At 01:44 PM 9/14/2001 -0400, Howie Goodell wrote:
These smart cards don't need to be connectable to your identity; just your body and a responsible party's signature. American Airlines and Lloyds put $1B behind my biometrics being one of an authorised class of pilots or plane cleaners. Who I am isn't necessary.
No, but what's going to sound more comforting to worshippers at the temple of the power trip: 1. Credentials without privacy violation, which chart a careful course between the risks of overidentification and the risks of overauthorization/overpermissiveness, a la Chaum - or 2. A big centralized database/control center, where serious-looking men with guns and uniforms will sit in swivel chairs and look at computer screens 24x7, using zoom lenses and database queries to inspect every movement or deviation from what's considered normal? This isn't just a technical question, it's a marketing question, and people are learning/have learned to feel safer when someone's monitoring them, and others, too. People believe that their experience as a subject of control and the exercise of power makes them safe - and that the feeling of not being controlled, or the idea that others are not being actively controlled (or at least monitored, to ensure that their internalized controls are functioning) is scary to them. Things aren't going to get better until people learn to abandon the false security of the control fetish, and learn to operate in an environment where uncertainty and risk are significant factors. -- Greg Broiles gbroiles@well.com "We have found and closed the thing you watch us with." -- New Delhi street kids