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Brilliant! Speed limit could also be enforced by placing cheap devices along the road. And your mother-in-law could track you over the Internet... :) |
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Can anyone say big brother. The last thing I
want is my travels being documented in a
database of some government agency. |
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Imagine what all the privacy advocates
would say if they tried to introduce
automobile licensing now... ``Oh my god,
they want to put a unique ID on every car
and keep a database connecting those
IDs to your personal information, driving
record, arrest record, etc.? What a total
Big Brother play! Next thing you know,
cops will be tracking our every move by
entering those numbers into the system...'' |
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"SCMOTS: The State, County, Municipal Offender Tracking System." Anybody seen 'The Blues Brothers' recently? |
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I recall hearing someplace that they have a system of putting a radio-tag in vehicles in Australia. Speed-traps then just record your tag number and speed. Come license renewal, you pay your annual fees PLUS the accumulated fines. |
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Im from Australia and thats the first Ive heard about a radio tagging system. As far as I know its still the same old game of cat and mouse with the cops here too. |
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And what if your travels were "documented in the database of some big government agency"? What have you got to hide? On the other hand I'd quite like to know if I was driving behind someone with no insurance who was currently banned from driving.
See "Invasive government" link. |
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[egnor] Automobiles can already be uniquely identified. It's called a VIN. |
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must be an American spelling. [angel] is quite good at sniffing those out. |
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London's new congestion charging scheme due to be implemented in 2002 has created a zone within central London completely ringed by license plate recognition cameras. As you enter the zone your license plate is logged and £5 debited from your (ccs) account. You have 24 hours grace to top it up. Good idea I think. Maybe the average road speed will climb above 10mph once more? |
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Hi hippo. Like invasive government, it's invasive. But it's us being invasive. Surely there's something to be said for the paradigm shift. Hi cmiller2478. Maybe you'd prefer the database somewhere in the private sector. I'd prefer it somewhere in the public domain. |
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This is (as far as UK is concerned) just public access to the Police National Computer, wherein are stored details of vehicles and their registered keepers. |
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I'd much rather be tracked by some underfunded, understaffed, poorly run government bureaucracy than some coldly efficient capitalist concern, like the phone company- or, worse yet, Microsoft... |
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