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Posts Tagged ‘DNA database’

So what we do when ID Cards 1.0 finally dies?

Wednesday, June 24th, 2009

UK Identity Card 1.0 is in deep trouble. It’s running late, and if the Conservative Party wins next year’s election it’ll be scrapped. Its original architect has changed his mind, and even some Cabinet members are starting to see it as a needless expense. But if we pull the plug, what then?

The cards may go away, but the issue won’t. Problems associated with identity, privacy and security will remain burning issues facing both the technology industry and wider society. But the irony is that the UK is well placed to develop a model identity framework for the 21st Century. Unlike many other countries, we don’t have the problems of any existing, legacy national identity scheme to encumber us. We have a clean slate. We could have got this right and shown the art of the possible.

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All the more reason to be dispirited then with the current identity plan, which seems to be rooted in a 1960s view of computing, with everyone’s personal information stored in some monolithic central system and proposed identity cards that seem to be little more than plastic copies of the cardboard identity documents the UK population was forced to use during the second world war.

It is as if someone has dusted off a document for a state-centric identity scheme from another era, one before the digital, Internet, consumer-driven age. But I won’t dwell on this as the failings of the current scheme have been the topic of endless well-informed analysis and comment already.

Read article:

http://www.theregister.co.uk/2009/06/19/identity_two_dot_oh/  

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Father bans school from fingerprinting daughter

Wednesday, June 17th, 2009

A father has refused permission for his daughter’s Oxford school to take her fingerprints – fearing it is step towards a ‘Big Brother’ state.

 

Ben Emlyn-Jones’s daughter Louisa, 12, attends St Gregory the Great School in Cowley – which is planning to use fingerprint recognition software in its library.

 

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On Tuesday, it was revealed that Windale Primary School, Glory Farm Primary School, Matthew Arnold Secondary School and The Cherwell School currently use fingerprint systems in libraries and Cheney School uses the technology to register pupils.

 

Mr Emlyn-Jones said: “I am really quite disturbed about it, it reminds me of a Big Brother state.

 

“There may be advantages in having a fingerprint database, but the price you pay is too high.”

 

Read article:

http://www.oxfordmail.co.uk/news/1452746.father_bans_school_from_fingerprinting_daughter/

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EU security proposals are ‘dangerously authoritarian’

Wednesday, June 17th, 2009

The European Union is stepping up efforts to build an enhanced pan-European system of security and surveillance which critics have described as “dangerously authoritarian”.

 

Civil liberties groups say the proposals would create an EU ID card register, internet surveillance systems, satellite surveillance, automated exit-entry border systems operated by machines reading biometrics and risk profiling systems.

 

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Europe’s justice ministers will hold talks on the “domestic security policy” and surveillance network proposals, known in Brussels circles as the “Stockholm programme”, on July 15 with the aim of finishing work on the EU’s first ever internal security policy by the end of 2009.

 

Jacques Barrot, the European justice and security commissioner, yesterday publicly declared that the aim was to “develop a domestic security strategy for the EU”, once regarded as a strictly national “home affairs” area of policy.

 

“National frontiers should no longer restrict our activities,” he said.

 

Read article:

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/eu/5496912/EU-security-proposals-are-dangerously-authoritarian.html

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Why are we fingerprinting children?

Wednesday, June 17th, 2009

As voters express concern about surveillance technology, is it becoming second nature to the Facebook generation – used to publishing intimate details of their private lives on the worldwide web – who, in later life, may be less vociferous in their opposition to such schemes?

 

An increasing number of today’s schoolchildren are forgoing the humiliating daily name call of registration, and are instead having to “fingerswipe” in and out of class, or to give it its proper name: biometric registration. According to campaign group LeaveThemKidsAlone, schools have fingerprinted more than two million children this way, sometimes even without their parents’ consent. A statement on its website claims: “It’s part of an enormous softening-up exercise, targeting society’s most impressionable, so they’ll accept cradle-to-grave state snooping and control.”

 

Hard-pressed schools and local councils with tight budgets are being enticed by a new generation of software that promises to cut administration costs and time. In the last 18 months, several Guardian readers have written into the paper expressing concern at this new technology being trialled on their children. Everything from “cashless catering schemes” to “kiddyprints” instead of library cards is being introduced by stealth into the nation’s schools, it is claimed.

 

Read article:

http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/libertycentral/2009/mar/06/fingerprinting-children-civil-liberties

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Police target ‘innocent’ youths for arrest in bid to increase DNA samples on database

Wednesday, June 10th, 2009

Youths with no criminal record are being targeted for arrest so their DNA can be logged on a database in the event they commit crimes.

 

A total of 386 under-18s had their DNA taken and stored by police last year in one north London borough – more than one a day.

 

An experience officer working for the Metropolitan Police admitted the DNA was being stored as part of a ‘long-term crime prevention strategy’.

 

The officer said: ‘We are often told that we have just one chance to get that DNA sample and if we miss it then that might mean a rape or a murder goes unsolved in the future.’

 

He added: ‘Have we got targets for young people who have not been arrested yet? The answer is yes.

 

Read article:

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1190785/Police-target-innocent-youths-arrest-bid-increase-DNA-samples-database.html

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Jacqui Smith’s DNA database by stealth

Tuesday, May 19th, 2009

 

It is perhaps ironic that the home secretary should seem so hellbent on collecting the nation’s DNA while still reeling from the embarrassment of her husband’s presumed attempts to spill his at the taxpayer’s expense. If it is irony then it is doubly so, as Smith is the minister charged with upholding the rule of law yet has such utter contempt for it and its principles. The EU court ruling stated very clearly that the DNA profiles and samples of the 850,000 innocent people currently on the database should be removed.

 

Smith’s response is to leave them on the DNA database for between six and 12 years. At best this is a childish kind of belligerent foot-dragging and at worst it is plain illegal. What is certain is that campaigners will challenge this, and once again Smith will be hauled into court.

 

Read article:

http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/libertycentral/2009/may/07/dna-database-jacqui-smith

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NO2ID - Stop ID cards and the database state