HSTEd
Veteran Member
- Joined
- 14 Jul 2011
- Messages
- 18,655
The idea of people routinely recording suitably high quality mugshots in banks and any number of locations, with the potential for such information to be diverted to any number of nefarious purposes, is rather terrifying.If (quite plausibly) the card contains a digital/electronic encoded photo that is routinely checked when the card is used, then people who steal cards would not normally be able to use them without being detected.
Not particularly massive? I'd say fraud is a pretty huge problem. Illegal immigration is not as big a problem as many people make out, but it's big enough to have had a fairly dramatic (and unpleasant) impact on Government policies towards immigration, so from that point of view anything that makes it easier to detect would be extremely welcome.
The weakness of politicians and their inability to use evidence to support their positions is not an argument from infringment of civil liberties, in my opinion.
The kinds of fraud that are prevented by ID cards are still a relatively minor part of the whole however.
This is an inherently emotive topic.As for your comment, scaremonger totalitarian policies - more emotive language??? I'm sure your debating standard is usually higher than this![]()
From a purely utilitarian perspective it is rather difficult to argue against constant facial recognition surveillance, with implanted RFID chips in all people that contain biometric information and are used in place of all bank cards, with them (and cash) being otherwise forbidden.
All transactions, all attempts to unlock doors, all entrances and exits of buildings, would be held on a secure database held by the state and it's security services.
But this is obviously a rather orwellian vision.