Lana Kane, just because you're not the only black field agent...
    Lana: Hey! That's not...
    Malory: "Urban," whatever. You come in here and accuse Conway of...what, exactly?
    Lana: OK, I can't prove anything right now, but that's
    Malory: ...but that didn't stop J. Edna Hoover from prosecuting Martin Luther King, now did it?
    Lana: What does that have to do with...wait, "J. Edna?"
    Malory: You never heard? That J. Edgar Hoover was this huge crossdressing chicken-hawk?
    Lana: I had not.
    Malory: Well, that's exactly the kind of slanderous and unsubstantiated illogical conclusions that we will not tolerate at SLASHDOT.

  45. Re:Let's face it, by Gilmoure · · Score: 1

    *golf clap*

    --
    I drank what? -- Socrates
  46. oh well by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    whatever, replace battery ignore letter

  47. Re:LOL .... by nedlohs · · Score: 1

    So what?

    Just because it is harder for someone doesn't change that it's hypocritical for them to rant that others should do something while refusing to themselves. America didn't always have that statement of principles - it took people declaring them and fighting a war against one of the super powers of the time (while allied with another super power mind you, otherwise it might not have worked out as much).

  48. Just avoid toll ways by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You've paid your tax dollars to fund the construction of this infrastructure. Why pay a second tax to use it?

    I have been known to drive 20 miles out of my way to avoid toll roads. They are a tax menace that need to be disposed of...quickly!

    1. Re:Just avoid toll ways by DigiTechGuy · · Score: 1

      Similar, I typically avoid toll raods though not always. I do math on the additional distance I would drive, approximate amount of gas that would burn, and the gas tax rate in the state I live to determine if which route results in the least taxes paid to the government. I don't care about spending more in fuel costs, just taxes.

    2. Re:Just avoid toll ways by pnewhook · · Score: 1

      Actually I agree with this. As a Canadian when I drive in the US I'm appalled at how many toll roads there are and how frequently you have to stop to fork over a few bucks. Then Americans try and claim that Canadians pay too much in tax!

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
    3. Re:Just avoid toll ways by Quila · · Score: 2

      Tolls originally had a valid reason. The government would purchase a bond to fund the road building, and the tolls would pay off the bond. I have no problem with this, the users of the road pay for their road.

      The problem comes after the bond is paid off, the government never likes to give up a source of income that people may not notice. Now they only have to pay a fraction of the toll for road upkeep, and the rest is gravy.

      Or even better, instead of paying off the bond with the tolls, they used the money for whatever pet projects they wanted. In either case the toll just becomes another tax.

  49. Patent Tolls by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm just sick and tied of these Patent Tolls I keep heaing about. When will the govenment get thei act togethe and epeal these patents?

    1. Re:Patent Tolls by Frenzied+Apathy · · Score: 1

      ...thei act togethe and epeal...

      Little trouble with your "r"?

      r r r r r r

      See, mie works fie!

      Oh - dammit - ow oe of my keys is't workig!

      --
      The cake is a lie.
  50. No battery in I-PASS by clorkster · · Score: 2, Informative

    The old models only have a battery because they beep and some (perhaps all) have a display showing your I-PASS balance. The newer models are entirely sealed, and do not require a battery because they work by RFID chips. This post is a bit ridiculous.

    If you want the reasoning... go no farther than the I-PASS website (quoted below):

    I have one of the old display model transponders that beeps. Can I keep replacing the battery instead of swapping it out for a new transponder?

    These older model transponders need to be replaced to ensure customers continue to receive the benefits of I-PASS and avoid toll violations. The Tollway recommends that these transponders be replaced for two important reasons:

    The older transponder model is no longer being manufactured and, therefore, is no longer certified by the manufacturer. Our testing has shown that the older transponder model does not perform as well as the new transponders on the new open road tolling system."

    1. Re:No battery in I-PASS by random+coward · · Score: 1

      "we want more revenue selling new transponders to previous purchasers"

    2. Re:No battery in I-PASS by JohnFen · · Score: 1

      The newer models are entirely sealed, and do not require a battery because they work by RFID chips.

      I just wanted to note that long-range RFID (such as would be used in this type of application) does require the RFID chip to be powered. The ones that don't need a battery only work at very short ranges.

    3. Re:No battery in I-PASS by PPH · · Score: 1

      The ones that don't need a battery only work at very short ranges.

      Unless the reader's RF field strength is jacked up. Or they use a big (relative to POS type RFID) antennas. If the rivets on your jeans get hot whenever you drive through a toll point, you'll know which it is.

      --
      Have gnu, will travel.
    4. Re:No battery in I-PASS by clorkster · · Score: 1

      Except the I-PASS is a one-time $20 deposit that is returned on return of the I-PASS...

    5. Re:No battery in I-PASS by clorkster · · Score: 1

      Indeed. I will make a note of not submitting crap in the future that is untrue. The sealed part certainly is true, but they have a battery.

    6. Re:No battery in I-PASS by clorkster · · Score: 1

      I just wanted to note that long-range RFID (such as would be used in this type of application) does require the RFID chip to be powered. The ones that don't need a battery only work at very short ranges.

      I have no expertise in RFID chips, but I'd be curious what defines "long range". According to this paper, a passive (non-powered) 15cm RFID antenna is effective at a range up to 4.9 meters (and I believe this number assumes a non-directional scanner). That is certainly less distance than is between the windshield and the readers above the road.

      Can you provide more insight into how you are defining "long range" and "very short range"? It looks like modern RFID tech can passively be scanned up to 40 feet in "normal conditions", and I'd have to assume that interstate, windshield-mounted, directional travel is rather normal.

    7. Re:No battery in I-PASS by JohnFen · · Score: 1

      It's not quite as clear-cut as that. First, as PPH points out, the range is also dependent on the power of the reader, as well as the sizes of each antenna. Among commercial RFID chips, there is a wide variety of antenna sizes. Some can only be read (with normal readers) an inch or two away, some from a half dozen feet or so. With less common equipment this range can indeed be extended to 40 feet or more.

      It looks like modern RFID tech can passively be scanned up to 40 feet in "normal conditions", and I'd have to assume that interstate, windshield-mounted, directional travel is rather normal.

      No, this use would not count as "normal conditions" at all. Rather far from it. Cars are very electrically noisy (and there's a lot of them around on the highway), the RFID chips are near lots of metal, even in a windshield, and they are traveling relatively fast. All in all, it's a pretty bad environment for radio equipment. I think it's overwhelmingly likely that the RFID being used in these devices is powered for two reasons: first, reliability. Passive RFID would be pretty hit and miss under these circumstances, even with a high power reader, and second is cost. Powered RFID would be a lot cheaper than the fancier passive systems that might be able to operate under these conditions.

      When given a preference, engineers using RFID will opt for the powered variety unless the design precludes it for size or weight reasons. Powered RFID is much better and more reliable than passive.

    8. Re:No battery in I-PASS by clorkster · · Score: 1

      Interesting. Thanks for the reply! I may have to waste $20 just to pull one of those dumb things apart.

  51. Re:Possibly just a bad idea or worse? by pixelpusher220 · · Score: 1

    Any toll plaza already has this ability. Point A at 9:12, Point B at 9:15, wait they are 6 miles apart....

    --
    People in cars cause accidents....accidents in cars cause people :-D
  52. Re:Damn by fusiongyro · · Score: 0

    #CTA

    Yo Broseph, this isn't Twitter.

  53. Re:Possibly just a bad idea or worse? by kheldan · · Score: 1

    Tape over the camera and/or microphone. Find the GPS antenna and disconnect or cut the lead, or just wrap it in aluminum foil and connect it to signal ground. Nobody should have to put up with this shit.

    --
    Are YOU using the TOOL, or is the TOOL using YOU? Think about it!
  54. Get one that attaches to your license plate by LanMan04 · · Score: 1

    I live in IL and have an IPASS on two of my vehicles (got the units about 6 months ago).

    In addition to the ugly little units that you have to attach to the inside of your windshield with adhesive/plastic velcro-like stuff (UGLY), they offer "external" IPASS devices that attach to your front license plate with screws. Called a "License Plate Tag": http://www.illinoistollway.com/portal/page?_pageid=133,1392898&_dad=portal&_schema=PORTAL#mount_transponder

    Ostensibly, these are to be used by people with special windshields that block the IPASS signal (no idea what causes that, but maybe some self-defrosting windshields have metallic stuff in them?), but they'll let anyone who wants to order one. The reason I got them is that I like my windshield clean, TYVM.

    Of course, they could get stolen off your license plate with a screwdriver, but I haven't had that problem.

    Anyway, this takes care of the "camera in my car" issue.

    --
    With the first link, the chain is forged.
  55. Re:Damn by spire3661 · · Score: 1

    I was surprised at how many cameras are on a modern public transit bus. Of course, being the geek i am I started wondering about their method rather then the Big Brother aspect of it. Do they record on the bus and transmit out, can they go live or is it time shift only? etc etc.

    --
    Good-bye
  56. Tolls? by AdamJS · · Score: 0

    What are the purpose of these, since infrastructure problems could/should generally be funded by their respective taxes?

  57. Re:LOL .... by Jibekn · · Score: 2

    You shouldn't follow the media blindly and research things yourself, Tea party members are not racists, nor ignorant. They are painted as such by the corporate controlled media outlets.

  58. Summary is WRONG by LanMan04 · · Score: 3, Informative

    (This notifies drivers that their battery is still good, unlike the silent second-generation version, which informs them of a dead battery by sending a ticket in the mail.)

    This is not correct when you sign up for an IPASS account, you give the toll authority your license plate numbers. If your vehicle goes through a toll and the IPASS unit doesn't work correctly, when the toll authority goes through the photos of supposed violators' plate numbers, yours will be cleared as a registered plate and they just deduct the toll as per usual. It shows up on your IPASS transaction list/invoice as a "Virtual Toll". I had a bunch of those on my statement from when I took the unit off of one car and put it on another for a week, and they didn't seem to care at all. Same regular toll price.

    The summary links for a forum post that says

    "Worse, the way they're sorting out motorcycles from cars is by doctoring the plate number in the system, so when they go to check your plate number, it won't come up even if it's linked to the account, and they assume that you're not an I-Pass customer even if you are."

    So that's some issue with motorcycles and the way their goofy system works, and this was in 2005.

    Now, since they can read your plate and determine if you're an IPASS user, and there is no penalty for not having an IPASS unit in your car if you're a registered user...why have IPASS units at all? I guess for when it's raining or the plate is obscured and they can't collect a toll by OCRing the plate?

    --
    With the first link, the chain is forged.
    1. Re:Summary is WRONG by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who said anything about OCR? Chances are the plate photos require human review before issuing a citation, just like camera tickets.
      What makes me think this is the case is that if you have any kind of discount or commuter plan on your EZ-Pass, it doesn't apply.
      If the transponder didn't read and they had to look at your plate, you get charged the full toll.

      Now, my university just implemented "Virtual Permits" that does use License Plate Recognition... Supposedly the parking enforcement vehicles have cameras, and if a plate can't be read the officer has to type it in... I will be raising hell if I ever get a parking ticket because someone fat-fingered my plate.

      CAPTCHA: Bordello... yep, there's an EZ-Pass for those too!

    2. Re:Summary is WRONG by steelfood · · Score: 1

      Now, since they can read your plate and determine if you're an IPASS user, and there is no penalty for not having an IPASS unit in your car if you're a registered user...why have IPASS units at all?

      They charge tolls by license plates in Canada. It may be a more effective way to do things. However, that would mean sharing everybody's vehicle registration information with the typically-private toll collection company, and that might not go so well with many people.

      --
      "If a nation expects to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be."
    3. Re:Summary is WRONG by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Now, since they can read your plate and determine if you're an IPASS user, and there is no penalty for not having an IPASS unit in your car if you're a registered user...why have IPASS units at all? I guess for when it's raining or the plate is obscured and they can't collect a toll by OCRing the plate?"

      Here in WA state, the state is implementing no toll booth tolls on a bridge. If you have the pass, the toll is taken from your account. If you don't have the pass, a bill for the toll is sent to the registered owner based on OCR'ing the plate. As you may have heard, it rains in WA state, the OCR system must be able to read through rain.

      They were supposed to start using the system last spring, but it has been delayed until the end of the year because of technical issues.

      I switched plates on a car, but the system for updating plates was overwhelmed (the vendor did not allocate enough resources) and broken (it couldn't deal with a personal plate being transferred from one vehicle to another) so I couldn't update the info. The system billed to the correct transponder, even though the plate was supposedly on a different vehicle.

    4. Re:Summary is WRONG by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now, since they can read your plate and determine if you're an IPASS user, and there is no penalty for not having an IPASS unit in your car if you're a registered user...why have IPASS units at all? I guess for when it's raining or the plate is obscured and they can't collect a toll by OCRing the plate?

      I, in fact, no longer carry my transponder. I have a pickup, a car, and two motorcycles on my account. I only use the transponder in other people's vehicles... I haven't checked to see what their success rate in billing me is lately.

      I did get a ticket for some absurd amount a couple years ago. ($250 or so? It was when I was still moving the transponder from vehicle to vehicle.) I called them and said "WTF?" They said "Sorry", dismissed the ticket and deducted something like $6.85 for missed tolls from my account.

    5. Re:Summary is WRONG by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If they can't read your plate, then how do they send you a ticket or a bill? Sounds like a win/win for the driver not to have the IPASS unit in the car. You either get billed at the correct rate or they can't bill you because the can't identify the car/owner.

    6. Re:Summary is WRONG by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      my guess would be that OCR is computationally expensive, whereas detecting the IPASS isn't. so every successful IPASS detection is an OCR run avoided. if no-one had IPASSes, the increase in the amount of OCR required to process all the traffic could make the whole system more expensive to run (which, if it did, would make your tolls higher to cover it).

    7. Re:Summary is WRONG by WarlockD · · Score: 1
      Because the OCR system is notoriously incorrect. Last year the Dallas Morning News ran an article about it.: http://www.dallasnews.com/news/community-news/plano/headlines/20100702-Camera-system-s-flaws-cost-North-8760.ece

      July 03--Hundreds of thousands of drivers are getting a free ride on area toll roads even as tollway authorities hammer others with huge fines to recoup their losses.

      The reason: The costly camera system that is fast replacing human toll-takers routinely fails to identify customers who use the roads without a TollTag. As a result, 28 percent of drivers without TollTags are never even billed.

      See, we don't have toll booths anymore. So you drive though and pay a bill that is sent to the registered mailing address to your car. Hell, even the tags sometimes miss, though much more rarely. What they want you to do is to get a tag because you save 20% of the toil cost, but in reality its so they don't have to bother with the OCR at all. I can tell you this much, when it rains I put my tag in my glove compartment. Never been billed for the use of the roads during then.

  59. Re:Possibly just a bad idea or worse? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This demands a rimshot!

  60. Re:Let's face it, by TheCRAIGGERS · · Score: 1

    Didn't you mean: *slow clap*?

    Because it was deserving.

  61. Cash only by DigiTechGuy · · Score: 1

    I only pay cash. Sure they can still track me with license plate cameras, and sure they can still take (arguable less clear) pictures through the windows, but I will not enable (and pay for!) the privelege of making it easier of government to track me. So I pay cash at all tolls. I've heard rumblings of eventually ending cash lanes on some roads, but if that's teh case it just means the few longer drives I make in a year just get a bit longer, though perhaps more interesting from taking more back roads.

    1. Re:Cash only by j2.718ff · · Score: 1

      There's a toll road near me that has eliminated the cash option. They photograph your license plate, and mail you a bill.

    2. Re:Cash only by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yep that's how the do it on the 470 in denver. Just photograph the plate and send you a monthly. That's how my son got busted using my S2000 to pick up his girlfriend at Denver International. Now he knows why I am always ranting about invasion of privacy.

  62. Summary makes no sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have four degrees, and have read this story summary twice.

    It makes no sense whatsoever to me.

    Perhaps because I am not from the US and don't drive a car (I'm guessing it might be something to do with a car because the 'Highway Authority' is mentioned)?

    Can someone post a plain-English paraphrase of the story? What is this "transponder" of which you speak?

  63. Re:LOL .... by Grishnakh · · Score: 2

    That's not quite the way I remember it. Instead, I remember the Tea Party having some valid complaints, but then they were quickly co-opted by some greedy politicians like Palin and Bachmann. The Tea Partiers were so dumb and gullible that when these politicians said "we're one of you!" they believed it and adopted them as their spokespeople. After this, the TPers' reputations were ruined.

  64. This entire article is silly by cdrguru · · Score: 1

    First off, yes, we should all get pitchforks and ax handles to storm the Illinois Toll Authority over this. It is obscene that they think they can collect money for driving on roads, and roads that were promised to have the tolls removed from after they were paid for ... in like 1970. Here we are 41 years later and nobody is talking about discontinuing the tolls any longer.

    The whole iPass thing is a criminal enterprise to begin with. The idea of untraceably collecting money from people as they drive. Where is my receipt? And everyone was assured that no records were kept - until a stubborn divorce lawyer subpoenaed the Toll Authority for the records and ... imagine that, they were able to produce the records. It is now common knowledge that the records exist.

    But as far as a camera on the transponder is concerned, just exactly what do you think could happen with such a thing? The unit has an extremely short range so even if they could transmit a picture it could only be done at the point where the toll collection transceivers are. At 60Mph (a conservative speed for the 294 I would say) the total time the unit is in range to communicate with transceiver is less than a second, so the amount of data that could be transferred has to be very small. I can't see there being any ability to send even a 360x240 frame much less any saved frames. What do you think the minimum size for a crappy JPEG might be? 10K? The data rate available through this system can't be that high, so what do you think, maybe they could transfer 2K? Not going to be much of a picture, is it?

    So thinking about this reasonably, what possible use would a camera attached to one of these things be? You aren't going to be able to get the pictures off it. I suppose you might be able to capture the driver's face - assuming the camera is pointed correctly - and only the driver's face at a fairly low resolution to document who was driving the car at the time. Why this might be interesting from a toll collection standpoint I can't imagine and the infrastructure to enable such a high speed burst of data being transferred has to be significant. And you are going to have significant collision negotiation problems which can be resolved today pretty easily but extending the data transfer time makes these problems much, much worse.

    I don't see any practical application for such a camera, nor do I see it being possible to get any meaningful amount of data from the camera through such a system.

    Consider that there are police cars that transfer their in-car video data wirelessly, but it takes quite a few minutes to do that with the car parked. Now if we were talking about toll collection consisting of parking the car for five minutes I would say that everyone has a reason to be concerned about what might be getting recorded. The way things work today, I can't see there being a problem. Not only is this a solution without a problem behind it, but it is hopelessly constrained by the physics of the system such that there is no possibility of it actually doing anything meaningful.

    So we're back to the immorality and criminality of toll collection. We all know about toll collection from children's stories of ogres, trolls and the like. Where do these stories come from - history and myth. We should expect therefore to find the Illinois Toll Authority staffed by ogres and trolls, right?

    1. Re:This entire article is silly by Chris+Parrinello · · Score: 1

      The whole iPass thing is a criminal enterprise to begin with. The idea of untraceably collecting money from people as they drive. Where is my receipt? And everyone was assured that no records were kept - until a stubborn divorce lawyer subpoenaed the Toll Authority for the records and ... imagine that, they were able to produce the records. It is now common knowledge that the records exist.

      Yes and you can login to your IPASS account and view the records yourself.

      At 60Mph (a conservative speed for the 294 I would say)

      "the 294"? You're not from around here, are you? It is "294" not "the 294". :)

    2. Re:This entire article is silly by Ritchie70 · · Score: 1

      No it isn't.

      It's the Tri-State.

      Never, ever use the numbers - someone new to the area might accidentally understand what you're talking about.

      --
      The preferred solution is to not have a problem.
  65. Re:carpool discount, possible reason for the camer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There are lots of people who keep their ezpass in the metal coated bag and only mount it when they are near a toll

    Those people are idiots. Few things are quite as annoying as driving behind someone fishing around in their glove compartment to find the ezpass, then going slack-jawed slowly as they hold it up to the windshield and gape at the sign. I propose that the cop at the toll confiscate the ezpass, put it in a sock, and then beat the fool with it. One hit for each car lined up behind you.

    Wanting to pay tolls faster and get discounts should not mean having to submit to random and capricious tracking and a total loss of privacy when traveling.

    This is NYC. You have 8 million neighbors. You're worried about privacy?

  66. Re:Damn by PoopCat · · Score: 1

    Doing X in a place where it is not used is in fact using X. Ipso facto, hashtags ARE now used in slashdot. Adapt or die.

  67. Re:LOL .... by TubeSteak · · Score: 2

    The Tea Party has some clear goals - limit the power of government - follow the Constitution - cut government spending (and thus government control of the economy).
    What are the goals of these Wall Street demonstrators?

    http://coupmedia.org/occupywallstreet/occupy-wall-street-official-demands-2009
    The web page is evolving and you have to essentially read it in reverse order to see the progress
    the order is (AFAICT):

    1: Declaration of the Occupation of New York City (11 demands)
    2: Below Is The Original List of Proposed Demands and Voting Links for #Global Revolution (17 demands)
    3 and Most Recent: LIST OF PROPOSED "DEMANDS FOR CONGRESS (8 demands)

    The page keeps changing, so you mileage may vary

    --
    [Fuck Beta]
    o0t!
  68. Re:LOL .... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Beat me to it, but yeah, this is what I remember as well.

  69. Re:LOL .... by Toonol · · Score: 1

    I wonder if the Occupy$places movement could mean that they're already rising up.

    I think the 'occupy' movement just committed suicide. There are plenty of valid reasons to protest Wall Street. It's rife with corruption, cronyism, and regulatory problems. Many people from all over the political spectrum would agree with that.

    However, they've made some public statements, include a list of demands, that are blatantly fringe leftist. That changes it from a general movement to a fringe element of one party; it makes them mostly irrelevant.

    The Tea party has a similar problem, and handled it a little better, but still is falling prey to it. They should be purely about economic freedom: reduced taxation, reduced government spending. That was their original focus, and it had a lot of widespread support. Associating the Tea party with 'social' issues, like abortion/religion/gay rights, or foreign policy, make it more appealing to a small group but less appealing to a larger group. That seems to be happening as well.

  70. Re:LOL .... by RicoX9 · · Score: 1

    The Tea Party may have had these goals *in the distant past*, but it's now a flunky tool of the Evangelical Xtian movement whose goal has been to corrupt and take over government since the 70's. The only thing it really accomplished was to make the Republicans look like even bigger stooges of the military and corporate America.

  71. Re:carpool discount, possible reason for the camer by Taty'sEyes · · Score: 1

    Well, if we all had an RFID implant, then it could communicate with the ez-pass to confirm the number of occupants in the vehicle...

    ducks...

    --
    We show geeks how to get their dream girl at EyesOfOdessa.com
  72. Re:Damn by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    #fuckPoopCat FTW

  73. Re:LOL .... by brit74 · · Score: 1

    The Tea-Party could get a lot further if they weren't so full of hyperbole and paranoia. I hear these guys talking about high taxes and socialism. If you look at capital gains taxes and the percentage-rate of the highest taxes bracket, the US is historically paying very little in taxes. Out of curiosity, I looked up the highest tax rates historically. Currently, the highest tax bracket is 35%. Since 1936, there were 45 years where the top income tax bracket was between 69% and 94% (all of them were before 1980) - in other words, for 60% of the last 75 years, the tax rate was double or more of what it is today. Yet, Oreilly talks about leaving his job if taxes go up because there's no point in working. And Tax Partiers invoke "John Galt" - as if taxes in this day and age are so oppressive, they'd might as well disappear. There were only 5 years when the top tax bracket was lower than it is today (it was 1988-1992). Yet, Obama is a socialist for wanting to increase it slightly - even though the national debt is going up, and has been going up significantly under every Republican administration going back to Reagan. Tea-Partiers have no sense of history.

  74. Re:LOL .... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    link?

    Now we are getting revisionist history of the Tea Party. They have ALWAYS been labeled by the media as racists. The only reason the Tea Party was given to exist by the left, was because they were racists. That is FROM DAY 1!!!! To try to say now that they had a point and were taken over by evangelicals tells us more about you, than it does about them.

  75. Re:Damn by SleazyRidr · · Score: 1

    How, pray tell, can I *use* hashtags in /.?

  76. One thing not mentioned.... by wandazulu · · Score: 1

    I have an ipass, and it's entirely hidden by the rear-view mirror; if there was in fact a camera, all it would capture is the back (front?) of the mirror. As I recall, the installation instructions specifically suggested that spot as being the most unobtrusive.

  77. Re:Damn by shadowfaxcrx · · Score: 1

    where I live, they record on the bus, and are reviewed if a fight breaks out or some other crime happens. I'm actually OK with cameras on buses - here in my city, for a long time buses had a bad reputation as a good place to go if you wanted to get mugged. Since the cameras went in, more people feel safe taking the bus, and moving people toward mass transit is good for everyone.

    They can already track your movement on the bus (they know who bought what bus pass, and they know what bus it was used on and when, which means they can figure out where you started and where you got off). Buses have no reasonable expectation of privacy, and the cameras don't auto-generate tickets for anything. OK by me.

    --
    "I disagree with you" does not equal "flamebait."
  78. Interesting by Dunbal · · Score: 1

    At least they are up front about what they want this for:

    "16. The onboard unit according to claim 1, wherein the onboard unit contains an acceleration sensor, which in the event of an acceleration exceeding a threshold causes the camera to record an image.

    17. The onboard unit according to claim 1, wherein the onboard unit contains a satellite navigation receiver to provide the image recording with the location and time data of its creation." Reminds me of this poster, except you'll be riding with a traffic cop 24/7. Nice! But why would I need this if my car already comes with On Star?

    --
    Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
  79. Re:LOL .... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As someone who lives with Tea Baggery every day, I can honestly state that it's been co-opted by religious zealotry.

    Limit government control? I'm on board. Force your batshit religious whims on me and my family, using my tax dollars, in direct violation of our nations foundational philosophies, and I'll fight you till I'm dead.

    They lost their way years ago, and haven't looked back.

  80. Re:LOL .... by Lithdren · · Score: 1

    Then stand up and demand those same rights. Thats what we did, there is no 'luck' involved. People died for those rights.

    If you're not willing to die for those rights, you shouldn't complain when you dont have them. Thats whats happening here. People would rather not die, and just let things happen. Thats slowly changing.

  81. Re:LOL .... by lgw · · Score: 1

    You "remember" this from your frequent attendence at Tea Party rallies? Or do you remember the Narrative as spun by the large media outlets changing over time as they found unpopular people to associate with the movement?

    Honest question here.

    --
    Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  82. Thanks for doing the due diligence by sgt_doom · · Score: 0
    jandrese (sounds idiotic, too) probably doesn't even wear panties, as she/he/it's ignoring and ignorance sounds mighty purported. I thank the author timothy for doing the scud work on this, and thanks to all and many who have tirelessly researched just how the USA, and the UK, and elsewhere are forever designing and building the "Big Brother Surveillance State."

    Then, when enough people realize that the banksters control the debt, and the credit and the financial intelligence (the last two items through their Regulatory DataCorp's G.R.I.D. -- Global Regulatory Information Database, the end result of Cheney/Poindexter's Total Information Awareness project) then they may finally realize they've been sitting on their butts watching TV/porn/sports/the Kardashians for far too long while everything has gone down the toilet.

  83. Another view on that by Quila · · Score: 1

    The press had already successfully demonized Palin and Bachmann (some deservedly, some not, some stuff just made up) in the public's mind.

    Those two late-comers to the Tea Party movement wanted Tea Party support to get votes, and the press was more than willing to put their faces on as the national face of the Tea Party in order to further demonize the Tea Party.

    1. Re:Another view on that by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      And the TPers themselves were more than willing to allow these bimbos to have speeches at their events. The TP demonized itself; it didn't need any help from the media.

      And what stuff about these two bimbos was "made up"?

    2. Re:Another view on that by Quila · · Score: 1

      And the TPers themselves were more than willing to allow these bimbos to have speeches at their events

      Yes, they should let the media lies about two people influence whether those people should speak. BTW, the Tea Party has no central governance to make such politically savvy decisions. It's a grassroots movement with fully independent chapters across the country.

      And what stuff about these two bimbos was "made up"?

      "I can see Alaska from my house" was promoted as something Palin said instead of the SNL sketch it was. Many of her detractors still believe she said it, and when presented with the fact she didn't, dismisse it.

      Palin referenced "Party like it's 1773" and was denounced by the liberal press as ignorant -- didn't she know it's 1776? But that was a Tea Party event, and she was referring to the 1773 Boston Tea Party. They were the ignorant ones, but they spun it as her being ignorant.

      Bachmann saying to a crowd "Who likes white people?" was propagated by the liberal press as true. Problem is, she said to a drenched crowd in the rain, "Who likes wet people?"

      Just look at how they deal with gaffes. Bachmann made a mistake of the "shot heard around the world" location and was excoriated as a dumb bimbo in the mainstream liberal press. But Obama was virtually given a free pass when he thought Arkansas was closer to Kentucky than Illinois (IL borders KY, AR doesn't). Bachmann mixed up two small far away New England states. Obama didn't even know which states bordered his own. But Bachmann's the idiot?

    3. Re:Another view on that by LearnToSpell · · Score: 1

      "I can see Alaska from my house" was promoted as something Palin said instead of the SNL sketch it was.

      I'd hope she could see Alaska from her house, living in Vladivostok and all...

  84. Re:LOL .... by SecurityGuy · · Score: 1

    Kara DioWhateverhername is flashing "jazz hands" is also front page news on CNN. CNN is not what it used to be, by which I mean a credible news organization.

  85. Re:Damn by PoopCat · · Score: 1

    You seem like a smart guy. Imagine the satisfaction that will come from figuring out the answer on your own!

  86. Re:LOL .... by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

    Unpopular? Palin and Bachmann are very popular among their many fans. These two made speeches at TP events; it's not like the news media fabricated this.

  87. Re:LOL .... by berashith · · Score: 1

    this is pretty close to my memory too...

    I agreed with a lot of what they were saying and stood for, then Glenn Beck started to agree, then more loonies got involved and co-opted the movement for themselves, and the reputation was wrecked. Adding Bachman and friends was close to the same time, so I am not 100% sure which event destroyed the movement for me.

    I still dont understand why Ron Paul ( who had all the ideas that the movement said it was pulling for before the movement existed) isnt backed by the TPers. I dont mind, makes me feel okay when I enjoy his rhetoric.

  88. fail slastdot post by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    so... photos of your new transponder with a camera inside or it didn't happen

  89. Re:LOL .... by Attack+DAWWG · · Score: 2

    Have you actually turned on a TV or read a newspaper in the last year or two?

    Palin and Bachmann associated themselves with the Tea Party movement. They give speech after speech invoking the Tea Party and they have very many Tea Party supporters.

    And you're trying to say this is "spun by the lib'rul media"? Amazing.

  90. Re:Damn by SpaceCadetTrav · · Score: 1

    Here is a demo of modern surveillance systems installed to watch bus passengers. This one is from Orange County CA and it has 7 cameras rolling at all times. http://www.fullertonsfuture.org/2011/octa-uncut/

  91. More than that: RFID tickets by F69631 · · Score: 1

    Where I live, all the tickets are electronic. Sure, you can buy single tickets from the driver but they cost more, aren't eligible for student discounts, etc... So everyone has a personal, electronic ticket to which you can either buy a period of time (e.g., a month) or value (e.g., 30 euros). When you get into the bus, you bring the ticket close to a device attached to the wall. If you have a period of time, it just beeps to inform the driver that he can get let you in and if you have value, you need to press some of the buttons to indicate how far you'll go (after which some of the value is reduced from your card, the device beeps, etc.).

    The big brother doesn't need cameras to know about practically every distance longer than walking distance that I've traveled during the last few years. This includes the times I've taken a taxi as I use credit cards to pay for those.

    1. Re:More than that: RFID tickets by Obfiscator · · Score: 1

      There is a similar system in Helsinki. However, you only use the card when you get on the bus. So the authorities only know when you got on, not where you got off...at least until you take the return trip. :)

      --
      "Nothing shocks me. I'm a scientist." -Indiana Jones
  92. Re:LOL .... by Hijacked+Public · · Score: 1

    When you hear people talk about John Galt, or 'going Galt' or quitting thier jobs over too much tax being taken, you can be absolutely 100% sure in every single case that the person is lying and would never quit.

    People like O'Reilly would fight you to gain a dollar even if the government was going to take 99 cents of it. An amount more is what matters to them, above the amount itself.

    --
    "Sacrifice for the good of The State" - The State
  93. Child Porn Alert ! by tekrat · · Score: 1, Insightful

    So, if my daughter is changing out of her sweats and into her cheerleader uniform in back seat (and we have tinted windows), and this device just happens to snap a photo at the right time...

    Someone needs to remind these iPass (can't Apple Sue?) people of the Penn. School Board people that were surreptitiously monitoring kids in their homes via laptop webcams.

    I fail to see how kids can be prosecuted as adults to "sexting" themselves to other's cell phones, but the government is OK with taking photos at random everywhere and yet, they fail to see the potential for creating tons of kiddie porn, which will, no doubt, get itself distributed somehow. So America, which wants to stamp out kiddie porn, the government is the biggest producer of... go figure.

    --
    If telephones are outlawed, then only outlaws will have telephones.
  94. Re:Damn by rinoid · · Score: 1

    ... or using CASH.

  95. Vodka in a water bottle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Vodka in a water bottle still works. Gets a lot of people through their workday, should work in a car also.

  96. And to add to the mix by sgt_doom · · Score: 1
    http://cryptogon.com/?p=25289

    http://cryptome.org/0005/ssl-broken.htm

    (Correction: SRI is Stanford Research International. It was originally called Stanford Research Institute so as to suggest it was affiliated with Stanford University -- located nearby -- but after a lawsuit from Stanford, SRI changed the I to "International.")

  97. Why not the easy way? by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
    Why not the easy/old fashioned way....just go back to paying cash at the toll booth?

    No picture that way....and no tracking you at all that way.

    --
    Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    1. Re:Why not the easy way? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly. It's not like the government mandated that a unique number be attached to each vehicle by which it could be tracked or anything...

    2. Re:Why not the easy way? by Cosgrach · · Score: 1

      In these here parts, if I pay a toll with cash at a tool booth they take a photo of the front of my car. This shows both the front plate and the driver. Not tracking? Yeah, right.

      However, the solution to the problem of the camera is simple. Turn the transponder around so that the camera is pointed forward. The only picture that they will get is the view through the front windscreen.

      --
      Why is it that most of the people that I encounter seem to have been shat from the Sphincter of Mediocrity?
    3. Re:Why not the easy way? by kunwon1 · · Score: 1

      Because in Illinois, paying cash means paying twice as much.

      --
      Specialization is for insects. -Heinlein
    4. Re:Why not the easy way? by Bob76 · · Score: 1

      There are no toll booths here around the Denver metro area. Everything is done by electronic pass on your windshield or a photo of your license plate. The photo eventually leads to getting a bill in the mail.

    5. Re:Why not the easy way? by djdanlib · · Score: 2

      Well, here's why the EZPass system is currently a good idea:
      * Bypass the enormous lines at rush hour. Try going over the Tappan Zee at 5:30 PM with one, and you'll never want to give up your EZPass.
      * 10% discount on tolls when paid with EZPass adds up.
      * It has automatic credit card billing so you don't have to make sure you have change on hand for tolls.
      * You can put in the foil bag it comes with to prevent it being read.

      If they can just keep those benefits without adding additional tracking, it would be good. I like the way it is right now.

      The patent specified optional camera(s), acceleration sensors and satnav tracking... I'd like to keep it the way it is!!

    6. Re:Why not the easy way? by gnapster · · Score: 1

      Because the number of exits which do not accept cash are increasing. In Miami, they are doing away with them entirely in the name of safety. (If a driver doesn't have to aim for specific lanes (change, coins only), then they won't have to switch lanes, which reduces the chance of accidents.)

    7. Re:Why not the easy way? by Seng · · Score: 1

      Coincidentally, the State of IL just got done announcing they were effectively doubling the cash AND IPASS prices for their tollways. Guess they have to pay for Quinn's political favors to the transponder vendor somehow.

    8. Re:Why not the easy way? by Culture20 · · Score: 1

      However, the solution to the problem of the camera is simple. Turn the transponder around so that the camera is pointed forward. The only picture that they will get is the view through the front windscreen.

      "I found that the manufacturer has recently filed a patent application for a new transponder that has a camera in it â" a camera pointed inward at the occupants. How long before they make it illegal to cover that camera with tape?" or point in the wrong direction..

    9. Re:Why not the easy way? by Kozar_The_Malignant · · Score: 1

      They're getting rid of those people. It's not an option a lot of places. And even where there are still toll booth occupants, there are cameras taking pictures of you going through the toll booth.

      --
      Some mornings it's hardly worth chewing through the restraints to get out of bed.
    10. Re:Why not the easy way? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or move downstate, nothing but miles of free highways from Joliet to Cairo. And cows, heroin, and meth. Not everyone will find all of those things favorable.

    11. Re:Why not the easy way? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They have license plate readers at the toll booth anyway.

    12. Re:Why not the easy way? by Adriax · · Score: 1

      Mirror.

      --
      I don't suffer from insanity, I enjoy every minute of it!
    13. Re:Why not the easy way? by _0xd0ad · · Score: 1

      Wonder how much they spent on that system instead of just raising the gas tax a few tenths of a cent?

    14. Re:Why not the easy way? by jc42 · · Score: 2

      It's not like the government mandated that a unique number be attached to each vehicle by which it could be tracked or anything...

      Dunno whether you were writing tongue-in-cheek, but we might point out explicitly that this has been done. Readers who aren't familiar with the topic might try googling "RFID in tires" and reading a few of the articles.

      So if you've bought a new car (or got new tires) in the US recently, your car can be tracked by RFID transceivers that you drive past. How much of this data is actually being collected doesn't seem to be much documented. There's an obvious problem in that it does require installing the RFID equipment throughout the road system, and it will probably be difficult to keep such a massive installation a secret for long. Today, you are probably mostly tracked this way when you pass a toll station on a major highway, or enter/exit parking lots of specific organizations that have decided to collect the data. But the installed base of RFID gadgetry on roads will probably slowly expand in the future.

      --
      Those who do study history are doomed to stand helplessly by while everyone else repeats it.
    15. Re:Why not the easy way? by jc42 · · Score: 1

      Mirror.

      Yeah. Actually, it's fairly common to install such transceivers on the glass in front of the rear-view mirror, since that's a place that doesn't block any more of your vision, and has good contact with the toll-booth electronics. So to be useful, they'll probably have to mandate that you install them in a spot with a clear view of the interior of your car, and if it can see you, it will inevitably block some of what you can see while driving.

      --
      Those who do study history are doomed to stand helplessly by while everyone else repeats it.
    16. Re:Why not the easy way? by JTsyo · · Score: 1

      Because it takes 3 times as long as to get through the toll plaza.

    17. Re:Why not the easy way? by Adriax · · Score: 1

      In short, mandating by law that this be installed in a specific spot facing a specific direction would generate too much backlash.
      Snub nose trucks with no real dash to mount things on, motorcycles, alot of the little extreme fuel effeciency "cars" you see as concepts and sometimes production models. Not to mention cars with a right side driver configuration (student driver cars and foreign cars).
      Fringe cases sure, but the people who can afford to have a european sports car shipped over and registered for street use tent to also have the cash to make a lot of noise in government buildings when something annoys them.

      --
      I don't suffer from insanity, I enjoy every minute of it!
    18. Re:Why not the easy way? by CAlworth1 · · Score: 1

      I believe the AC was referring in fact to license plates. Printed on a reflective surface, so they are easy to pick up on camera.

    19. Re:Why not the easy way? by cayenne8 · · Score: 1

      So, his does that work for someone driving through from out of state?

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    20. Re:Why not the easy way? by JWSmythe · · Score: 1

        I was surprised that they do that when you're trying to leave the parking garage at LAX also. The funny part was, at night my taillights were too bright for their camera. I'd pull up to the booth, and have my foot on the brakes, and they couldn't read the license plate. I had to shut off the lights and take my foot off the brakes. I never got a satisfactory answer to why I couldn't just pay. Cash, no change, open the gate. Why do they *need* a record that I left.

          The common excuse was that it was to prevent car thefts. But, they never verified that the car was mine. All they know is that someone left the parking garage in that car.

          We don't have the luxury of very many cash toll booths where I am now. They've gone almost completely automated. If you have a transponder, it charges your account right away. If you don't, they'll send a bill to you at home, because they still take photos of every license plate. If the plate doesn't correspond to a transponder transaction, they mail it to you. Then it's up to you to dispute it if they try to charge you both ways. I haven't run into that, but people I know have. Maybe it has something to do with driving around with an opaque license plate cover. :)

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    21. Re:Why not the easy way? by JWSmythe · · Score: 1

          Don't forget the idiots who fuck up the whole flow. You know, the ones that'll pull up to a closed lane, but not actually far enough so someone will override the gate. Then they'll back up into traffic, and then try to drive across every lane, and eventually just stop for about a minute while they try to figure out how much they had screwed up.

          That's almost as bad as the people aimed for the sunpass lane doing 60, just to stand on the brakes and stop when they reach the gate. I'm not sure which was more difficult to understand. "Speed Limit 25mph", or "Do Not Stop".

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
  98. Re:Damn by AJH16 · · Score: 1

    While I don't disagree that I don't see a privacy concern with cameras on buses, it is worth pointing out that in every city I know of, it is possible to buy a bus ticket with cash, and therefore, they don't know who you are when you get on or when you get off. Many also don't require you to scan a pass getting both on and off.

    --
    AJ Henderson
  99. Why not just pay cash? by cayenne8 · · Score: 1

    If you pass through more than one toll gate, they can determine your average speed between the toll gates, and if it's over the average posted limit, they can send you a ticket. If they have a picture of you driving at both check points, then they have proof it was you speeding.

    As I'd mentioned earlier...why not just ditch the electronic toll pass altogether...and just pay cash?

    Then, they don't have as easy a way to track you at all...

    --
    Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    1. Re:Why not just pay cash? by Bucky24 · · Score: 1

      I got ticketed at a Fasttrak lane a month ago (I didn't have a Fasttrak pass and by the time I realized my mistake it was too late to merge to another lane). They took a picture of my license plate and used that to track me down. They don't need to have a picture of your face in order to find out who's car it is. Hell they don't even need to have a device in your car at all. Your car CARRIES an ID around with it on the bumper.

      --
      All the world's a CPU, and all the men and women merely AI agents
    2. Re:Why not just pay cash? by cayenne8 · · Score: 1

      I got ticketed at a Fasttrak lane a month ago (I didn't have a Fasttrak pass and by the time I realized my mistake it was too late to merge to another lane). They took a picture of my license plate and used that to track me down. They don't need to have a picture of your face in order to find out who's car it is. Hell they don't even need to have a device in your car at all. Your car CARRIES an ID around with it on the bumper.

      I've been wondering about that....

      Wondering if I were to install a large number of extremely high intensity IR LEDs around the license plate...if that would blind the camera, but all the while, leave the plate perfectly readable by human eyes?

      :)

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    3. Re:Why not just pay cash? by Bucky24 · · Score: 1

      Haha I just read your other comment that says the same thing. I'm fairly certain this is illegal, though I wonder how they'd catch you...

      --
      All the world's a CPU, and all the men and women merely AI agents
    4. Re:Why not just pay cash? by cayenne8 · · Score: 1

      Haha I just read your other comment that says the same thing. I'm fairly certain this is illegal, though I wonder how they'd catch you...

      I'm actually wondering about the 'illegality" myself. I mean, as I understand it..and I am FAR from being a lawyer, I think most laws stipulate that the plates must be readable at x distance. If it doesn't stipulate electronically readable..I'd guess you could argue that a human cop or other enforcement agent could read it, and that was what the intent of the law was?

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    5. Re:Why not just pay cash? by _0xd0ad · · Score: 1

      I wonder how they'd catch you...

      Probably the first cop you passed who wondered why the dashcam just went blind.

    6. Re:Why not just pay cash? by cayenne8 · · Score: 1

      Hmm...is there a law saying it has to be readable to a dash cam?

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    7. Re:Why not just pay cash? by _0xd0ad · · Score: 1

      In the Missouri Revised Statutes it states that the plates "shall be aesthetically attractive" and "Each such plate shall be securely fastened to the motor vehicle or trailer in a manner so that all parts thereof shall be plainly visible and reasonably clean so that the reflective qualities thereof are not impaired". Section 301.130

      But we all know that you'd probably just get nailed for some statute related to interfering with the police's ability to collect evidence and/or perform their duties.

    8. Re:Why not just pay cash? by _0xd0ad · · Score: 1

      Whoops, intended to say, picked MO because that's relevant to me, but I imagine most states would have something sufficiently ambiguous about the display of license plates that could be interpreted to make it illegal.

    9. Re:Why not just pay cash? by bennomatic · · Score: 1

      There are laws in at least some states (California for sure, don't know about others) which prohibit the installation of non-essential external lights on vehicles. Of course, it's not heavily enforced, clearly, as I've seen the guys with their low-riders with fluorescent under-carriage lights cruising down the strip many a time. But if you're looking for a technicality...

      --
      The CB App. What's your 20?
  100. Re:LOL .... by NotSanguine · · Score: 1

    That's not quite the way I remember it. Instead, I remember the Tea Party having some valid complaints, but then they were quickly co-opted by some greedy politicians like Palin and Bachmann. The Tea Partiers were so dumb and gullible that when these politicians said "we're one of you!" they believed it and adopted them as their spokespeople. After this, the TPers' reputations were ruined.

    And don't forget the Koch brothers. They were major contributor to TP candidates.

    I just wish we could get back to the original definition of "Tea Bagger"

    --
    No, no, you're not thinking; you're just being logical. --Niels Bohr
  101. It's just obsolete by Ritchie70 · · Score: 1

    Just to put some context around this, the "new" transponders were out 10 years ago. I've had an IPass hanging off my windshield since at least 2001 and it's always been the newer ones, no replaceable battery, no beep. They were fairly new at the time, because some of the instructions talked about stuff the new ones didn't have but the old ones did.

    There's probably no evil conspiracy. He's just the IPass equivalent of an Windows 98 user and they don't want to support him any more. The old transponders may have a different protocol, or the failure rate among them may have hit a point where they just want them all out of the field.

    You can tell if the toll has been paid if you go through the lanes that are like the coin collection lanes (where you're supposed to stop.) There's a light.

    It's only the "open road tolling" where you can't tell, and if your transponder isn't working you don't get a ticket - because they know your license plate. So if you have a broken transponder, they look up the plate in their database and apply the normal IPass charge to your account. I went literally months before I realized my transponder had failed, and they didn't even mention it to me, much less send a ticket. I just finally realized that the light never lit up on the side of the road when I drove by.

    Now, there have been rumors of tickets being issued based on the transponders - if I make it from toll point A to toll point B in an amount of time that indicates an average speed over the speed limit, I was clearly speeding. But so far I've never gotten a ticket, and I surely have deserved one many times. But a camera would make sense in that case - you want to be able to prove who was driving.

    --
    The preferred solution is to not have a problem.
  102. Couple of Things by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1. You can face the transponder any direction you like. I keep mine in my center-console and it works just fine. If you think yours has a camera, rotate it to point out the front of the car: they already know you're at the toll-booth anyway.

    2. I-Pass/EZPass transponders don't phone home: they are pretty much just like RFIDs. So, even if there were a camera in the transponder, it's not like it's going to send a live video feed back to I-Pass central.

    3. If the transponder were to add some kind of cellular transmitter so it /could/ dial home and upload photos/video/GPS data, the cost of the network traffic would probably outweigh the amount of money collected in tolls.

    So, if you see your tolls increase from $0.50 to $9.50, it's time to get some masking tape.

  103. Re:Damn by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

    #nerdrage

    --
    "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
  104. IL is on the EZ-pass system now IN needs get rid o by Joe_Dragon · · Score: 1

    IL is on the EZ-pass system now IN needs get rid of the gates in I-Zoom (part of the EZ-pass system) only lanes they look like the I-pass only ones but have gates at the end. I also most hit one thinking the 15mph I-Zoom only lanes where like the IL ones with no gates and then saw the gate at the back and hit the brakes hard.

  105. the $10 is fully refundable and you can link more by Joe_Dragon · · Score: 1

    the $10 is fully refundable and you can link more then 1 Transponder to your account.

  106. Re:LOL .... by jdastrup · · Score: 1

    The Tea-Party wants more FREEDOM and less SECURITY. Those are polar opposites. Dems and Reps both want to increase Security and decrease Freedom. So, for people who want Freedom, where do they go? who do they vote for? who represents them?

    Don't criticize the Tea-Party for wanting Freedom. Because they don't have an official leader, yet, there are a lot of them who make different statements and claims, and they all don't agree with the details. But the one thing they all agree on is Freedom.

    And you're right, many of them don't understand history, and taxes ARE too low to support the current government programs that ensure our Security.

  107. Re:LOL .... by lgw · · Score: 1

    You basically look like an idiot when you can't even tell the difference between Evangelical and Fundamentalist Christians. Hint: they don't much like each other. Evangelical churches, by definition, compete for members with other churches of the same religion (this is doubly true of televangelists). In Reagans day there was some overlap between Evangelical and Fundamentalist Christians, becaue the fire-and-brimstone and Hod-hates-fags stuff was prety popular with the older generations. That fashion has reversed over the past 20 years, and now we have huge Evangelical mega-churches that know the basis of their sucess: all "up with people", never mention sin, rarely mention Jesus. Hardy the people you need to be worried about - those would be the Fundamentalist Christians.

    And the Tea Party seems to be dislodging the Fundamentalist Christians from their place in the Rebublican coalition, as the guys who knock on doors and man phones come election time.

    --
    Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  108. Re:LOL .... by lgw · · Score: 0

    Does saying that you're the leader of a group make it so? Does having some followers make it so? From what I've seen, when Palin says stuff the Tea Partiers agree with, they cheer, and when she doesn't they ignore her: hardly the sigh of a leader.

    And you're trying to say this is "spun by the lib'rul media"?

    Ahh, I see, everyone who disagrees with you is a drooling red-state moron, since no one intelligent could disagree? How's that religion working out for you?

    --
    Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  109. Re:LOL .... by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

    Yeah IIRC one of the points of their early "constitution" (which conflicted with itself) was basically pushing a theocracy, making the US a Christian nation or something like that. This was one of the points that conflicted with another point, religious freedom.

    "You can worship anyone you want, as long as it's Jesus."

    --
    "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
  110. Re:LOL .... by Attack+DAWWG · · Score: 2

    Everyone wants freedom for themselves. Heck, even criminals want "freedom" to commit their crimes.

    The Tea Partiers seem to be all about getting as much freedom as possible for themselves, and taking away freedom from anyone who is different from them. And they will use Big Government to pass laws to take other's freedoms away. Have you asked a Tea Partier for their opinions on abortion lately? Medical marijuana? Gay marriage? Integrating (their own) religion with government?

  111. Just stop and pay with coins/cash by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Buy your tolls with cash. Sure, it isn't as convenient, or in my state, cheap, but they can't surveil me through cash, yet... Besides, if everyone, or even some large minority of drivers would boycott the machines and stop at toll booths, it would actually result in tollbooth bottlenecks, put more people to work collecting tolls, costing the toll collectors money, slowing down commerce, making people late, and causing confusion and delay. The other alternative is don't take toll roads. When you already pay taxes, why are you paying tolls?

    1. Re:Just stop and pay with coins/cash by cornface · · Score: 1

      You are actually wrong. In my state at least the cameras at every tollbooth do automatic license plate recognition, both as a means of issuing tickets, or so that you can register a temporary car and drive through the ez tag lanes without your tag.

      So you are being watched and noted regardless of what you are paying with.

      They also put up ez tag readers along even non-toll routes as a means of collecting traffic (including speed) data. Despite reassurances I can't imagine this goldmine of tracking and potential ticketing will go untapped forever.

    2. Re:Just stop and pay with coins/cash by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Learn to read, fucking moron. He is talking about going through the CASH lanes, which in many states do not have cameras.

      Holy fuck.

    3. Re:Just stop and pay with coins/cash by cornface · · Score: 1

      Hey dummy, I specified my state, where even the cash lanes have tag readers.

      p.s. kill yourself

  112. Re:LOL .... by jdastrup · · Score: 1

    Many of those topics you bring up are not issues that the Federal Government should be dealing with, so if you ever hear a Tea Partier talk about Abortion, Marijuana (medical or not), etc, they are not talking about it from the Tea Party perspective, but from their own opinion.

    That's another thing you don't understand about the Tea Party - unlike Dems and Reps, they all don't believe the exact same thing, or vote the same way. In contrast, if your a loyal Dem you vote for Abortion, and if you're a loyal Rep you vote against Abortion. But, if you're are a Tea Partier, you don't support Abortion being a Federal issue.

  113. irresponsible report? by tjmcmullin · · Score: 1

    so, in reading only the first few comments, it appears that Illinois state is not using the camera in any way, has no intention to do so, never did, and this whole article, from it's catchy title to the contents, is largely in part speculative dribble stirring up fear. terrorism is what some people call it. can we just remove this garbage from the site? slashdot is a great new site but i don't want conspiracy theorists and fear mongering getting the better of what makes front page here... how was this useful for nerds? we know about big brother, yes? was there anything added to the cauldron of conspiracy here today that was newsworthy or is someone just looking for a soapbox in the limelight? sorry, i just don't get this new article...

  114. Misleading headline by Arancaytar · · Score: 1

    Big Brother calls shotgun

    Complete rubbish. The armed response module won't be included until the next version.

  115. Big brother is getting? greedy by redwraith94 · · Score: 1

    From the text of the patent, it sounds like they are trying to find a way to take a still, in order count passengers. I would guess so that they can charge per person in the vehicle, or at least have the option in the future. Not that it couldn't be used for something more nefarious. Either way it's cash for me thanks.

    --
    I art more snarky, and terse than thou. I art Slashdot!
  116. how-could-george-bush-do-such-a-thing by CoverStory · · Score: 1

    What does this have to do with George Bush?

  117. Re:LOL .... by Attack+DAWWG · · Score: 1

    And you're trying to say this is "spun by the lib'rul media"?

    Ahh, I see, everyone who disagrees with you is a drooling red-state moron, since no one intelligent could disagree? How's that religion working out for you?

    How is what you said even related to what I said?

  118. Which is funny by Stargoat · · Score: 1

    Which is funny, because Big Brother in Illinois is very much anti-shotgun.

    --
    Hoist Number One and Number Six.
  119. Re:Damn by SleazyRidr · · Score: 1

    You don't seem like such a smart guy. Try to think about the purpose of hashtags to work out why I said that.

  120. Re:Damn by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And the rest of us should lose privacy so you can feel all warm and fuzzy inside because...?

  121. look at the sky by pdfsmail · · Score: 1

    Just mount the responder where the windshield meets the dash... with the camera facing up... it still reads when you go through the toll.. and all they see is the sky (and no tape used).

  122. Re:LOL .... by lgw · · Score: 1

    I know people who are "going Galt" already, in one way or another. One retired a couple of years earlier than he had originally planned (still quite well off). One is a consultant who'd now waiting till next year to start his next contract, having made about $250K already. One's a small business owner who decided not to risk highering one more employeee this year, because his personal risk/reward on that isn't so good with where his marginal tax rates are (beyond a certain point you start losing the ability to deduct things as you make for money, so the effective marginal rate is well over 50% for certain ranges).

    Once you're making seriously good money, the marginal utility of that next dollar is low compared to actually having some time to spend with your family,and it's very possible for higher tax rates to make the difference. And that's a shame, because we really need business owners to be willing to take a risk right now: that's the only cure for the unemployment blues.

    --
    Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  123. Re:LOL .... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Tea partier here..

    Have you asked a Tea Partier for their opinions on abortion lately?

    The choice of the person carrying it, always.

    Medical marijuana?

    Sure. But I wouldn't stop there: if you want to, smoke up.

    Gay marriage?

    Sure. Let them be just as miserable as everyone else.

    Integrating (their own) religion with government?

    Kindof hard to force my lack of religion into government.

  124. Re:Damn by fusiongyro · · Score: 1

    Absent some kind of hash-tag search (you may recall, this is why this exists on Twitter) it adds nothing to the conversation except "I'm the kind of guy who thinks Slashdot is basically the same thing as Twitter."

  125. but the govt would never spy on avg citizens.. by shop+S+Mart · · Score: 1

    i'm sure they wont turn the camera on unless you report the car stolen or the govt subpoenas video evidence of something.

    --
    "all i wanted was a pepsi..."
  126. Great... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ANOTHER article on Patent Tolls...

  127. Re:LOL .... by NiteShaed · · Score: 1

    One is a consultant who'd now waiting till next year to start his next contract, having made about $250K already.

    How does that make sense? If he's just got enough money and wants to take time off, hell, I'd be on board with that, but for tax purposes? What, the fact that he'll pay a few percent more on everything past what he's already made suddenly makes it not worthwhile? He'd still be getting 65% of everything over $250k, so if he'd gross another $50k, he'd still keep $32,500, which in my world is not an insignificant amount of money....Now, if he thinks that next year he's going to potentially not have that much work, and would rather be taxed on that $50k at the lower rate to make his income for 2012 higher overall, well, that's a different story, and then it'd potentially make sense to put off that contract regardless of what he's being taxed at if he can afford to wait. That's an issue of managing backlog more than anything else though....

    --
    Some bring out the best in others, some the worst. Some bring out far more.
  128. Re:Damn by PoopCat · · Score: 1

    #hashtag

    Happy?

  129. Are you sure the new tags use batteries? by Megane · · Score: 1

    (This notifies drivers that their battery is still good, unlike the silent second-generation version, which informs them of a dead battery by sending a ticket in the mail.)

    I followed the link and the word "battery" was nowhere. The problem was entirely a database problem. Is submitter trolling or just completely stupid?

    I know that current generation TxTag toll tags in Texas are RFID stickers, and of course they won't beep. Is submitter really sure that the current generation I-Pass tags use batteries?

    As for the camera, a patent is not a statement of what is actually going to be implemented, or even what is feasible to implement. I can't see why anyone would want to do it, other than nosiness on the part of the gummint, or under-the-table deals from someone wanting to sell them, especially when it is clear that a battery is no longer needed for toll tag transponders. 1) a camera would take a lot more power than a transponder, are they expecting people to hook it up to the lighter plug? 2) how exactly do they plan to get the data from the camera to Big Brother, especially on battery power? That's a lot of data, and a lot of battery drain.

    --
    #naabhaprzrag, #sverubfr-000, #agi-fcbafberq, negvpyr[pynff*=' negvpyr-ary-'] { qvfcynl: abar !vzcbegnag; }
  130. cash? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    why not pay the toll in cash? I dont live in USA so I dont fully understand the problem, here we have automated toll too, but you have the option to pay in cash, thing that I do. I dont even have a credit card, all my purchases are in cash.

  131. Re:Damn by PoopCat · · Score: 1

    #hashtag search, at your service. You're welcome. Now we've successfully shown hashtags can be and indeed ARE used on slashdot, by your logic, slashdot IS now twitter.

  132. Re:Damn by shadowfaxcrx · · Score: 1

    And you should expect privacy on a public bus that's driving down a public street in public because... ?

    --
    "I disagree with you" does not equal "flamebait."
  133. Re:carpool discount, possible reason for the camer by rastoboy29 · · Score: 1

    You would accept removing the cover every time  you paid a toll?

    Christ, we are fucked.

  134. SunPass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My wife and I have a new-style battery-free SunPass (Florida), and before I used it, I thought "No lights and beeping...how do I tell if it's defective or if I have a low balance?"

    Simple.

    As I enter a SunPass-equipped toll point, there's a traffic signal. Red means it didn't see a SunPass, and I'll probably be hearing from them. A green "THANK YOU" means I was tolled. Yellow means I was tolled, but the yellow light has the words "LOW BAL" in it, warning me to add money.

    Some newer toll points in Florida allow SunPass to go through at full speed without stopping, and cash/receipt drivers have to take an exit, similar to a commercial truck weigh station. Not sure how this would work Re: failed SunPasses, but the way I'd hope it would work would be:

    - I drive through a full-speed SunPass lane with a defective SunPass, so it doesn't register.
    - Enforcement camera gets my license plate number.
    - The SunPass database sees that my license plate number has a SunPass, and I get an e-mail explaining what happened with a link that will take me to a page, where checkboxes would (1) confirm the toll to be deducted from my SunPass penalty-free, and (2) have a new SunPass mailed to me free of charge if mine is, in fact, defective.

    Once, in the Orlando area, before I had a SunPass, I accidentally went through a SunPass toll point without paying. Not wanting to take a $100 bath, I stopped at the next service plaza to speak to a SunPass sales person, and he said I most likely would not receive a ticket in the mail (I never did). Apparently, they're pretty forgiving with one-time offenders, and they mainly go after people who, say, use a toll road twice a day, every single day, with no SunPass (if a newcomer to central Florida decides to stick it to the state and not get a SunPass, that week of commutes to and from work will run up $1000 in fines).

  135. Re:Damn by shadowfaxcrx · · Score: 1

    That's a good point, though where I live hardly anyone pays cash anymore. You get a discount if you buy the pass ahead of time.

    --
    "I disagree with you" does not equal "flamebait."
  136. Re:Damn by JTsyo · · Score: 1

    With the progress of face recognition software, it might not matter what you use to pay.

  137. Got that letter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Got that letter too, as well as two followups, each more insistent (ok, so I ignored the Toll Authority - it's not like they're Big Brother, er.. yet) I believe that the last letter stated that they would suspend my iPass and go after my licenses if I didn't go to the local grocery store and get it replaced!.. Sheesh.. sure let them put a camera inside. I can already see the long list of hardware hacks. Besides, if I mount it backwards.. well.. that solves that problem!

  138. Re:Damn by AJH16 · · Score: 1

    Right, my point was just that the previous poster's comment that cameras didn't make a difference because you were already buying a ticket wasn't actually true since it is possible to get a ticket without identifying yourself, thus the cameras do represent a potential reduction in privacy. That said, I think a bus is public space and personally I see no problem with the presence of cameras for security purposes on a bus.

    --
    AJ Henderson
  139. Re:Damn by fusiongyro · · Score: 1

    Awesomesauce. A-shark jumping we shall go.

  140. Re:LOL .... by Culture20 · · Score: 1

    And you're trying to say this is "spun by the lib'rul media"?

    Ahh, I see, everyone who disagrees with you is a drooling red-state moron, since no one intelligent could disagree? How's that religion working out for you?

    How is what you said even related to what I said?

    You implied that he mispronounces liberal; a common slight meant to imply that the recipient is unintelligent.

  141. Re:Damn by PoopCat · · Score: 1

    Bandwagon, perhaps, but shark? /. jumped that several years ago.

  142. Re:carpool discount, possible reason for the camer by joeaguy · · Score: 1

    Well, the toll attendant at the toll plaza can see into my car to check that I qualify for the discount. Toll plaza already have a ton of cameras trained on your car. The transceiver camera provides an automated means to do the same thing.

    I agree, its till really weird and creepy, just I think a cover would provide some balance in implementing a solution with the goal of car pool discounts. I also worry lots of people would just leave the cover open all the time. Also what is there to stop them from enforcing whatever else they feel like this way, like seat belts, etc?

    An other choice might be to make each passenger carry an special ezpass transmitter, and the toll booth would count how many it detected in each car. That count could be randomly checked against photos of cars going through the tolls (something they do already) to spot cheaters.

    The reality at the heart of all this is that owning a car is awful for your civil liberties, and it always has been, and that awful can creep into the rest of our lives. They need to be highly regulated so they don't kill people and all that massive infrastructure is paid for. It gives the government a huge excuse to intrude in your life that you don't get if you walk or bike everywhere.

  143. Re:Well.. by rpresser · · Score: 1

    Eventually they will deactivate your transponder number, and your perfectly good but old unit will stop paying your tolls.

  144. Occupants? by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    Are the tolls somehow calculated per # of passengers? If not, its a violation of privacy, if it is, its f-ing insane.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  145. Re:LOL .... by lgw · · Score: 1

    Your dismissive insulting of the intelligence of people who disagree with your beliefs is so habitual that you can't even see it now. That's what the mindset of the followers of a successful religion looks like: they're so good at screening out information that might make them doubt that they'll never see any.

    --
    Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  146. Re:LOL .... by lgw · · Score: 1

    How does that make sense? If he's just got enough money and wants to take time off, hell, I'd be on board with that, but for tax purposes? What, the fact that he'll pay a few percent more on everything past what he's already made suddenly makes it not worthwhile?

    Insightful question. After all, the water temperature would only rise a little, why would the frog jump out?

    Have you actually read Atlas Shrugged, by any chance? A key notion in that book is that there's this system of abuse of the most drvien and intelligent people, where we as a society take advantage of the fact that they'll keep working hard no matter how small the reward, because they are so driven. At some point people wise up to this tactic, and realize they have to draw a line somewhere, jump out of the water before it's boiling. That's where that "going Galt" phrase comes from.

    Many people who are very successful are extremely driven, and have to actively push back against their natures in order to have any sort of family life (or life outside work). In his case this was made much easier because he started to feel that he was "being used". Rationally, IMO he'd be better off doing this every year, since the extra money he takes in on good years makes him far less happy than being home with family (he travels constantly for work, only home on weekends), but I guess it was the emotional response to people saying "bah, you'll work just as hard anyhow, it's just the kind of guy you are" that mattered to him.

    --
    Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  147. Its the beep by PPH · · Score: 1

    I don't know exactly how your iPass system works. But if its typical of many, a deduction isn't made from the transponder itself each time its read. Your serial number is simply looked up in a database from which your fee is deducted. Now here's the kicker: Not every transponder read needs to result in a toll. They can be used to track vehicle locations if readers are placed at strategic points in the city. But your's beeps. So if it starts beeping every block, you'll know something's afoot. So they need to silence the beepers.

    Washington State is implementing a "Good To Go" pass system with RFID-like transponders. There will be no beep. But there are ways to detect when your transponder wakes up. And I'm looking forward to coupling a sniffer to mine just to see how and where they are tracking us.

    --
    Have gnu, will travel.
  148. Yes, correction by Quila · · Score: 1

    "Russia"

    But I think you get the point.

    1. Re:Yes, correction by LearnToSpell · · Score: 1

      I do get the point. I sometimes wonder if her nuthugging defenders get the point. You want the actual quotation? She was asked how living next to Russia helped her with foreign policy experience, and she replied "They're our next-door neighbors, and you can actually see Russia from land here in Alaska, from an island in Alaska."

      It's indefensible. There is no way to spin that other than an idiotic statement made by an ignorant moron. She's barely traveled outside of the US, so it's hardly surprising that she'd think mere proximity to another nation would somehow grant insight and knowledge.

      It's embarrassing to be from the same hemisphere as these fools, let alone having them be eligible for the highest public offices in the land.

  149. Re:LOL .... by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

    >>Palin and Bachmann associated themselves with the Tea Party movement. They give speech after speech invoking the Tea Party and they have very many Tea Party supporters.

    This would be the same Tea Party that polls at 75% stating they never want to see Palin run for president?

    The Tea Party was a 3rd party protest movement against the Democrat and Republican parties both (since they both supported big government), and rather cannily succeeded where most 3rd parties failed by winning Republican primary challenges.

    If you don't believe me, your sense of history is being rewritten. Go back and Google the furor that happened when the GOP created a "Tea Party" page on their web site. They had to retract it.

  150. Re:LOL .... by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

    >>the US is historically paying very little in taxes.

    Liberal talking point. Not true.

    The percentage of GDP in receipts has stayed surprisingly constant since the 1940s, especially given the drastic changes in the tax code, medicare, and so forth since then.

    (http://nationalpriorities.org/resources/federal-budget-101/charts/general/federal-outlays-and-revenues-1930-2015-perc-gdp/)

    What HAS increased is outlays, and rather significantly. This is why most sane people believe in fixing the deficit mainly by cutting spending.

  151. Re:LOL .... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How does that make sense? If he's just got enough money and wants to take time off, hell, I'd be on board with that, but for tax purposes? What, the fact that he'll pay a few percent more on everything past what he's already made suddenly makes it not worthwhile? He'd still be getting 65% of everything over $250k, so if he'd gross another $50k, he'd still keep $32,500, which in my world is not an insignificant amount of money....Now, if he thinks that next year he's going to potentially not have that much work, and would rather be taxed on that $50k at the lower rate to make his income for 2012 higher overall, well, that's a different story, and then it'd potentially make sense to put off that contract regardless of what he's being taxed at if he can afford to wait. That's an issue of managing backlog more than anything else though....

    In my corporation, we can (roughly speaking) bill at any point during the year. So we'll look at how much we've made so far during the year and estimate how much we're going to make during the next year to decide when we're going to bill. It's much better to bill $200k in two years than $400k one year and $0 the next (or $300K / $100K, more realistically).

    The tax rates really hard high enough to make playing such games worthwhile.

  152. Re: Speed at the line by WoodstockJeff · · Score: 1

    Actually, the toll areas have speed sensors in the ground - they know how fast you pass through the lane (it's also used to count the axles, which is what the toll is based upon). And, if you've ever been to Illinois, you know that this fact does NOT slow anyone down! Granted, we're not as bad as some states, but a lot of people think those green signs with the big "I" on them are announcing the speed limit, NOT the route number!

  153. Clearly we need more counter-technology patents by almondo · · Score: 1

    An excellent application for my patent pending micro image tape which will be available with images of a wide range of characters including Johnny Cash, John Wayne, Elvis, Beavis & Butthead, Bugs Bunny and of course my preferred choice, Taz.

  154. Transponder Facts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As a bit of an expert on the subject of Toll Roads (In my career I've been the IT director of 3 toll roads in 3 states, all of which use the same transponder IL uses) I can comfortably say that no toll road in the US is moving towards a transponder with a video camera in it. The old user replaceable transponders were popular when the technology first came out for tolling and customers wanted feedback when they paid. New Transponders dropped the feedback lights and went to a smaller footprint and battery. The old ones still technically work, and we use to run them through our lanes for testing but in general they failed at a higher rate then the new ones. The more transponders fail the more you have to have someone there to collect the toll or you lose revenue. IL uses video tolling to capture license plates when your transponder isn't read or when you don't have one, but if that happens too much you'll get a nice letter telling you to check your transponder.

    While there is a future generation of transponders in the works the truth is using transponders is old fashion. Once you pay for the infrastructure video tolling is cheaper then transponder tolling as you don't have to buy the hardware up front (transponders are like $15 each, IL has something like 2 million users) plus you don't have to worry about people who don't have transponders. Plus no need for slowing down. If you want further proof just look at all the new miles or road in Texas. Man I miss toll roads...shame the economy crashed....

  155. Or it could be the integration with EZPass. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Or, if you look around on their website, there's likely a more practical reason for it.

    The IPASS system joined the EZ Pass association a few years back. When they did this they started replacing IPASS tags with newer models that were compatible with the new EZ Pass radios they had to install to become compatible with the rest of the EZ Pass system. They probably want to take the original IPASS radios down so they can save space/power/money.

    That said, I recently had an issue where my EZ Pass transponder (Which is rather old. We got it back when New Jersey finished installing EZ Pass on the entire Garden State Parkway, which was probably back in like, 2003) wasn't fully registering with the tolls. We received several tickets in the mail despite receiving an "EZPASS PAID" message on the screen. Customer Service referenced the cameras to confirm it was my car and nullified the tickets, and retroactively billed our account for the tolls, but it's still a hassle. So No system is safe, but at the same time, the next time you blow through a toll booth in the New Jersey/New York area at 60 miles an hour through the new High Speed EZ Pass lanes, you'll realize how much of a time saver this really is compared to having to stop.

  156. pathetic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You know what SLAPSHOT slashdot has such a pathetic sick bunch of saddo ganja smoking coke taking doped out tossers as mods it is untrue i thought some of the British sites were bad but this is just the joke of the world really seriously is . This site needs a takeover by someone with a few straight Morals not the faggot supporting crap that is the present collection ..

  157. She was right by Quila · · Score: 1

    Mexican border state presidents know a whole lot about Mexico because they have to deal with Mexico. Alaska has a lot of direct dealings with Russia, especially in gas and fishing, so the Alaskan governor would know a lot about dealing with Russia.

    The "You can see" comment is to help the morons out there who don't know geography realize that the US and Russia are almost as close as Mexico.

  158. I got one of these letters too. by databaseadmin · · Score: 1

    I got one of these letters too. It is an obvious lie. The battery is replaceable. The device has a button you can press to determine that the battery is fine. Illinois is the most crooked state I've ever experienced. Bad state. Stay away if you can.

  159. Re:LOL .... by NiteShaed · · Score: 1

    Insightful question. After all, the water temperature would only rise a little, why would the frog jump out?

    But in that case, the frog will die. Your friend will still benefit from having more money than he would otherwise.

    This really seems like an almost perfect case of cutting off one's nose to spite their face. An almost childlike cry of "If I can't have it all, I don't want any!". The person earning the money still, even after paying taxes, benefits from having more money than they did before. If they're satisfied with having less, fine, can't fault someone for that, but doing it solely to avoid taxes and "suffering" to do so just seems petulant.

    As for Rand, yes, I read Atlas Shrugged, and I find it cringeworthy. Not sure where this quote comes from, but it nicely sums up my thoughts about it: "There are two novels that can change a bookish fourteen-year old’s life: The Lord of the Rings and Atlas Shrugged. One is a childish fantasy that often engenders a lifelong obsession with its unbelievable heroes, leading to an emotionally stunted, socially crippled adulthood, unable to deal with the real world. The other, of course, involves orcs".

    --
    Some bring out the best in others, some the worst. Some bring out far more.
  160. There I go again by Quila · · Score: 1

    Governors, not presidents. Typing too fast.

    BTW, don't take any of this as an endorsement of Palin or Bachmann. I can't stand either of them and wouldn't want to vote for them. However, that doesn't I can't recognize the unfair, absolutely biased treatment they've received at the hands of the press.

    Palin's out of the running now -- yippie. I hope she's missed her chance forever. But Bachmann's still in. If she gets too high poll numbers I may have to finally register with a party, Republican, in order to vote against her in the primary (and also maybe to vote for Cain). I don't want the choice between her likely incompetence and the proven incompetence of the current office holder, between a religious nutjob and a leftist nutjob.

  161. Re:Damn by Lashat · · Score: 1

    Your opinion that moving to mass transit is "good for everyone" smacks of someone who has never tried to use the bus as a commute option. As 6'3" 260 lb adult male the is bus an absolute nightmare. The leg room problem would be laughable if not for the pain of my knees smashed up against the seatback in front of me. Plus, one of my shoulders and most of an arm will always be partially in your seat no matter how far I try to lean the other way and ignore the awkward position of my spine. I would rather take an 8 hour flight in coach than spend 1 hour on a commuter bus.

    Look I understand that generally mass transit is better for traffic congestion and the natural environment. Heck, it was even cheaper by about $150 a month than driving. However, if I cannot walk from the bus stop to the office because of 90 minutes of physical torture beforehand then forget it.

    --
    For every benefit you receive a tax is levied. - Ralph Waldo Emerson
  162. Easy Fix - Keep the transponder in the static bag. by Lashat · · Score: 1

    Even now, this is where I keep my Electronic Toll Collection device. I do this for a few reasons.
    1. I hate anything obstructing the field of view out of my windshield.
    2. I don't always use it when paying the toll.
    3. I don't like the idea of it being always readable by road sensors.

    As I approach the toll plaza, I reach into my center console grab the bagged device. Remove the device from the bag. Cross the toll plaza. Rebag the device and return to center console. Easier than when I retrieve paper money from my wallet because that is usually deep in my pocket.

    --
    For every benefit you receive a tax is levied. - Ralph Waldo Emerson
  163. nice hacking project. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    this + cloud facial recognition. how many abuses of human rights can we find. its not the device or its current listed use that is the issue for me. it what these things could and probably will lead to.
    do government and private agencies 'really' need all this info on us? what happens when the data leaks or the servers get hacked, if there is one thing all large IT project should learn form the last few years is that if its stored digitally it can probably be hacked/sold/leaked...

  164. Re: Speeding Through an EZ Pass Lane in New York by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    EZ Pass provides discounts at numerous NYC bridges and tunnels connecting Manhattan to the outer boroughs and New Jersey, as well as on toll highways like the New York Thruway. It also allows you to minimize waiting time passing through tolls.

    To get one, you need to agree to abide by the E-ZPass License Agreement Terms & Conditions including that you will approach and pass through E-Z Pass-only lanes at or below the posted speed limit. For a first EZ Pass speeding violation, the Violation Processing Unit will usually issue a warning letter with a 60-day probationary period.

    For a second violation, you will likely be suspended for 60 days, and for a third violation your suspension can be extended or you can lose your EZ pass all together.

    Note that these penalties are based on speeding while using any EZ pass tag assigned to your account (not just the one which resulted in the first letter).

    The good news is that getting caught speeding through an EZ pass lane is not a moving violation and will not appear on your driver license or affect your auto insurance rates (except if a police officer actually issues you a traffic ticket for speeding and you are convicted of that charge).

    Matthew Weiss, Esq.
    www.nytrafficticket.com

  165. Tips and trics how to make money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    LIKE ON MY FAN PAGE AND WIN!
    http://www.facebook.com/pages/Tips-and-trics-how-to-make-money/207146829350851

  166. Re:LOL .... by lgw · · Score: 1

    There are other goals in life than money, is the point - money helps a lot with happiness, but enjoying what you earn has to be part of it. Just because there is a reward, doesn't mean the reward justifies the opportunity cost.

    --
    Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  167. Re:Damn by RockDoctor · · Score: 1

    They can already track your movement on the bus (they know who bought what bus pass

    My electronic bus pass was registered several years ago to Mr Osama bin Laden, of Tora Bora, Afghanistan. It only got paid-up once, with cash (it only works in the capital city of the country south of us ; it still has several rides on it).

    I'd be astonished if I was the only Mr bin Laden on the bus system at any random time. On those rare occasions when I go to that festering shit hole of a city.

    --
    Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"
  168. Re:LOL .... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Tea party has a similar problem

    But they are bringing out voters, the "Occupy" groups will not have that impact.

  169. Re:LOL .... by camg188 · · Score: 1

    citation needed.
    The Tea Party has always been a single issue, grassroots voter advocacy group. Their platform has always consisted of 3 planks:
    Fiscal Responsibility
    Constitutionally Limited Government
    Free Markets

    That's it. Nothing about race and nothing about religion.
    The TEA Party has Libertarian roots, not Christian Conservative roots.

  170. Re: Speed at the line by cycleflight · · Score: 1

    That explains the drivers down here on I-10, slowest I've ever seen on an interstate.

    --
    "...And who wants to make buttprints in the sands of time?" ~Bob Moawad
  171. Re:LOL .... by NiteShaed · · Score: 1

    There are other goals in life than money, is the point - money helps a lot with happiness, but enjoying what you earn has to be part of it. Just because there is a reward, doesn't mean the reward justifies the opportunity cost.

    I believe I addressed that twice though; if you just want to take time off, or do something else, that's great. I'd do that myself given the chance. But if the only motivation is "I'd rather have nothing than pay taxes", I have absolutely no sympathy. Those of us who make more, in some cases far, far more than others do so because the society we live in provides us a framework that enables us to do so. Let me say that part again, enables us to do so. Without that framework, we'd be digging in the dirt and fighting for our lives just like everyone else. I have no problem paying more taxes than someone who makes less; I reap greater rewards from that framework, and therefore I have a responsibility for it's upkeep, and the greater the reward the greater the responsibility. Put another way, would your friend rather live in a mansion or a slum? He'd pay lower taxes living in the slum, but I'd bet he'd be more comfortable living in a mansion. I'd rather see America be a mansion than a slum. Or maybe I just can't imagine being so self-involved that I'd rather have less just to ensure that I don't have to contribute to the well being of others.

    --
    Some bring out the best in others, some the worst. Some bring out far more.
  172. change a kids diaper... by niftymitch · · Score: 1

    Changer a kids nappy in the car (possible view of the
    camera) and then troll for sex offenders.

    --
    Truth is stranger than fiction, but it is because Fiction is obliged to stick to possibilities; Truth isn't. Mark Twain.
  173. Re:LOL .... by lgw · · Score: 1

    I can't speak for him, and I agree with you about the framework, but fuck em if they want to punish success, says I. (Of course, I don't have enough to "go Galt" yet, so I'm just hot air.)

    Why? Because that framework you talk about is less than 20% of government spending (OK, somewhat more if you count the defense budget as necessary, but still the smaller part). Transfers of money from people who earn it to people with political power account for more than 100% of federal revenue these days, and that's not going to end well. Europe has all but collapsed already because of this sort of thing.

    As I see it, America became great because government let success be rewarded with great wealth (sure we needed some basic safetly and fraud regulation and the like that we lacked durig the industrial revolution, that's not what I'm talking about here). Now we just can't stop giving money to people who vote for more money, and the burden of that is draging us into that very slum. We desparately need already-wealthly business leaders to take risks if we're going to save the economy, but all people talk about is diminishing the rewards!

    I want to "starve the beast" till government as we have come to know it collapses, and (because we have to) we go back to a federal government that only provides that framework you talk about.

    Or maybe I just can't imagine being so self-involved that I'd rather have less just to ensure that I don't have to contribute to the well being of others.

    It's amazing how many people say this in one breath, and then in the next say "it's worth hurting the economy and even generating less overall tax money, as long as the the rich suffer from the tax system". But maybe that's not you.

    --
    Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  174. Re:LOL .... by NiteShaed · · Score: 1

    fuck em if they want to punish success, says I.

    You and I have very different ideas of punishment. Being "punished" by only leaving someone with around $650,000 on every million doesn't sound that uncomfortable to me.

    As I see it, America became great because government let success be rewarded with great wealth

    And yet during some of the greatest economic expansion that not only the U.S. but the world has ever seen, between the 1930s and the 1970s, the top marginal rates were between 50% and 90%. Using your arguments, those should have been the catastrophically worst years.

    Now we just can't stop giving money to people who vote for more money,

    And yet, by continually lowering rates on the top bracket, that's what we've been doing. We've been gutting the engine that builds growth and pays for infrastructure, defense and social services, while at the same time disincentivising business growth by making it more attractive to pay smaller numbers of people ever more staggering amounts, rather than nudging them towards putting that money into the businesses.

    We desparately need already-wealthly business leaders to take risks

    There's no reason for them not to take risks, business losses and expenses don't get taxed. As it is now though, the incentive is to simply amass more and more money, and hold on to it, which does virtually nothing for the economy.

    I want to "starve the beast" till government as we have come to know it collapses, and (because we have to) we go back to a federal government that only provides that framework you talk about.

    I don't think there's quite as much room for starvation as you think. There's the military, which I'd be in favor of using in less expensive ways (ie: not going off on adventures that have no clear benefit to us), there's Social Security/Medicare, which cutting out would leave us with a large group of impoverished elderly people (although if you cut Medicare I guess they'd die off faster so it's a self-solving problem if you're okay with that), infrastructure, which is already falling apart and is only going to get worse, social services such as food-stamps and welfare, which you could cut but I'd expect a pretty hefty increase in law enforcement expenses if you increase the population of desperate, hungry people with nothing to lose, education, which we could cut if we'd like to give up any pretense at having a workforce that can compete with other first-world nations, and on and on. Simply saying "Cut the spending" is meaningless unless you're prepared to offer a plan to deal with the consequences of those cuts.

    "it's worth hurting the economy and even generating less overall tax money, as long as the the rich suffer from the tax system"

    The rich are not, and would not be suffering by paying higher taxes. It's not a crushing punishment to have to fly first-class instead of owning a a private jet. If the top marginal tax rate was raised to 50% (still WELL below historic highs), these people would still be holding over $500,000/year in personal income on each million they make, and that only counts their actual salaries, not investments and other capital gains (which is what Buffet was talking about when he said he was taxed lower than his secretary). A person making $40k/year will definitely feel the burn if you tax him at 10%, but someone making millions in salary/bonuses? He's still living a lifestyle that almost nobody else will ever have, and is not worrying about paying for the groceries, even at 50%. Now, if you want to talk about raising the tax brackets, so that the upper middle-class (say, up to around the $350,000 or so range) don't get hit as hard as the guy making $3m, or just creating new brackets that incrementally increase at much higher numbers than they do now, that's a different topic entirely and one that probably has a lot of room for discussion.

    --
    Some bring out the best in others, some the worst. Some bring out far more.
  175. Re:LOL .... by lgw · · Score: 1

    Some quick notes:

    And yet during some of the greatest economic expansion that not only the U.S. but the world has ever seen, between the 1930s and the 1970s, the top marginal rates were between 50% and 90% [netdna-cdn.com]. Using your arguments, those should have been the catastrophically worst years.

    During most of that time tax loopholes were many and large, and offshore investments were hide-able from the IRS. The rich weren't paying any higher taxes in reality, and perhaps lower. Under all the tax plans that have been tried for a century, federal revenue ends up at 19-20% of GDP.

    On social security - it servbes a vital purpoise, but no point at all is served by having the government hold the peoples retirement money (they government just spends it) - let/force people to have their own retirement svaing accounts, no need for government to be involved beyond that requirement.

    On Medicare - it doesn't matter how good/useful it is. We're not even funind it at 10% of what's needed - it can't possibly be paid for as things stand now. And, again, there's probably a solution that involves minimal government.

    But overlal, you're missing my real point: the economy prospers when the risk/reward matrix is good for wealthy and successful businessmen. The more you up the risk (e.g., with a changing regulatory enorinment) and the more you diminish the reward (by steep taxes) the less the economy will grow, and the less technological progress we'll have, and the worse off everyone will be one generation later.

    --
    Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  176. Re:LOL .... by NiteShaed · · Score: 1

    During most of that time tax loopholes were many and large, and offshore investments were hide-able from the IRS. The rich weren't paying any higher taxes in reality, and perhaps lower. Under all the tax plans that have been tried for a century, federal revenue ends up at 19-20% of GDP.

    I'll abandon this point, only because the issues are complex and I'm simply not prepared or qualified to make a proper counter-argument. I only repost it now so that I don't appear to simply appear to be picking and choosing the points I like.

    On social security - it servbes a vital purpoise, but no point at all is served by having the government hold the peoples retirement money (they government just spends it) - let/force people to have their own retirement svaing accounts, no need for government to be involved beyond that requirement.

    The fact that a vast number, possibly even a majority of people are incapable of managing long term investments like this simply invites disaster. That doesn't even touch on the fact that we regularly see market corrections that wipe out people's retirement plans, or the predatory schemes that the investment houses can and do engage in. A safety net is required unless you're prepared to see potentially large numbers of indigent elderly people on the streets, and I don't think anyone would be comfortable with that.

    On Medicare - it doesn't matter how good/useful it is. We're not even funind it at 10% of what's needed - it can't possibly be paid for as things stand now. And, again, there's probably a solution that involves minimal government.

    I agree with your first premise, but not the second. I favour a single-payer universal system, but that's a much larger conversation.

    But overlal, you're missing my real point: the economy prospers when the risk/reward matrix is good for wealthy and successful businessmen. The more you up the risk (e.g., with a changing regulatory enorinment) and the more you diminish the reward (by steep taxes) the less the economy will grow, and the less technological progress we'll have, and the worse off everyone will be one generation later.

    Oh I'm not missing your point, I'm disagreeing with it. I agree that reward is an integral part of motivation, but not that it's the only one, or that it has to be unlimited. I see the current situation as being dominated by a predatory class of super-wealthy, and I don't agree that it's deserved. Having 1% of the population control 90% of the wealth is simply absurd, do you really believe that their efforts, on the whole, are 90x as important as everyone else? Does an investment banker, who produces nothing aside from paperwork really have more value to society than 100 (or more) teachers? Does a football player or radio talk show host really bring 50 times the value of 100 paramedics to society? And how about all of those "born on third base but act like they just hit a home-run" types like the Hiltons or the Kardashians, who make money simply by being who they are. The average household income in the U.S. is somewhere around $50,000, meaning that it'll take one of those average families 20 years to see $1M in earnings, vs Larry Elison, who will see $1M in earnings (not investments or stock options, just salary) by February each year. No, I don't think the super-rich are justified in their earnings, the numbers are absurd, and it's all a rigged game designed to keep virtually all of the wealth in a small number of hands. And besides, if taxes on the top bracket went up to 50%, do you really think Elison would give up and stop working if he had to pay $3M in taxes a year, because he'd only have $3M left (plus all of his stock options and capital investments)?

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    Some bring out the best in others, some the worst. Some bring out far more.
  177. Re:LOL .... by lgw · · Score: 1

    Quick on Social Security: there reasonable options between the extremes of "government controls everything" and "people can blow their savings on crazy stuff". Most financial planners will give the same advice, and that advice could be used as guardrails - just like a 401k can't offer just any crazy investment, the "government 401k" could offer still more conservative choices. The point is that the government shouldn't hold the money.

    And I think you are missing my point: again it's not all-or-nothing. Yes, there are stil incentives when taxes are higher, but those incentives are smaller.

    And why would you sacrifice the good of all on the altar of "fair pay"? Would you seriously be willing eliminate pay you saw as unfair if it meant everyone would suffer? (More realistically: how would you like to eliminate pay thta some ruling elite not chosen by you saw as unfair, if it meant everyone would suffer?) I don't think a pro sports star works 100 times as hard a a college athelete, but that's not some great moral problem either. The market finds prices that avoid scarcity and glut, not "fair" prices (as judged by ... ?).

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    Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  178. Re:carpool discount, possible reason for the camer by randyleepublic · · Score: 1

    "Metal coated bags" don't always work. I sometimes put my cell phone in a metal box. Imagine my surprise the first time my phone rang while in the box.

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    Social Credit would solve everything...
  179. Re:LOL .... by NiteShaed · · Score: 1

    Quick on Social Security: there reasonable options between the extremes of "government controls everything" and "people can blow their savings on crazy stuff". Most financial planners will give the same advice, and that advice could be used as guardrails - just like a 401k can't offer just any crazy investment, the "government 401k" could offer still more conservative choices. The point is that the government shouldn't hold the money.

    I'd say that what we have now is the place between two extremes. You can invest on your own, and should that not work out as hoped, you won't be left completely penniless. True, a 401k can't just offer any insane thing they like, but if you think they can't (and aren't) manipulated in favor of the traders, you're just being naive. As for the government holding the money, the government is the people. Why do you think that having a private group with a potential profit motive, accountable only to itself is better than a well regulated, not for profit structure that everyone has at least some voice in?

    And I think you are missing my point: again it's not all-or-nothing. Yes, there are stil incentives when taxes are higher, but those incentives are smaller.

    I'd say your position is closer to all-or-nothing than mine. Nobody is going to choose a minimum wage job over making $5M a year because they only have $2.5M left after taxes. Nobody is going to choose making $100K/year over making $1M/year because they'll only net $500K after taxes. The tax rate can go much higher at those levels than it is now before people seriously say they don't want the "hassle" of being a highly placed executive, with all the perks and extras that go with it.

    And why would you sacrifice the good of all on the altar of "fair pay"? Would you seriously be willing eliminate pay you saw as unfair if it meant everyone would suffer?

    You keep saying everyone would suffer, but I still don't see it. Someone who makes $1M and has $500K left after taxes is not *suffering*. They're still living better than almost anyone else you'll meet. If that's suffering, sign me up, I'll take one for the team.

    (More realistically: how would you like to eliminate pay thta some ruling elite not chosen by you saw as unfair, if it meant everyone would suffer?)

    Straw-man, nobody's talking about eliminating pay for anyone in particular, or even at all. A progressive tax system taxes everyone at a given income level similarly.

    I don't think a pro sports star works 100 times as hard a a college athelete, but that's not some great moral problem either. The market finds prices that avoid scarcity and glut, not "fair" prices (as judged by ... ?).

    Indeed, in that case, the ridiculous salaries are due to a glitch in the system, where *somebody* has to get the money, even though what they provide isn't particularly productive or useful. It's irrelevant though, as they have the money, and taxes would be applied to them the same way as if they had made that money in any other occupation. The fact remains that without society to support them (stadiums, audiences, transportation, etc), they wouldn't be making anything at all. That they make such amazingly high amounts is a benefit they reap from being part of society, and therefore it can be argued they owe more back than, say, a hard working longshoremen or cop. Just as there's no guarantee to be rich, I'm aware of no guarantee of unlimited riches to the detriment of everyone else.

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    Some bring out the best in others, some the worst. Some bring out far more.
  180. Re: Speed at the line by mike.mondy · · Score: 1

    They don't need to count the axles every time you pass though every toll booth. Where I'm at, you're not allowed to move your toll tag from one vehicle to another. And of course, when you apply for a tag, you have to specify the license plate and number of axles for each vehicle you want a tag for.