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[personal profile] webofevil
Four Britons have been sentenced for their role in what has been described as one of the largest international online criminal networks stealing personal data.

[...] But the four British men were not acting alone, and formed part of what the US Department of Justice described as "one of the largest illegal online centres for trafficking in stolen identity information and documents". The website acted as a criminal e-bazaar—in effect an online auction site for the underworld. [BBC]
So what we urgently need is some kind of system that can concentrate all our data in one place so that dedicated criminals will have instant access not only to some scattered details of our lives but to every conceivable item—financial, legal, medical—of our personal data. To administer this comprehensive system we have the choice of low-paid, unmotivated and questionably skilled government employees (it might be quicker to establish if any data at all has been sent securely from HMRC in the past couple of years) or their counterparts in one of the government’s mysteriously favoured private sector companies (there are too many EDS stories to enumerate here, so I’ll just flag this, recall the near-collapse of the child support system and mention the most recent shitstain on their CV, which by their standards is relatively minor).

But it’s all right, because there’ll be biometrics! Ministers who do not understand technology have been parroting the party line that biometrics would have meant that the recent loss of 25 million people’s data was not a problem, because they probably think biometrics are some sort of species of friendly demon. The wishful thinking surrounding biometrics was illustrated in last week’s episode of Spooks, whose already fairytale technology—such as localised electromagnetic pulses that can be used to stop the good guys’ car but not wipe out the bad guys’ own van a hundred yards away—became even more fantastical when face-mapping technology grabbed an image from a tiny video camera of a guy’s face in three-quarter profile seen from below and matched it within seconds with his criminal record. They can do that, you know. That’s why they demand you sit exactly face-on for your passport photos with your eyes just, just there, no, back a bit, tilt your neck, no, that’s no good, do it again but with the seat lower, open your eyes wider, for God’s sake don’t smile or it’ll never recognise you, sorry, we’ll have to start again, can we do something about your nose?

What with infallible technology, the highest quality employees in charge of the day-to-day running of the scheme and such capable, trustworthy people in overall charge, what kind of swivel-eyed anarchist could possibly oppose the introduction of the ID card database?

Date: 2007-12-21 11:31 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] nalsa.livejournal.com
Well, yes. Argh argh argh argh argh.

Date: 2007-12-21 11:32 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] amuchmoreexotic.livejournal.com
Don't you know there will never be equality for children in this country until we have scanned all their faces to identify the wanky ones?

Date: 2007-12-21 11:50 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] chiller.livejournal.com
Dude, in five years' time everyone's life is going to be as open as my LJ.

Ok, it's the government. Ten years. And then, after a brief year of incompetence culminating in someone re-sorting the database by number of sexual partners an individual has had, cross-referencing each incident to the records of the persons it relates to, the whole thing will quietly catch fire and the world will go back to normal.

Date: 2007-12-21 11:44 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] how-i-lie.livejournal.com
Instead of political comment I'm going to settle for saying: WAH! I miss Ros the Spook. Profound, I know.

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