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It's Getting Harder To Reside Anonymously In a Modern City (citiesofthefuture.eu)

dkatana writes: In a panel on 'Privacy in the Smart City' during this month's Smart City World Congress, Dr. Carmela Troncoso, a researcher from Spain, argued that data anonymization itself is almost impossible without using advanced cryptography. Our every transaction leaves a digital marker that can be mined by anyone with the right tools or enough determination.

Most modern cities today are full of sensors and connected devices. Some are considering giving away free WiFi in exchange of personal data. LinkNYC, which was present at the congress as exhibitor, is one such example of this. The panelists insisted that it is the duty of world leaders to safeguard their citizens' privacy, just as corporations are answerable to leaks and hacks.

100 comments

  1. IMHO that's good by argStyopa · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Personally, I think the anonymity of people in massive cities is the source of many of the problems of city life.

    A lot of urbanites poo-pooh the closed-minded clannishness of small town life, but part of the VALUE of this life (I live in a MN town of 1500) is that people know each other. They know each others' families, they know their histories.

    If you're an asshole, people know it and will remember it. So you make SURE you don't act like an asshole. Cities? You'll likely never see that person again, so who gives a shit?

    --
    -Styopa
    1. Re:IMHO that's good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cities? You'll likely never see that person again, so who gives a shit?

      Progressive protestors. On hoods of cop cars.

    2. Re:IMHO that's good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure, let's dismantle the last 2-3 centuries of progress in civil and constitutional rights, so we'll finally know "who is an asshole and who is not".

      Is there the katrashian show tonight on tv?

    3. Re:IMHO that's good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cities? You'll likely never see that person again, so who gives a shit?

      You WILL see and remember the person over and over again when they act like an asshole in a city, because their viral video of them taking a piss on someone's mailbox you won't forget anytime soon. Neither will Google search history.

    4. Re:IMHO that's good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Small towns are full of bigots, pedophiles, racists and thieves and everyone is too afraid or much of a coward to do anything about it because of family ties.

      That's always what I think of when I hear someone say "they're good people" or espouse their small-town (often southern) values.

    5. Re:IMHO that's good by dablow · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Anonymity is what enabled the modern world.

      It was because the anonymity cities provided people where able to question religious dogma, dared to question the authority of king and queens etc.....

      Yes, having anonymity also leads to people being douche bags to each other, that is the price to pay for a technological civilization.

      BTW last I checked, small towns also had a lot of the same issues as big cities. Murder, drug use, spousal abuse, etc happen there too. And although I have not looked into the numbers, probably in the same proportions as major cities. So like if there is 3 murders per 100,000 in a mjor urban area, that means if you divide up the population into 66 towns of 1500 people, only 3 of them will experience a murder. Which leads to the perception that it "never happens".

    6. Re: IMHO that's good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fine. Make people wear tracking devices then. Do it the honest way or don't do it at all.

    7. Re:IMHO that's good by TWX · · Score: 1

      It was because the anonymity cities provided people where able to question religious dogma, dared to question the authority of king and queens etc...

      Are you sure that was anonymity and not simply groups meeting in secret?

      --
      Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
    8. Re:IMHO that's good by RabidReindeer · · Score: 1

      Ah. You mean like this country neighbor? https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

    9. Re:IMHO that's good by JackieBrown · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Small towns are full of bigots, pedophiles, racists and thieves and everyone is too afraid

      Ahh. Just like large cities, then? Except in a small town, you can learn who to avoid.

    10. Re:IMHO that's good by ColdBoot · · Score: 1

      well said. It is the peer pressure that helps keep rural society in check. Without that, there is no enforcement mechanism to ensure social norms are complied with which explains in part why urban societies are so much looser.

    11. Re:IMHO that's good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're so confused that I don't know where to begin.

      (a) You seem to be comparing the other people of a small community (*which you know yourself*, so this relation is symmetric) with the completely intransparent mix of search engines, advertisers, banks, known and unknown state agencies, internet-of-things enterprises which are those who *know you* in a diffuse, difficult to define way?

      (b) As another poster said it, many recent changes in our society (which I, at least welcome!) were made possible by this short period of anonymity which seems to be ending now. Think homosexuals, for example

    12. Re:IMHO that's good by cant_get_a_good_nick · · Score: 1

      There is a side effect to this. Large cities are actually easier on the environment to people scattered all over the place. Whether you think the big city is good or not from an asshole standpoint, it's good from a resource standpoint, so we need to solve the asshole standpoint or we all drown in rising sea levels.

    13. Re:IMHO that's good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They know each others' families, they know their histories

      Maybe so, but they sure didn't gain that knowledge by spying like a pedophile creep. But that's exactly how governments and busineses do it.

    14. Re:IMHO that's good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Small towns are full of bigots, pedophiles, racists and thieves and everyone is too afraid or much of a coward to do anything about it because of family ties.

      That's always what I think of when I hear someone say "they're good people" or espouse their small-town (often southern) values.

      And large cities don't have these people?

    15. Re:IMHO that's good by dablow · · Score: 2

      Of course there was groups meeting in secret.

      However how do do you have secret meetings if everybody knows who you are, where you are, what you are talking about and with whom at all times?

      Secrecy is dependent on privacy.

    16. Re:IMHO that's good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People "poo-pooh" small-town life particularly because they abhor the lack of freedom that comes from constant "surveillance". Small town communities are extremely conformist and a nightmare for anybody who strays from the norm. That's why you find interesting cultural progression in cities. The very same effects that make people hate small town life are caused by the excessive tracking that is enabled by online transactions and pervasive computer networks.

    17. Re:IMHO that's good by Actually,+I+do+RTFA · · Score: 1

      So you think instead of having two different options (small town/city) we should instead only have one option?

      --
      Your ad here. Ask me how!
    18. Re:IMHO that's good by oic0 · · Score: 1

      It just lets you find out who they really are without pretense. Just like online, if youre a jerk when you think youre anonymous, you actually are a jerk.

    19. Re:IMHO that's good by Kjella · · Score: 1

      Personally, I think the anonymity of people in massive cities is the source of many of the problems of city life.

      Yes, but the lack of anonymity in rural communities is the source of many of the problems of living there too. I've heard many say they moved to the big city to get away from the peanut gallery.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    20. Re:IMHO that's good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      > Anonymity is what enabled the modern world.

      FALSE.

      Mutually assured destruction, plus safety in numbers enabled the modern world.

      Anonymity is only an enabler of assholes. The larger question, which you are gleefully ignoring (because your diseased society has taught you to hate the truth above all else) is WHY do you think you need to be anonymous in order for social progress to take place? If progress can only happen with anonymity, then you have got waaaaaaaaaayyyyyy bigger problems than just religious dogma, etc.

    21. Re:IMHO that's good by Falos · · Score: 1

      Oh. You think commoners have access to Big Data. Imaginary property will actually resemble property when it's undistributed.

      But this isn't about Frank down the street. Precedent and protocol should be determined by more than your minisemiquasimicrocosm. If you can't see the big picture - a perspective that's better delivered by separating The Message and the identity that happened to write it - then defer to those who will think beyond themselves.

    22. Re:IMHO that's good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hear, hear! Vote parent up!

    23. Re:IMHO that's good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You say this like its a good thing.

    24. Re:IMHO that's good by TWX · · Score: 1

      Clandestine meetings take place in public areas all of the time. Additionally there are still private clubs (as there were back then) where only members could enter. Barring everyone else included the authorities.

      --
      Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
    25. Re:IMHO that's good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ahh. So you're one of those bigots, then? In a small town, if you are being discriminated against for whatever reason, it is much more difficult to find recourse. In a large city there are networks of people that circumvent one another, so if you have a problem with one group, you can just associate with a different one. Absolutely not so in small towns.

    26. Re:IMHO that's good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "Without Freedom of Thought, there can be no such Thing as Wisdom; and no such Thing as publick Liberty, without Freedom of Speech; which is the Right of every Man, as far as by it, he does not hurt or controul the Right of another: And this is the only Check it ought to suffer, and the only Bounds it ought to know."

      - Some Asshole

    27. Re:IMHO that's good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      With the data we're all leaking 24/7 it is (or will soon be) impossible to meet anyone anywhere clandestinely without taking specific actions to prevent leaking that data. And, with the near ubiquity of that data stream, a change in the type or amount of data one leaks will in itself be cause for suspicion. So now to go to that AA meeting and stay anonymous, one will need training in counter-surveillance techniques. But hey, if you're doing nothing wrong, you have nothing to hide, eh?

    28. Re:IMHO that's good by cayenne8 · · Score: 1

      Additionally there are still private clubs (as there were back then) where only members could enter. Barring everyone else included the authorities.

      I dunno....if you have one of those clubs and try to exclude anyone, you get hit with a racist or sexist tag and get sued.....and there goes you exclusivity.

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    29. Re:IMHO that's good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Neither will Google search history.

      Unless that city happens to be in Europe.

    30. Re:IMHO that's good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why would such a mundane video go viral? Nobody cares about that.

    31. Re:IMHO that's good by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      If you're an asshole, people know it and will remember it. So you make SURE you don't act like an asshole. Cities? You'll likely never see that person again, so who gives a shit?

      I have had similar thoughts. If you live in the city and lose all your friends, no big deal, just go find other ones pretty quick. No reason to value them.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    32. Re:IMHO that's good by Noble713 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      If you're an asshole, people know it and will remember it. So you make SURE you don't act like an asshole.

      Things that nosy small town people consider assholish:
      1. Inter-racial relationships. "Ohhh, didn't you know your daughter is dating a gaijin? And a black man at that? You must be so ashamed."
      2. Material wealth. "Mr. X is driving a Lexus now. He must think he's better than us. What did he do to get that money anyway, living and working out here? Probably something illegal."
      3. Niche music/TV/fashion tastes. "Did you hear that noise Mr. X was playing? He called it 'death metal'. That's the path to the Devil. Keep your kids away from him."

      I've lived in small towns and large, both in the US and in Japan. The problem with small towns is they are almost always subject to groupthink of the lowest common denominator. If you are a vanilla human being, sitting close to the 50% percentile of every possible normal distribution, it probably sounds like heaven....But if you are a statistical outlier, a minority in any way (ethnicity/religion/hobbies/sexual preference/whatever), you are at the mercy of the idiots around you. At least in cities you have access to a large enough variety of people that you can form social connections with like-minded individuals. And since they are exposed to different people, the population in general is more willing to mind their own business "Hey, if that's your thing, do what works for you."

    33. Re:IMHO that's good by dablow · · Score: 2

      It is not clandestine if the people meeting in a public location are known to all, if people can hear what they discuss, with whom, what they are planning.....

      They reason why they can meet clandestinely in a public space is due to anonymity. Nobody knows who they are and don't care...

      However if for example, il all outspoken critics of the catholic church are grouping up in a public park, the catholic church knows something is up and could move to suppress said movement.

    34. Re:IMHO that's good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you don't want to be anonymous, move to some podunk town somewhere.

      Oh, wait, you did.

      Now you just want to tell everybody else how they should want to live.

      Well, I guess we all know and will remember that you're an asshole.

    35. Re:IMHO that's good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I don't know whether Jackie is a bigot, but you sure are. You have prejudged all small towns as full of "bigots, pedophiles, racists, and thieves" with "southern values", the latter of which is a double-whammy of bigotry.

      I don't even understand where you got pedophiles and thieves from. Thieves are much more likely to be found in cities even on a per capita basis. I've never heard of pedophiles having any difference in distribution between the two, but you can be sure that if somebody is a known-pedophile, nobody lets their kids play near that person, *even if* they close ranks against them actually being prosecuted (seriously though, pedophiles are generally not considered cool in any scale of settlement).

      Being in a small town where everybody discriminates against you uniformly would be bad. On the flip side, a small town where discrimination against you is not tolerated is good. The networks of people circumventing each other goes both ways.

      I can at least understand where you get bigots and racists -- with fewer people, comes less exposure to different races, ideologies, sexualities, etc., and it's well known that exposure to these things tends to make you more tolerant of them. I'll throw you a bone and also argue that in a small enough town, you might not be able to reach a critical mass of people who share your particular ideology / special interest / cultural background / whatever to be able to relate with your shared experience. The flip side of that is in a large enough city, you can actually find a large group of people who share your particular niche ideology / special interest / whatever to such a great degree that you don't have to expose yourself to anybody that differs from you, but you could never reach such a critical mass in a smaller settlement. You find some of the most oddball groups in cities, and oftentimes that's harmless but it can be just as bad.

    36. Re:IMHO that's good by Shadow+IT+Ninja · · Score: 3, Insightful

      But the smart city isn't addressing this issue at all. You are still anonymous to other ordinary citizens. It's corporations and government agencies you are no longer anonymous to.

    37. Re:IMHO that's good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I want to be able to buy sex toys without the whole damn world knowing about it. They aren't illegal, they just aren't anybody else's damn business.

      Anonymity can protect people from the tyranny of the masses, and (sometimes) from misguided vigilantes.

        Lastly, whether you think I need anonymity is irrelevant; I want it and should be free to have it.

    38. Re:IMHO that's good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Anonymity is only an enabler of assholes.

      Says the Anonymous Coward

    39. Re:IMHO that's good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bullshit.

      Stop trying to equate being known by your neighbors with having every little detail of your life stored in a database that resides on a server in an unknown, far off location, that hundreds and hundreds of random huge corporations have access to, and will use for the purposes of trying to separate me from my money and trying to influence my life.

      I don't need or want my entire life stored away for easy access to entities like that.

      That's not even getting into the whole profiling capabilities this provides to people like politicians (and those behind them) and law enforcement types...aka the kinds of assholes who have no business being able to know everything about me on a whim.

      FUCK THAT. Privacy matters.

    40. Re:IMHO that's good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A good thing? What, being confused?

      An optimist you are?

    41. Re:IMHO that's good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I grew up in a small town and then later in life moved to a large city.

      I agree that thieves are essentially non-existent in small towns compared to cities. I imagine pedophiles/serial killers/etc are higher in small towns, just because it's far easier to have real privacy even if everyone knows who you are. But I don't have any statistics for that, so whatever.

      On the other hand... where are these "small towns where discrimination against you is not tolerated"? I've never even heard of such a thing. By virtue of human nature alone it's practically impossible to have or create a small town that is truly open-minded. Good luck being the only black/latino/whatever in a small town full of white people (or vice-versa). Good luck being an open atheist or other religious minority in a town where everyone else meets at the same church on Sunday. Or if you've found a mythical progressive small town, have fun being the only conservative, or being one of the only poor people in town.

      There are great things about small towns, but come on. If you don't notice the inherent bigotry of all shades, you're either blind or part of the problem.

    42. Re:IMHO that's good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yep. I agree, and I think we're less than 50 years away from it becoming de facto illegal to disable your monitoring. There may not be an actual law, but it will be suspicious, prevent you from being identified automatically whenever you're out in public, etc. Just like many countries require you to carry an ID with you at all times. The difference is that your ID is not constantly broadcasting information.

    43. Re:IMHO that's good by moeinvt · · Score: 1

      Is that "groupthink" or is it a matter of cultural norms? Isn't a small town just a social connection between "like minded individuals" which is made somewhat more rigid by geography? The types of differences you're talking about definitely attract attention in a small town, but it's unfair to suggest that every difference which attracts attention is viewed as an intolerable negative.

      The problem I see with cities is that this "mind your own business" mentality becomes extreme to the point of dehumanization. People outside your little cliques no longer count as humans who deserve respect and basic courtesy. The city dweller might be exposed to plenty of people, but is less likely to interact with or render assistance to a random stranger. In a small town, everyone is more or less in your clique so it's perfectly acceptable to strike up a conversation with someone and entirely normal to help out a stranded motorist for example.

    44. Re:IMHO that's good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's a freaking *huge* between nosey Sue down the road knowing you're having it off with Mary-Anne the mayor's wife, and having every single fact about your life, how you live it, what you think about (google searches), private correspondences... literally *everything*... collated and (mis)used by advertising companies, government agencies, supermarket chains, insurance companies and practically any other corporation/government agency with more money/power than morals.

      And besides, having lived in both cities (currently living) and small towns (grew up in) I must say that I haven't really noticed that much difference in the percentage of arseholes. The only difference is that in country towns you are more likely to know the arseholes in advance, but paradoxically less likely to be able to avoid them.

    45. Re:IMHO that's good by AdamThor · · Score: 1

      insightful!

      --
      -- "Oh. This guy again."
    46. Re:IMHO that's good by wyHunter · · Score: 1

      Funny, I live in a small town in a very red state. I found more bigots, racists, and thieves living in the bluest of blue states, Massachusetts. (I cannot speak for pedophiles as this is not usually something one advertises). I actually suspect few pedophiles live in small towns - they'd be...dealt with.

    47. Re:IMHO that's good by Sir+Holo · · Score: 1

      If you're an asshole, people know it and will remember it. So you make SURE you don't act like an asshole. Cities? You'll likely never see that person again, so who gives a shit?

      Small-town assholes are the worst of the lot.

      And in any case, there are thousands of other small towns where these assholes can move, starting afresh as an assumedly wholesome, small-town type of folk. After all, "Nothing ever happens here"

    48. Re:IMHO that's good by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      But there are the problems with not being anonymous, even in a small town. If you get a rep for being a trouble maker as a kid, the police will always suspect you even when you haven't done anything. Like Dukes of Hazzard. Social life often means going over to the next town where people don't know you and you can have a beer with your date without causing gossip. Especially if that date happens to be the same sex, or is older, younger, married, of the wrong race or religion. And speaking of religion, everyone will know if you decide not to head to church, they won't approve if you decide to switch denominations, become catholic, switch religions, or become atheist. They'll figure out if you're secretly siding with the wrong political party and come up to shout at you while you're shopping. They'll know if you visited planned parenthood, the shooting range, the Sierra Club meeting, a twelve step program. In short, they'll know every time you change or don't change your underwear.

    49. Re:IMHO that's good by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      I grew up in a smallish town, was 10,000, now 20,000. We had plenty of burglaries. The small 500 person hamlets had crime. One of the highest crime rates in California one year was from a very small rural town.

      Of course, times change. When I came home from college once my parents chuckled when I automatically locked the car door. Then a decade or so later they had a burglary and got an alarm system.

    50. Re:IMHO that's good by pnutjam · · Score: 1

      Funny, I live in a small town in a very red state. I found more bigots, racists, and thieves living in the bluest of blue states, Massachusetts.

      Funny, I live in a small town in a very red state and all the bigots, racists, and thieves are my friends. I'm part of the in crowd and I like it that way. In the city I'd just be another medium fish.
      FTFY.

    51. Re:IMHO that's good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Amen to that. Years ago, I bought a house in a very homogenous community – just didn’t realize what it was like before committing to the purchase. For the first few years they made it abundantly clear that I was not welcome, so I gave up trying. Then, after about five or six years, they started coming after me for not participating in their “community” – what an evil person I was, etc., etc.

      I finally got out once the economy improved, but I hated having to move – I put a lot into that house and really liked it. If it weren’t for the people I was surrounded by, I could have seen myself living there for the rest of my life.

      Small communities are great if you are “one of them,” but if you aren’t, they are nasty places to live – as the OP pointed out, once they decide you aren’t good enough, they will all make sure you never forget it.

    52. Re:IMHO that's good by wyHunter · · Score: 1

      different strokes for different folks, glad you don't live here.

  2. just use cash and no cell phone by known_coward_69 · · Score: 2

    in NYC you can find a basement to rent in a private home for cash and a lot of times a minimal background check. buy a burner cell phone or use only a home phone and pay cash for everything. but gift cards to shop online or walk to the local store. metro card machines take cash. live life like your parents did.

    1. Re:just use cash and no cell phone by Chrisq · · Score: 1

      in NYC you can find a basement to rent in a private home for cash and a lot of times a minimal background check.

      Can you really? In the UK the checks that landlords must provide are far form minimal. I'm pretty sure you could find places to rent that didn't do this, but I don't think they'd be in the best parts of town!

    2. Re:just use cash and no cell phone by known_coward_69 · · Score: 1

      NYC is full of illegal and semi-legal rentals where people who own a home rent out their basements to help make the payments. you can get buy with showing your ID and a simple credit/criminal check for legal reasons. the payments can be made in cash. illegal immigrants do it all the time. kids just want to live in hyped up neighborhoods full of snooty bars and restaurants and shop online because they are too lazy to walk to the local store for anything

    3. Re:just use cash and no cell phone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "cash and a lot of times a minimal background check"

      Doesn't practically every background check require your name, birth date, references, and SS number? Sounds like a pretty solid beginning for a paper/digital trail to me.

    4. Re:just use cash and no cell phone by JackieBrown · · Score: 1

      So how do illegal aliens do it then?

    5. Re: just use cash and no cell phone by interiot · · Score: 1

      And use a license plate cover (although covers have been made explicitely illegal in some places).

    6. Re:just use cash and no cell phone by known_coward_69 · · Score: 1

      except it stays with the property owner who isn't paying taxes on your rent income. renting in real apartment buildings via management companies means you have to pay by check which leaves a trail. but you can probably find some place to rent without a background check. just don't walk in the area at night.

    7. Re:just use cash and no cell phone by Richard_at_work · · Score: 1

      In the UK, illegal landlords. Putting 5 families into a normal house, well beyond the legal limits, knowing the families cannot raise complaints.

    8. Re: just use cash and no cell phone by Richard_at_work · · Score: 1

      Completely illegal in the UK, as is pretty much any changes to the number plate - you cant even change the spacing between characters.

    9. Re: just use cash and no cell phone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd be curious to know the exact wording of the UK law regarding license plat covers. Most states here in the US have laws against modifying or completely covering plates from view as well but the covers that are often sold are designed specifically to defeat plate scanners (IR/limited field of view) without overly effecting standard traffic enforcement. Only a few states (New York) have laws specifically making these illegal, in most states they are a bit of a grey area.

    10. Re:just use cash and no cell phone by AHuxley · · Score: 1

      Re 'So how do illegal"?
      In the distant past it was simple: One person has photo ID that is acceptable at a state and federal level. Rent it out to a person who has the same basic appearance and they can rent a home in your name. Only do that one time and a steady flow of cash is paid for the cover ID owner, paper work is paid for by a group of people living in that home under the cover name.
      It works as different state, city, federal databases could often never be shared as the name is not on any gov list to be reconciled.

      "Under the radar with the UK's illegal migrants" (24 September 2015)
      http://www.bbc.com/news/uk-343...
      "Instead of buying a set of fake documents, he paid someone to share their legitimate national insurance number with him."

      What nations need to do is have a set of ID, photo ID at every level of interaction with work, tax, banks, gov services, when seeking any form of accommodation, free gov medical services, post offices services, private sector work, as university students still doing registered (eligible) course work, as tourists, private medical services, gov assistance at a state or federal level, when buying a car or later registration/reporting over the years.
      Traditional charities, gov departments and social workers could easily help a nations own citizens or eligible individuals with the new paperwork if they need help to sort, upgrade, apply or request.

      The methods are very easy with todays digital gov databases to find the every expanding vast pool of fake and shared ID's.
      The other method is to have a system of camera networks to capture face and licence plates on all vehicles at random heavy traffic areas. Does the face match the paperwork and face on the ID, if not a chat down?
      The other option is to have long term legal guests who are working, living, or are undertaking a form of real education in a nation, register with the police at set times and if their circumstances change. No need for a "carry at all times" national ID card, just make every aspect of a functional life interact at a city, state and federal level in real time with any issued photo ID. No need for an expensive passport or drivers licence, just offer a "free" state or federal photo ID card based on an interview and a long list of interconnected, supporting documentation.
      Why is this not been done in more advanced nations? Too many business leaders like their union free, interchangeable, tax free, no paper work, disposable workers and are allowed to hire such workers by political leaders over decades.

      --
      Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
  3. What country you from? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    and do they speak English in it?

    "just as corporations are answerable to leaks and hacks."

    Funny, OP. Real funny. Glad to know the drugs are working.

  4. Anonymity and modern convenience by TWX · · Score: 1

    One can easily live anonymously if one is willing to sacrifice modern convenience. Buy things only with cash. Live somewhere less desirable where the landlord doesn't want to know who the tenants are, or pay a lot more to live somewhere such that the landlord turns a blind-eye to the anonymity, and don't have some characteristic that draws attention. Use mass transit and use the cash-accepting kiosks to buy tickets and don't own a car.

    On the other hand, if one wants to consider anonymity and loss of it, people haven't been anonymous since the wide adoption of the telephone or since the advent of electric power and other utilities that are personally paid-for by the subscriber, and those with means that have sought insurance or purchased land have never been anonymous and documenting private ownership of land with the local government has been the principal means that ownership is established for probably thousands of years. Living anonymously may have its benefits, but there are a lot more benefits when one isn't living truly anonymously.

    --
    Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
    1. Re:Anonymity and modern convenience by DarkOx · · Score: 1

      Does any of that really work when massive facial recognition systems exist and cameras are everywhere.

      As long as nobody takes an interest it you anonymity is possible. The moment a three letter or other LEO does take an interest they can probably track you and uniquely identify around town easily.

      --
      Repeal the 17th Amendment TODAY! Also Please Read http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/right-to-read.html
    2. Re:Anonymity and modern convenience by known_coward_69 · · Score: 1

      most of the cameras are privately owned to watch over someone's property. the data is deleted within a few days unless it catches a crime and the cops ask for the feed. at least in the USA

    3. Re:Anonymity and modern convenience by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is against federal law to lease or rent a living space anonymously, because with anonymity comes the landlord's inability to comply with the Fair Housing Act.

    4. Re:Anonymity and modern convenience by jimtheowl · · Score: 1

      You need a good doze of wake the fuck up. There are fixed cameras everywhere; bars, stores, restaurant, street lights, tablets, laptops, possibly your TV... It has also become difficult to go out without someone pointing a cell phone in one's general direction and take a picture, either having coffee or at a restaurant. Even private property owners usually contract out the camera surveillance, most often to their ISPs, and have no control over the feed retention.

    5. Re:Anonymity and modern convenience by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One can easily live anonymously if one is willing to sacrifice modern convenience.

      With the amount of surveillance today, there is nothing "easy" about defining "easily". Even the simple instruction of buying everything with cash is almost impossible to do today.

      That problem will become exponentially harder in the coming decade (thing drones for surveillance, legal under the guise of "security")

      The question is, will you give a shit about privacy any more than you do today?

    6. Re:Anonymity and modern convenience by TWX · · Score: 1

      You need a good doze of wake the fuck up. There are fixed cameras everywhere; bars, stores, restaurant, street lights, tablets, laptops, possibly your TV... It has also become difficult to go out without someone pointing a cell phone in one's general direction and take a picture, either having coffee or at a restaurant. Even private property owners usually contract out the camera surveillance, most often to their ISPs, and have no control over the feed retention.

      [CITATION NEEDED]

      Seriously. Citation needed. In my experience they're locally stored and operated, simply because the bandwidth of the cameras is far too high to send it across the WAN or Internet pipe. The cameras I work with connect at 100BaseTX. Given that manufacturers are cheapskates that means they need more than 10BaseT speeds. For the sake of argument, if a camera uses 11 Megabits and there are two cameras that's already exceeded the transmit speeds of most DSL and Cablemodem (ie, cheap) connections and is FAR in excess of anything in the low-end T-carrier WAN tech short of a T3, and even then is using up half of that T3 for just security cameras.

      Security footage is locally stored, and when there's a problem it's either locally or remotely accessed. To do otherwise would be a huge waste of both bandwidth and of storage.

      --
      Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
    7. Re:Anonymity and modern convenience by PPH · · Score: 1

      Owning cars/houses/bank accounts in your own name is for plebes.

      If you are wealthy, these can all be purchased through corporate fronts. Yes, you will have to own a residence (or rent one). Because a person with some level of wealth but no residence stands out in a database. But you don't actually live there.

      Many years ago, when I lived in apartments, my building had more mailboxes than actual apartments (and numbers that didn't go with actual units). The manager made a decent amount of money on the side renting them out.

      --
      Have gnu, will travel.
    8. Re:Anonymity and modern convenience by JoeMerchant · · Score: 1

      Mass transit sounds like a quick way to lose any anonymity you thought you had - what metro station isn't completely covered with video surveillance? I think it's even becoming common on metro buses and some taxi cabs. Walking in a city? How many cameras cover the sidewalks? Wearing a mask only gets you recognized more quickly.

    9. Re:Anonymity and modern convenience by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Even private property owners usually contract out the camera surveillance, most often to their ISP"

      I've yet to hear of a single ISP offering a security camera service. Some businesses contract out to security firms who have access to their camera systems or who have a backup of some of their video information. Other businesses have their own security camera systems on site which send out limited backups when the alarm is tripped. And I have little doubt that the government has tie ins with some of the major security firms to pull video/images from their databases and they may even have agreements with some of them to log in to their customers security DVR's directly to pull records. But despite what you may have seen on CSI or other Hollywood fantasies there is no way that all of the raw footage from a significant amount of private security cameras is accessed real time by the government, there simply isn't that much bandwidth on the planet.

    10. Re:Anonymity and modern convenience by jimtheowl · · Score: 1

      Since you decided to pick on that one detail, allow me to put minimal effort into it:

      https://www.att.com/shop/digit... http://www.bce.ca/news-and-med...

      Perhaps those cameras that you have 'experience' with use 100BaseTX Ethernet as physical medium. That doesn't mean that they are using the full bandwidth (pretty much guaranteed by design), nor that video cannot stream over the Internet (cell phone video streaming and Netflix). I'm not saying that everything is stored all the time, but the client doesn't necessarily control it. Further, this one just one example of how ubiquitous cameras have become. Cross it off the list, it changes nothing.

      To keep things in context, this statement: "Does any of that really work when massive facial recognition systems exist and cameras are everywhere."

      Was replied to by: "..most of the cameras are privately owned to watch over someone's property.."

      [CITATION NEEDED] ? Seriously.

    11. Re:Anonymity and modern convenience by AHuxley · · Score: 1

      Re "Does any of that really work when massive facial recognition systems exist and cameras are everywhere."
      That works well until you are seen near a gov building, court, using public transport, bank, get stopped or get shared with the gov via cctv over the years.
      Some nations do the CCTV sharing legally, others just set up public private partnerships and connect to federal government departments in a more discreet way. "Facial recognition: Privacy advocates raise concern over 'creepy' system Government says will enhance national security" (9 Sep 2015)
      ".. will allow law enforcement and security agencies to quickly scan through up to 100 million facial images held in databases around Australia." "The images can come from drivers' licences, passport photos or security cameras in your local shopping centre.."
      "..mobile CCTV and tablets and are trialling body cameras to work with facial recognition."
      Sooner or later a legal "random" chat down induced by a face not meeting a gov threshold will demand real ID.
      Then the sit down interview about proof of been a home owner, rental accommodation, utility bill, phone, car, work, gov, wealth, bank account, education, other forms of ID update questions start.

      --
      Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
  5. What the hell is a "smart city"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Is that newspeak for "orwellian shithole that tracks your every move and action to make sure you conform to their ever-increasing amount of completely arbitrary, restrictive laws that regulate things no sane government should ever even think of regulating"?

    Got a nice ring to it, I must say.

    1. Re:What the hell is a "smart city"? by Actually,+I+do+RTFA · · Score: 1

      completely arbitrary, restrictive laws

      Except, they are not laws. They are TOS of various corporations.

      --
      Your ad here. Ask me how!
    2. Re:What the hell is a "smart city"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Milton Keynes

      Ahahahahahaha ahh ohh.

      I made myself sad.

    3. Re:What the hell is a "smart city"? by gurps_npc · · Score: 1
      Simple way to stop 99% of stupid regulation:

      Live in an unincorporated area, with no community board, no community center, etc.

      Because almost all of the problems come from LOCAL governments doing stupid things.

      The federal government has more important stuff to do, it only gets involved in things that need regulation. They might make BAD regulations, but they don't waist time on things that don't need to be regulated.

      States do some stupid things, cities/towns do a LOT of stupid things. When you hear about a silly California law, it's almost always something a town/city has done, not the state.

      But the absolute worst regulations are those put out by home owners associations or co-ops. Pets, noise, paint color, fees for having overnight guests/street parking, pool rules. SATELITE SURVEILANCE in order to ensure compliance Garage sale rules, dress code rules, home business rules, gardening rules, the list is endless.

      HOAs basically demonstrate what communism was like. In fact, that's how communism got so bad, they based their entire government on an HOA.

      --
      excitingthingstodo.blogspot.com
    4. Re:What the hell is a "smart city"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't try to blame communism for something as capitalistic as an HOA.

      If you wonder how an HOA is capitalistic, its simple. A company decides to build a neighborhood and sell houses and they don't want someone buying a house and doing something to it that makes it harder to sell neighboring houses for as much. So they put a clause in the sales contract creating the HOA. All those stupid invasive HOA rules are made with the intent of maintaining the value of the property so that houses in that neighborhood can sell for more money.

    5. Re:What the hell is a "smart city"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As a townhouse owner in San Diego, I appreciate that my HOA is being draconian because I really appreciate the value added to my own property that I have zero intentions of keeping for more then another 8 years.

      I feel very sorry for people that have neighbors that cannot be bothered to keep their properties nice. No paint, no yard work, no upkeep at all. If enough people do it, you will definitely lose money on the property trying to sell unless you are in a booming market.

      Everyone that hate's HOAs, don't live there then. No one forced you to buy and it was completely disclosed before hand that one existed.

  6. We used to call people in the woods kooks by cant_get_a_good_nick · · Score: 1

    Now they're the vanguard.

    1. Re:We used to call people in the woods kooks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yip. I live in a town that has six houses. Technically it is an unregistered township. I don't actually know what my neighbors get up to unless they tell me and they don't know much about me unless they ask and I tell them. Fortunately, we communicate and tend to use that information to care about each other instead of harming one another. Funny, that. Ah well... (Still not logged in. I am really lazy today.)

  7. Have big cities ever been anonymous? by areusche · · Score: 1

    I remember going to Toronto around 2002 and recalling how many video cameras were all over the place. I bet it wasn't any better in the 90s either.

    What type of anonymity are we talking about? Personally in large cities I enjoy the sheer fact that other people do not know me. I can go to a bar and make a total fool of myself and no one will even care or remember. Sure there are a trillion video cameras around and if someone really wanted to they could follow my footsteps through my boring life.

    Contrast that to small towns, where I may be "anonymous" but the corner store clerk knows my name and people all around recognize me even though it would be harder for an alphabet soup agency to track me. Try and make a fool of yourself at the local watering hole and you'll end up with a bad rep.

    1. Re:Have big cities ever been anonymous? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure, people around you might not recognize you, and you may feel like you're "hiding in plain sight" in a crowd.

      But, what is really happening with those government cameras is that advanced facial recognition is tracking you as you move around the city, and government can tell everywhere you go and when, and with whom you associate.

    2. Re:Have big cities ever been anonymous? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "government cameras is that advanced facial recognition"

      Thankfully, for the moment anyway, that fear is vastly overestimated. The cameras used by most city government CCTV systems are low resolution or limited FOV cameras designed more for rough situational awareness not identification. The data/processing requirements are also extensive, meaning that (again, for the moment) even where the cameras do have the resolution/storage needed for facial recognition most actual uses of it are limited to situations where there is a significant need for the capability (theft, abduction, murder, officer with a vendetta, etc).

    3. Re:Have big cities ever been anonymous? by mspohr · · Score: 1

      That's why I don't like cities. Too many jerks who think they can do anything stupid and be "anonymous".

      --
      I don't read your sig. Why are you reading mine?
  8. Is someone working by WormholeFiend · · Score: 1

    on a scramble suit?

  9. ORLY? by mark-t · · Score: 1

    it is the duty of world leaders to safeguard their citizens' privacy

    That's all very well and good, except for the fact they do a fucking awful job of it. People should be responsible for their own privacy. Full stop.

    1. Re:ORLY? by wonkey_monkey · · Score: 1

      Well, how are they supposed to make sure they're safeguarding their own citizens, and not some other country's, unless they know exactly who everyone is?

      --
      systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
    2. Re:ORLY? by mark-t · · Score: 1

      Why would they have to, if they weren't supposed to be responsible for it in the first place?

    3. Re:ORLY? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Simple, safeguard anyone within your borders. Government does have a legitimate reason to track people when they are crossing the border, they do this via time honored method called a "passport". But tracking everyone inside the borders has far less utility in a free country. Even if you get into the "illegal immigrant" issue you're talking less than 4% of the population here in the US and 95% of that is because we've basically been purposely failing to secure the southern border of the country because we saw those crossing as a form of cheap disposable labor

  10. Old news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Thomas Paine the anonymous author of "Common Sense" was eventually found out by the British government in 1775. So a loss of anonymity is hardly new. Incidentally long before open source Paine relinquished his copyright to the public and even denoted his profits to the Continental Army of George Washington.

  11. Doesn't make a difference by HalAtWork · · Score: 1

    Who cares if someone's an asshole? They'll be naturally avoided anyway. Does the whole town have to know who's naughty and nice? Then it's about being a secret asshole and keeping up appearances. Assholes are assholes regardless of who is aware of their being an asshole anyway. They'll just make sure they slime their way out of consequences anyway. I know plenty of assholes at work and they're not anonymous. They don't care nobody helps them out, they have ways of preying on the weak and twisting arms to get their way anyway (there are still weak/gullible in small towns too). They don't give the slightest fuck.

  12. Or just keep the government away from it by mi · · Score: 1

    The panelists insisted that it is the duty of world leaders to safeguard their citizens' privacy, just as corporations are answerable to leaks and hacks.

    With corporations already answerable, how about we simply keep the government away from the data — and make corporations provide all of the anonymity-threatening services? Then we will not need to establish yet another governmental Department (of Privacy) and live happy fulfilling lives?

    --
    In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
  13. Right by easyTree · · Score: 1

    The panelists insisted that it is the duty of world leaders to safeguard their citizens' privacy, just as corporations are answerable to leaks and hacks.

    Not at all then...

  14. I couldn't disagree more by MakersDirector · · Score: 0

    It's getting harder to live anonymously?

    I've been living off the grid for about 3 years.

    I don't make an income. I live in a tent in a public park. I bathe regularly, and spend my days playing MMORPGs, writing, and watching television and movies through torrents like Jessica Jones and Doctor Who.

    Leveraging a peer to peer network, what I watch isn't traceable. I leverage a wireless connection at Starbuck's and am one of 50 users on at any given time, and I would estimate up to 1000 people hit this network a day.

    What I buy isn't traceable. I'll help people take viruses off their systems when virus protection fails, I will advise them to remove virus protection, as it costs money and creates a gaping hole in your machine's security. With an MBA and Bachelor's in science, I'll help tutor people, and through personal life experiences and a life coaching background I help people empower themselves. Anything I get for income is cash only.

    I call myself by a different name than what I have on my driver's license. So no one knows my real name no matter where I go.

    And I have grown my hair out long since any valid state IDs have been taken. Having worked on image recognition and facial scanning as a programmer before, there's certain bone structures for faces which are very common and tough to distinguish which I am blessed with.

    And I use 5 primary email accounts and about 30 other ones at any given time to keep my location and habits obscure.

    Now I have taken living 'off the grid' to the extreme.

    So while yes, anything I spend can be correlated to an image pulled in from security cameras to obtain marketing demographics on a guy like me, only one organization is capable of doing that - my former employer - the NSA.

    And while yes, where I go can be correlated to fixed routes - should I murder someone or commit any other kind of felonious crime, it's very easy for someone like me to simply shift to another location and no police would never be able to find me because there's no real time acquisition and correlation of homeless people's whereabouts and habits. This works to my benefit.

    Now for the average consumer, who's buying things on credit cards, it's easy to trace your location and spending habits. It's easy to single you out and not just what you like to watch based on the shows being fed through the same cable you pay for. But also at the cable company level obtain demographical information on everyone in your household. Demographical information that can, and quite often is, resold to the highest bidder.

    Who it's sold to influences your habits. Influences your patterns. Influences where you go to eat, what you do for fun, and who you make love to,

    My choice to 'live somewhat off the grid' wasn't really a choice.

    But being 'out of it' - when someone asserts it's hard to reside in a modern city anonymously...

    I call bullpuckie. That's wishful thinking by intelligence types who prefer people like me didn't exist.

  15. Connectedness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Only problem with a connected smart city is with a breach there is wide spread contagion. Even with all systems being disparate geographically, you're presenting a larger attack surface than needed.