House Panel Considers Secure IDs, and ACLU Asks ‘What About Privacy?’ (10/18/2007)
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WASHINGTON -- A subcommittee of the House Oversight and Government Reform
Committee held a hearing today on secure identification technology, and the
American Civil Liberties Union urged lawmakers to consider the privacy
implications before rushing to embrace new technology. Since 9/11, some Members
of Congress have proposed the government mandate identity documents for
everyone, including citizens. Congress has passed sound-good legislation without
fully considering their impact on Americans’ privacy. The government’s troubled,
still behind-schedule Real ID program, which 17 states have rejected, and the
notoriously delayed Western Hemisphere Travel Initiative, are only two examples
of the government’s problems getting identity security off the ground.
The government’s proposed ID plans have called for vast databases cataloguing
Americans’ most personal information, machine-readable technology that would
allow the government to track and limit Americans’ movements and a card that
stores Americans’ personal information, leaving it vulnerable to identity
thieves, corporations wanting to make a profit and spying by government
officials of all levels. The government’s ID programs, with costs in the
billions, create a massive bureaucracy and ultimately don’t create a safer
society. The ACLU urges Congress to protect privacy and carefully consider plans
for identity technology before subjecting the American people to privacy risks
and bureaucratic nightmares.
The following can be attributed to ACLU Legislative Counsel Tim
Sparapani:
"The government keeps diving into massive ID programs without seeing how far
down they go. Privacy and security are a false dichotomy – privacy itself is a
matter of security. If the government institutes IDs without privacy protections
those IDs will be insecure because every American will have to live with the
threat of identity theft and wonder how many people have access to their
personal information – and how long it will take until their information is
abused.
"High-tech ID cards need privacy protections for the same reason doors have
locks and cars have seatbelts – you need a backup plan in case the worst does
happen. Every ID system the government implements must protect our privacy for
the sake of Americans’ identity security."
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