corsasport.co.uk
 

Corsa Sport » Message Board » Off Day » National ID Cards


New Topic

New Poll
  <<  1    2  >> Subscribe | Add to Favourites

You are not logged in and may not post or reply to messages. Please log in or create a new account or mail us about fixing an existing one - register@corsasport.co.uk

There are also many more features available when you are logged in such as private messages, buddy list, location services, post search and more.


Author National ID Cards
johnhara1
Member

Registered: 19th Oct 06
Location: Newcastle upon Tyne
User status: Offline
21st Feb 08 at 12:58   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

/\
Adam
Member

Registered: 1st May 01
Location: Hurstbourne Tarrant
User status: Offline
21st Feb 08 at 13:00   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

quote:
Originally posted by johnhara1
quote:
Originally posted by Adam
quote:
Originally posted by johnhara1
Your whole life would be on this card - doctors records \ loans \ drivers license \ etc etc etc


There's no way they could manage that.


What makes you think that? Having your whole life history accessible via 1 card doesnt sound impossible to me.

[Edited on 21-02-2008 by johnhara1]


The sort of database needed to hold all the data on a person would just be so unmanageable. I'm sure any DBA's on here would be able to agree but 60ish million people in the UK, 1000 bits of information per person and you're talking 60,000,000,000 fields of data
R Lee
Member

Registered: 15th Aug 03
User status: Offline
21st Feb 08 at 13:03   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

quote:
Originally posted by Hamish
quote:
Originally posted by R Lee
In Hong Kong, they have been using for absolutely years.
It works great and everyone must carry one at all times.
I've never heard of ID theft over there.

And do you think that all news from Hong Kong is reported over here?

My parents live there, and i'm there quite regularly.
And I can watch the news over here


Adam
Member

Registered: 1st May 01
Location: Hurstbourne Tarrant
User status: Offline
21st Feb 08 at 13:03   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

quote:
Originally posted by R Lee
In Hong Kong, they have been using for absolutely years.
It works great and everyone must carry one at all times.
I've never heard of ID theft over there.


Both Australia and the USA have worse problems of ID theft than Britain, precisely because of general reliance on a single reference source of Social Security Numbers, your use of a card will be the transmission of a code or hash of various bits of data and would effectivly form your electronic signature. If someone intercepts that hash then what's to stop them impersonating you.

I realise that's a very simple explanation but hay-ho.




From NO2ID.org
quote:

Many western countries that have ID cards do not have a shared register. Mostly ID cards have been limited in use, with strong legal privacy protections. In Germany centralisation is forbidden for historical reasons, and when cards are replaced, the records are not linked. Belgium has made use of modern encryption methods and local storage to protect privacy and prevent data-sharing, an approach opposite to the Home Office's. The UK scheme is closest to those of some Middle Eastern countries and of the People's Republic of China—though the latter has largely given up on biometrics.


[Edited on 21-02-2008 by Adam]
R Lee
Member

Registered: 15th Aug 03
User status: Offline
21st Feb 08 at 13:07   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

I had to get thumb prints scanned in etc not so long ago.
I'm not bothered if it happens here anyway. They can follow me into the toilet and watch me shit if thats what they want to do
AlunJ
Member

Registered: 3rd Apr 07
Location: Newport
User status: Offline
21st Feb 08 at 13:07   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

quote:
Originally posted by R Lee
In Hong Kong, they have been using for absolutely years.
It works great and everyone must carry one at all times.
I've never heard of ID theft over there.


it may do, but this is the UK and the government have proved even they can't look after our details safely
R Lee
Member

Registered: 15th Aug 03
User status: Offline
21st Feb 08 at 13:09   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

quote:
Originally posted by AlunJ
quote:
Originally posted by R Lee
In Hong Kong, they have been using for absolutely years.
It works great and everyone must carry one at all times.
I've never heard of ID theft over there.


it may do, but this is the UK and the government have proved even they can't look after our details safely


Point taken
Mather.16v
Member

Registered: 1st Nov 04
Location: Stockport
User status: Offline
21st Feb 08 at 13:11   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

im all for it

some people are far to paranoid
Adam
Member

Registered: 1st May 01
Location: Hurstbourne Tarrant
User status: Offline
21st Feb 08 at 13:16   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

quote:
Originally posted by Mather.16v
im all for it

some people are far to paranoid


Or some people are just far too trusting of the gov't
Mather.16v
Member

Registered: 1st Nov 04
Location: Stockport
User status: Offline
21st Feb 08 at 13:27   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

i couldnt care to be honest, im going to live in new zealand for a year

people complain about immigrants / criminals / peados / rapeists etc, isnt this a way of easily finding them

weigh up the pros and cons
Half Pint
Member

Registered: 25th Mar 02
User status: Offline
21st Feb 08 at 13:33   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

quote:
Originally posted by drunkenfool
quote:
Originally posted by nova_gteuk
quote:
Originally posted by corsabadboy
yeh quite a bit, will stop a hell of a lot of identity theft, underage drinking, people will no longer be able to give false details to police etc


untill people start to make forged id cards,

no matter how hard they make them to copy,
criminals will find a way of duplicating them.

biggest waste of money imo and another way of controlling us.




But what about the database itself? Even if they did manage to make a fake card, could they get a fake entry put into the database?
Im personally for it, I dont see what all the fuss is about.


well they would probably offshort the database with loads of badgers putting the info in, such badgers are open to exploiting the law and selling information as happens today... thus you have a loop hole
Doug
Member

Registered: 8th Oct 03
User status: Offline
21st Feb 08 at 13:37   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

I can see pros and cons.

unless you have something to hide then I dont see the problem
taylorboosh
Member

Registered: 3rd Apr 07
User status: Offline
21st Feb 08 at 13:46   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

quote:
Originally posted by Hamish
quote:
Originally posted by corsabadboy
yeh quite a bit, will stop a hell of a lot of identity theft, underage drinking, people will no longer be able to give false details to police etc

and the government will also know where you are all the time and what you are doing. No thanks


HAVE YOU GOT ANYTHING TO HIDE?

Adam
Member

Registered: 1st May 01
Location: Hurstbourne Tarrant
User status: Offline
21st Feb 08 at 13:55   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

quote:
Originally posted by Doug
I can see pros and cons.

unless you have something to hide then I dont see the problem


Have nothing to hide but after all the data losses I don't really want everyone to have access to ALL my details
Adam
Member

Registered: 1st May 01
Location: Hurstbourne Tarrant
User status: Offline
21st Feb 08 at 13:56   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

quote:
Originally posted by corsabadboy
quote:
Originally posted by Hamish
quote:
Originally posted by corsabadboy
yeh quite a bit, will stop a hell of a lot of identity theft, underage drinking, people will no longer be able to give false details to police etc

and the government will also know where you are all the time and what you are doing. No thanks


HAVE YOU GOT ANYTHING TO HIDE?



Nope, have you? You don't mind your personal data being sold to people (DVLA)? or just lost?
LeeM
Member

Registered: 26th Sep 05
Location: Liverpool
User status: Offline
21st Feb 08 at 13:59   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

dont see much of a problem really, im sure all my details are held somewhere already anyway
Half Pint
Member

Registered: 25th Mar 02
User status: Offline
21st Feb 08 at 14:10   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

Christ,

most of your details can be got from the internet already, as if another goverment fuck up will really matter!

[Edited on 21-02-2008 by Half Pint]
ed
Member

Registered: 10th Sep 03
User status: Offline
21st Feb 08 at 16:16   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

quote:
Originally posted by Adam
quote:
Originally posted by johnhara1
I think:

Eventually the card would be used to do everything, even buy your groceries so then cash itself could be removed.

This would mean all your money was simply numbers on a piece of paper, cash would not exist. This would stop any cash in hand work \ drug dealers etc who work with cash only.

Everything like go through the card. It will be like a lifetime of big brother.




So the small family run shop making very little turnover/profit should be expected to purchase;

A valid card reader
Internet connection
and unless it's built into the device some sort of firewall/encyption technology for it to check your details back to home base?

Every single part of your life would be logged and recorded somewhere and how would this work for internet purchases?

[Edited on 21-02-2008 by Adam]
Well, nearlly every shop has a chip and pin machine.
Adam
Member

Registered: 1st May 01
Location: Hurstbourne Tarrant
User status: Offline
21st Feb 08 at 18:33   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

quote:
Originally posted by ed
quote:
Originally posted by Adam
quote:
Originally posted by johnhara1
I think:

Eventually the card would be used to do everything, even buy your groceries so then cash itself could be removed.

This would mean all your money was simply numbers on a piece of paper, cash would not exist. This would stop any cash in hand work \ drug dealers etc who work with cash only.

Everything like go through the card. It will be like a lifetime of big brother.




So the small family run shop making very little turnover/profit should be expected to purchase;

A valid card reader
Internet connection
and unless it's built into the device some sort of firewall/encyption technology for it to check your details back to home base?

Every single part of your life would be logged and recorded somewhere and how would this work for internet purchases?

[Edited on 21-02-2008 by Adam]
Well, nearlly every shop has a chip and pin machine.


Which I'm pretty sure is paid for by the bank, if this is a gov't scheme it's gonna have to be paid for in tax
drax
Member

Registered: 5th Feb 05
Location: Sittingbourne, Kent
User status: Offline
21st Feb 08 at 20:49   View User's Profile U2U Member Reply With Quote

To be fair, the only terrorists the government are going to need to look out for soon, are its own countries populas. People will not stand when they get to breaking point, and hopefully that'll be soon.

  <<  1    2  >>
New Topic

New Poll

Corsa Sport » Message Board » Off Day » National ID Cards 24 database queries in 0.0422442 seconds