Slashdot Mirror


User: MMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM

MMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
941
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 941

  1. Copyright violation for the masses on Pay Dirt in Scanned Driver's Licenses · · Score: -1

    Finding Pay Dirt in Scannable Driver's Licenses

    By JENNIFER 8. LEE

    BOSTON -- ABOUT 10,000 people a week go to The Rack, a bar in Boston favored by sports stars, including members of the New England Patriots. One by one, they hand over their driver's licenses to a doorman, who swipes them through a sleek black machine. If a license is valid and its holder is over 21, a red light blinks and the patron is waved through.

    But most of the customers are not aware that it also pulls up the name, address, birth date and other personal details from a data strip on the back of the license. Even height, eye color and sometimes Social Security number are registered.

    "You swipe the license, and all of a sudden someone's whole life as we know it pops up in front of you," said Paul Barclay, the bar's owner. "It's almost voyeuristic."

    Mr. Barclay bought the machine to keep out underage drinkers who use fake ID's. But he soon found that he could build a database of personal information, providing an intimate perspective on his clientele that can be useful in marketing. "It's not just an ID check," he said. "It's a tool."

    Now, for any given night or hour, he can break down his clientele by sex, age, ZIP code or other characteristics. If he wanted to, he could find out how many blond women named Karen over 5 feet 2 inches came in over a weekend, or how many of his customers have the middle initial M. More practically, he can build mailing lists based on all that data - and keep track of who comes back.

    Bar codes and other tracking mechanisms have become one of the most powerful forces in automating and analyzing product inventory and sales over the last three decades. Now, in a trend that alarms privacy advocates, the approach is being applied to people through the simple driver's license, carried by more than 90 percent of American adults.

    Already, about 40 states issue driver's licenses with bar codes or magnetic stripes that carry standardized data, and most of the others plan to issue them within the next few years.

    Scanners that can read the licenses are slowly proliferating across the country. So far the machines have been most popular with bars and convenience stores, which use them to thwart underage purchasers of alcohol and cigarettes.

    In response to the terrorist attacks last year, scanners are now also being installed as security devices in airports, hospitals and government buildings. Many other businesses - drugstores and other stores, car- rental agencies and casinos among them - are expressing interest in the technology.

    The devices have already proved useful for law enforcement. Police departments have called bars to see if certain names and Social Security numbers show up on their customer lists.

    The electronic trails created by scanning driver's licenses are raising concerns among privacy advocates. Standards and scanning, they say, are a dangerous combination that essentially creates a de facto national identity card or internal passport that can be registered in many databases.

    "Function creep is a primary rule of databases and identifiers," said Barry Steinhardt, associate director of the American Civil Liberties Union, citing how the Social Security number, originally meant for old-age benefits, has become a universal identifier for financial and other transactions. "History teaches us that even if protections are incorporated in the first place, they don't stay in place for long."

    But companies that market the scanning technology argue that it poses no threat to privacy.

    "It's the same information as the front of the license," said Frank Mandelbaum, chairman and chief executive of Intelli- Check, a manufacturer of license-scanning equipment based in Woodbury, N.Y. "If I were to go into a bar and they had a photocopier, they could photocopy the license or they could write it down. They are not giving us any information that violates privacy."

    Machine-readable driver's licenses have been introduced over the last decade under standards set by the American Association of Motor Vehicle Administrators, an umbrella group of state officials.

    Under current standards, the magnetic stripe and bar codes essentially contain the same information that is on the front of the driver's licenses. In addition to name, address and birth date, the machine-readable data includes physical attributes like sex, height, weight, hair color, eye color and whether corrective lenses are required. Some states that put the driver's Social Security number on the license also store it on the data strip.

    The scanning systems present a challenge to efforts by state and federal governments to limit the amount of information that can be released by departments of motor vehicles. In 1994, Congress passed the Driver's Privacy Protection Act, largely in response to the murder of Rebecca Schaeffer, an actress who was killed in 1989 by an obsessed fan who had found her unlisted address by using California motor vehicle records.

    Before the law was adopted, states were selling driver's license information to direct marketing companies, charities and political campaigns. Businesses selling, for example, fitness products and plus-size clothing were able to focus on customers within a given range of height or weight.

    While the privacy act staunched the flow of information from state motor vehicle departments, there are only spotty controls over how businesses can create such databases on their own. In Texas, the driver's licenses can be electronically scanned for age verification, but the information cannot be downloaded from the machine. In New York, businesses are only allowed to store name, birth date, driver's license ID number and expiration date for the purpose of age verification. Many states require people to give consent to be on marketing lists, but businesses generally interpret consent to mean not actively removing their names from a list.

    When Mr. Barclay, the bar owner, saw a demonstration of Intelli-Check (news/quote)'s driver's license scanner at a trade show in 1999, he was surprised. "It had never dawned me that that strip had information on it," he said.

  2. Censorware.org on Phytoremediation · · Score: -1

    How long till Mikey the Twink delete this post.

    Because we all he wouldn't get involved in censorship. No, he would not. *sigh*

  3. Re:lots of techies into scientology? on Scientology Uses DMCA to Delist Critic's Website · · Score: -1

    Indeed, lots of techies into scathology.

  4. Re:DMCA as a religion on Scientology Uses DMCA to Delist Critic's Website · · Score: -1

    Your post is subversive and may offense some readers. Go to your room.

  5. Re:No jokes about maths? on Simpsons Guide to Math · · Score: -1

    Q: How does mathematician attract women?

    A: They don't. They use their hand.

  6. Re:Clawing my way to the top.... on Alternative Energy: Power Via Coastal Wave Motion. · · Score: -1
  7. Re:Freenet on If This Had Been An Actual Emergency · · Score: -1

    Arguing on the Internet is like the Special Olympics. Even if you win, you're still a retard.

  8. Re:Yeah... on If This Had Been An Actual Emergency · · Score: -1

    They are bothering us every days with their annoying emergency tests on TV. And guess what? Not a single real emergency alert showed up the day the WTC towers collapsed. Really useful. We are paying taxes for this shit? Count me out.

  9. Re:apologies.... on IE, Apache Clash on Web Standard · · Score: -1

    Sir, you seriously need medications. Please choke and die. Thanks!

  10. Re:doesnt look that bad... on IE, Apache Clash on Web Standard · · Score: -1

    Out of curiousity, what happened with the economy? I lived in a cave the past six months.

  11. Re:I have the patent on patents! on nVidia Claims Patent On Interactive Gaming Servers · · Score: -1

    I hold the patent on patenting.

    Gotcha! Now try to be unfunnier.

  12. Re:Viruses for Java? on Another Java Security Hole in Windows · · Score: -1

    OMG duck and cover!

  13. Re:It's a hole in Java on Another Java Security Hole in Windows · · Score: -1

    It's a well known fact that Sun stole JVM from Microsoft.

  14. Re:MacOS, and soldered on CPU on ATX PPC Motherboards from Eyetech · · Score: -1

    Because I have no clue what you just said. I shit your mouth, asshole.

  15. Re:Un impressive on ATX PPC Motherboards from Eyetech · · Score: -1

    I learned the hard way that she's an hermaphrodite. My anus still hurt from the unwelcome visit of her phallus.

  16. Re:A bit expensive on ATX PPC Motherboards from Eyetech · · Score: -1

    You are old. Please die immediately.

  17. Re:PA can do whatever they want; I just need fucki on Pennsylvania Law Requires ISPs to Block Child Porn · · Score: -1

    Use your fist.

  18. Re:The price of free software just went up. on FSF, Affero Announce A GPL For Web Services · · Score: -1

    The GPL is viral.

  19. Re:Hi! on County-wide Wireless Broadband · · Score: -1

    Where have you been? Were you in custody for "disturbing the peace"?

  20. Re:1 word: on Laser HUD Projected on Retina · · Score: -1

    That doesn't bring any discussion. You are a dweeb. And stop promoting GHB. it's an illegal drug, darn hippie.

  21. Re:PREMIER COMMENTAIR (FRANCAIS) on Laser HUD Projected on Retina · · Score: -1

    France surrender

  22. Re:whoa! just hope that laser isn't hacked on Laser HUD Projected on Retina · · Score: -1

    /. janitors should put a warning label on the front page.

    "GO BACK TO WORK, YOU ARE NOT FUNNY"

  23. Re:Laser HUD Projected on My Nuts on Laser HUD Projected on Retina · · Score: -1

    I was raped by a carrot, then I ate it.

  24. Re:Damn on Laser HUD Projected on Retina · · Score: -1

    Sacrificing your own anus would be a better solution.

  25. Re:Oh my goodness no! on Larsen Ice Shelf Collapses · · Score: -1

    How can you tell? Did you ask Mr. Volcano?