U.S. Congress passes "Real ID Act"

by Frannie Banannie 23 Replies latest social current

  • Frannie Banannie
    Frannie Banannie

    http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ttpcworld/20050519/tc_techtues_pcworld/120893&cid=1740&ncid=1729 ID, Please

    Exclusive from:

    Thu May 19, 3:00 AM ET

    Brad Grimes

    If someone asks for your ID (and you're of driving age), you probably whip out your driver's license. In personal identification circles, what you obtain from your state's department of motor vehicles is considered a de facto national ID because most adults carry one and most places that require ID accept it.

    But it's not really a national ID. Each state has its own DMV, with its own computer systems, and its own unique license characteristics for protecting their integrity. Not surprisingly in the post 9/11 age, there are those in government who wish we'd all just carry a single, United States ID card--maybe even one that contains biometric data about us.

    Welcome to Real ID

    Earlier this month, Congress passed the Real ID Act, which President Bush promptly signed into law. In fact, the House of Representatives passed the act several months earlier, but because of the controversy such an ID card engenders--mainly around privacy issues--the Real ID Act was subsequently tacked onto a bill authorizing money for troops in Iraq . Because no politician in their right mind is going to deny money to the troops, the Real ID Act became law.

    Put simply, starting in 2008, you may need a new driver's license. Anyone living and working in the United States will use a federally approved ID card for everything from boarding a plane to opening a video rental account. It's possible some current state IDs will meet federal standards, but others will need an overhaul.

    Should You Care?

    So what's the big deal, aside from the prospect of huge lines at the DMV? The Real ID Act, as it's currently written, says each ID must contain unspecified "machine readable" information. No one knows yet what that information will be or what kind of machines will be reading it, but the Homeland Security Department gets to choose. And the department is currently experimenting with all the latest high-tech ways of identifying you.

    It might be that the new ID just has a magnetic stripe with your name, address, Social Security Number, etc. Or it could carry a radio frequency identification tag, such as the one the State Department wants embedded in new passports. During congressional debates, Representative Ron Paul ( news , bio, voting record), R-Texas, worried that RFID technology would lead to an ID that carries far more information on a microchip than current licenses carry, including digital fingerprints or retinal scans.

    What's the Big Deal?

    Privacy advocates worry about, among other things, a scenario like this: If your ID is suddenly machine readable, anyone with the right machine can collect the data it contains. Today if you go into a bar, for example, the only way most bouncers can get your name, address, or other personal information is to write it down longhand or type it into a computer. On a busy Saturday night, who has time for that? But if the ID is machine-readable, and the bar sets up the right scanner, all the bouncer has to do is swipe your ID and the bar could start sending you targeted mailings.

    Experts also worry that the new ID will effectively create a national database of personal information, because states will be required to share information with the federal government. Some say that much information in one place could be a boon for identity thieves.

    But it may never come to that. With the right rules and regulations in place, you should be able to rest assured that the new ID you'll get in the coming years won't be abused. It's too early to push the panic button--even vigilant watchdogs such as the American Civil Liberties Union are just beginning to explore ways of defending citizens against privacy issues related to the IDs. But the prospect of a new national ID system is something everyone should stay informed on.

    Former PC World executive editor Brad Grimes covers technology in government for Government Computer News in Washington, D.C.

  • Frannie Banannie
  • doogie
    doogie

    ah, screw it...just stamp the barcode on my neck. it'll save a couple of steps.

  • hillbilly
    hillbilly

    Unless you live in a cave, there is so much finanacial and personal information out there...on any and all of us. If any of us are worried about "privacy" well for the last 20 years you've been an open book. Computers just make it "faster" for "average" people to get your numbers

    I show up on the FBI database...when I was 11 my dad's company (he was a principle manager) got a Federal loan to build a plant in a depressed area.........imagine that...1970! The whole family is on file.

    Barcode on my neck..na' ...chip in the keister for me!

    ~Hill

  • Frannie Banannie
    Frannie Banannie

    Makes me contemplate moving to a "third world" country

  • mkr32208
    mkr32208

    The only ones who are super concerned about this invasion of privacy are the ones who are breaking the law! Why do I give a s*it if the goverment knows where I shop or eat or work? Why do I care if banks and retailers know? If I'm not breaking the law WHY DO I CARE IF EVERYONE KNOWS!!!!!! Want to put an GPS chip up my A$$ I don't care just use plenty of lube I have nothing to hide!

    Do you???? If no then why are you so worried?

  • mkr32208
    mkr32208

    Duplicate!

  • coffee_black
    coffee_black

    mkr, I have nothing to hide... but that doesn't mean that I want my personal info out there for all to see. My address and other personal info is just that.... personal. I choose who I give it to. I value my privacy. The argument that you must be doing something illegal if you don't want your info out there is 100% rediculous..and bogus to boot. There are people out there stealing identities all the time, with horrible consequences for the victim. My life is an open book only to those I choose to open it to.

    Coffee

  • stillajwexelder
    stillajwexelder

    the names George and ----- Orwell spring to mind

  • undercover
    undercover
    The only ones who are super concerned about this invasion of privacy are the ones who are breaking the law! Why do I give a s*it if the goverment knows where I shop or eat or work? Why do I care if banks and retailers know? If I'm not breaking the law WHY DO I CARE IF EVERYONE KNOWS!!!!!! Want to put an GPS chip up my A$$ I don't care just use plenty of lube I have nothing to hide!

    It's attitudes like that that are causing us(US citizens) to lose more and more freedoms and liberties.

    So you don't care if the govenment knows where you shop or eat. What if where you shop or eat is on a list of companies that supposedly supports anti-US movements? What if the government decides that since you shop or eat there that you are sympathetic to that cause? What if they arrested you and held you prisoner on whatever terrorist charges they felt like? The truth that you had no idea about the alleged sinister activities of the company you dealt with is of no consequence. You supported that cause by purchasing goods thus in the eyes of the ever growing, ever more controlling government, you're guilty of sedition.

    I bet you'd think about those freedoms and liberties a little bit more then.

    An extreme example? Maybe, but as long as people allow the government to intrude more and more into their lives, the more people are willing to give up liberties to feel safe, the more people don't care about what liberties they have now then the more fascist the government will become. All because we don't care.

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