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Τρίτη, 29η Ιανουαρίου 2008

IPS η διαρροή προτείνει την μπριζόλα δακτυλικών αποτυπωμάτων καρτών ταυτότητας

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Η δύναμη τυπωμένων υλών ακριβώς απαιτείται για τις» πρόσθετες» ομάδες

Από John Lettice

Ένα βασικό συστατικό του σχεδίου καρτών βρετανικής ταυτότητας, η κεντρική βάση δεδομένων των δακτυλικών αποτυπωμάτων, μπορεί να εγκαταλειφθεί, σύμφωνα με ένα διαρρεσμένο έγγραφο Υπουργείων Εσωτερικών αποκτηθείς από Παρατηρητής. Το έγγραφο δεν προτείνει εξ ολοκλήρου τα δακτυλικά αποτυπώματα, αλλά αντ' αυτού προτείνει ότι η αξία τους πρέπει να αξιολογηθεί για κάθε ομάδα του πληθυσμού που εγγράφεται.

Τόσο πώς εκείνη η εργασία; Καλά, για το σχέδιο ταυτότητας όπως αρχικά προγραμματίζεται, σαφώς όχι. From David Blunkett onwards Home Office ministers have presented biometrics as the system’s USP, the one single factor that makes it entirely certain (in their view) that you are who you say you are. And, they have claimed, the ability to check those biometrics against a central register would give us the ‘gold standard’ of identity. But if you don’t necessarily collect everybody’s fingerprints, then you don’t have a complete national biometric register, so you might as well save yourself a pile of money, chuck away any notion of online biometric checks as a matter of routine, and forget any ideas you still had about a national biometric register.

Quite a few of the claimed ‘benefits’ of the ID scheme go out of the window if you do this. The police cannot trawl the register in order to match crime scene fingerprints, nor can they use their mobile fingerprint readers to identify you or to prove that you are who you say you are. Effectively, the ID card would be chip-backed picture ID, with the security of the chip only of value in circumstances where a reader was used.

Except, apparently, for some groups. Immigration Minister Liam Byrne recently reiterated his commitment to issuing the first biometric ID cards to foreign nationals from November of this year. Having this group carrying biometric ID cards makes sense to the government, in a racist sort of way, because it should already have biometrics for many of them via the biometric visa programme. But not all foreign nationals require a visa, so perhaps not all foreign nationals will turn out to require an ID card - at least initially.

But even if the Home Office were to abandon ID card fingerprints for everyone bar the foreigners it’s fingerprinting already, it would still ultimately be fingerprinting most of the rest of us, as the Identity & Passport Service (IPS) is currently scheduled to start collecting fingerprints at passport renewal from 2009. The UK isn’t a Schengen signatory and therefore isn’t obliged, as the Schengen states are, to add fingerprints to passports, but has committed to do so.

Which presents us with a puzzle. The ID card has up to now been envisaged as, effectively, a small format passport - you collect the biometric data for the passport and squirt it onto the passport chip and the ID card chip, same thing, different shapes. But there’s always been a need, if the ID card is to be universal, to collect biometric data from that part of the population that doesn’t have a passport. And if you’re not going to do that, then the passport and the ID card start to become different beasts, with the passport the ID that’s more strongly tied to the individual, and the ID card being rather less so.

The picture is not wholly coherent, which is as one would expect from an organisation looking for savings and shortcuts in a desperate attempt to salvage something from the ID card disaster.

Meanwhile in separate leaks, the Home Office is considering beating young drivers with a stick to get them to sign up for ID cards. Well, sort of - see here. ®

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  • This entry was posted on Tuesday, January 29th, 2008 at 5:11 pm and is filed under Surveillance . You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

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