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Public Meeting on the Identity Card
On May 19th, PI will hold a public event focusing
on the UK government's proposed identity card. The meeting will hear from key
figures in the fields of law, politics, security, technology and human rights.
PI
Releases Study on ID Cards and Terrorism; ID Card Bill Published
Privacy International has released a new study "Mistaken
Identity: Exploring the Relationship Between National Identity Cards & the
Prevention of Terrorism". The report finds that there is no evidence
that national ID cards reduce terrorism.The Government
has released its draft
bill. PI press
release. See
the UK
ID
Card
Page for more details.
ID Cards
After September 11
In the wake of the tragic
events in the United States, some countries are now considering
adopting national id cards. These include the United States,
United Kingdom, the Philippines, and the Netherlands.
Over the past eleven years,
Privacy International has been at the forefront of opposing
these proposals in a number of countries including Australia,
New Zealand, the Philippines, Thailand, the United Kingdom
and the United States. In recent years, attempts to create
national ID cards in the US, Korea and Taiwan have all
fa lied
because of public opposition.
These pages are
an attempt to bring together materials based on PI
members' experiences on opposing the proposals. While
each jurisdictions may have local variations, the themes
remain remarkably similar no matter where the proposals
are heard. Our intention here is to discuss the evidence
at an international level and to promote debate about the
claims made about such card systems.
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Privacy
International Materials
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- Privacy International, UK
ID Card FAQ, July 2002
- Privacy International, Guide
on How to Respond to the ID Card Consultation Document,
July 2002
- Privacy International statement, July 3,
2002.
- Simon Davies,Director,
PI, Reckless ID card plan will destroy
nation's freedom, Appeared in Daily Telegraph, September 29,
2001.
- Privacy International's ID Card FAQ.
Frequently Asked Questions report on id cards. (7000 words)
- Campaigns of Opposition to ID Cards.
A review and analysis of the successful campaign to kill
the Australia Card in 1987.
- Personal views from around the world on ID cards.
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ID
Cards in the United Kingdom
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UK
ID Card Web Page. Includes a FAQ on the
UK National
ID card, a guide to responding to the consultation document
and a historical overview of the ID cards in the UK.
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Other
Reports and Materials
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- TOUCHING BIG BROTHER: How biometric
technology will fuse flesh and machine" by Simon Davies.
- Ontario Privacy and Information
Commissioner's Position
on Smart Cards,
April 2001.
- Smart Cards: Big Brother's
Little Helpers" by The Privacy Committee
of New South Wales, Australia.
- Provincial
Identity Cards: A Privacy-Impact Assessment, David H. Flaherty, Information
and Privacy Commissioner for the Province of British
Columbia, September 27, 1995
- A NATIONAL ID SYSTEM: Big Brother's
Solution to Illegal Immigration, John J. Miller and Stephen
Moore, Cato Foundation, 1996
- Chip-Based ID: Promise and
Peril by Roger
Clarke, Australian National University.
- Human Identification in Information
Systems: Management Challenges and Public Policy
Issues
by Roger Clarke.
- Identification, Anonymity and
Pseudonymity in Consumer Transactions: A Vital Systems
Design and Public Policy Issue by Roger Clarke.
- To Trade or Not to Trade?:
Thoughts on the Failed Smart Card Based National ID Initiative
in Taiwan,
Tyng-Ruey Chuang, Jan-Ming Ho, Shih-Kuen Huang,
Ching-Yi Liu, Da-Wei Wang
- How Smart Is the IC Card?:
The Proposed National Smart Card Plan, BOO Strategy,
Electronic Commerce, and the Emerging Danger to Online
Privacy in Asia, Ching-Yi Liu, Tamkang University
- 1991 Hungarian Supreme Court decision striking down use of ID numbers.
- New Zealand Office of Privacy
Commissioner, BACKDOOR ENTRY FOR ID CARDS? March 1998. Report on Land Transport Bill:
Photo ID Driver Licences, March 1998.
- Greece to Demand Religion on
National ID Cards, 2 May 1993. This demand was
criticized by the European Parliament and the Greek Data
Protection Commission. Prime Minister Costas
Simitis announced in May 2000 that new Greek
identity cards would not include religion, not
even on a voluntary basis. The decision was opposed
by Archbishop Christodoulos, the leader of the powerful
Greek Orthodox Church who said, "These changes are being
put forward by neo-intellectuals who want to attack us
like rabid dogs and tear at our flesh."
- Electronic Privacy Information
Center's pages
on current national ID card proposals in the
United States.
- Korean NGO Committee against
Electronic National ID Card Pages.
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Other
News Stories
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- (PH)National
ID: Protection or a threat? The Philippine
Star, September 28, 2001,
- (US)White House
nixes controversial national ID notion, Infoworld, September 27, 2001.
- (US)National ID Card Push Roils Privacy Advocates, Newsbytes, 25 Sep 2001.
- (US)ID Cards Are de Rigueur Worldwide, Wired News, September 25, 2001.
- (US)Attacks
stir national ID card debate, Infoworld,
September 25, 2001.
- (US)Make ID cards compulsory, urges Oracle boss, The Register, September 24,
2001.
- (US)Bush Contemplates National
ID Card, For all Citizens, Drudge
Report, September 23, 2001.
- (US)Oracle boss urges national
ID cards, offers free software, SJ Mercury News, September 22, 2001.
- (MY)Malaysia's smart card touted
as weapon against terrorism, The Canberra Times, 22 September
2001.
- (NG)Obasanjo Seeks Legal Backing
On ID Card, Sends Enabling Bill to National Assembly, This Day (Lagos), August 31, 2001.
- (NG)Chieftain
Cautions Against Use of ID Card for Elections,The Guardian (Lagos),
September 4, 2001.
Last updated July 15, 2002.
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