back to article Ban internet anonymity – says US Homeland Security official

Internet anonymity should be banned and everyone required to carry the equivalent of a license plate when driving around online. That's according to Erik Barnett, the US Department of Homeland Security's attaché to the European Union. Writing in French policy magazine FIC Observatoire, Barnett somewhat predictably relies on …

  1. Zog_but_not_the_first
    Big Brother

    After...

    you.

    1. asdf

      Re: After...

      But he is obviously a "good" guy and us proles that pay his salary are not. Funny how information asymmetry works.

      1. Graham Marsden
        Black Helicopters

        Re: After...

        > ...you

        "Everyone?"

        "Yes. Well, everyone but *us*, of course..."

  2. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    The old adage comes to mind: "Those who want power are the last people who should be allowed to have it".

    We have to live with a certain amount of risk. Those who wish to control the world so that there is no risk - are merely showing their own insecurity about themselves - and possibly fearing/hiding their own dark thoughts.

    People with power in the USA over the centuries have form on paranoid witch hunts - both literal and figurative.

    1. Kurt Meyer

      @AC

      You wrote:

      "People with power in the USA over the centuries have form on paranoid witch hunts - both literal and figurative."

      You should have written:

      "People with power over the centuries have form on paranoid witch hunts - both literal and figurative."

      You do a grave disservice to those people living outside the US who have suffered, are suffering, and will suffer from the paranoid witch hunts of the powerful throughout history

      This is not an issue confined to the US (although they're in it up to their eyebrows), this overreach has happened, and is happening, everywhere.

      All of us must fight together in this battle against those who would presume themselves to be our masters. If they succeed, they will have levels of control only dreamt of by the likes of Beria, Himmler, or Mielke.

      1. asdf

        Re: @AC

        Three cheers for silicon valley who made multi billion dollar companies with 50 employees possible. Making spying on the peons trivial is the cherry on the shit cupcake.

  3. Notas Badoff

    "ignored most of the time"

    Hmm, cars. Okay, all cars belonging to DHS personnel should have their names, phone numbers and home addresses stenciled on the sides. These will of course be ignored most of the time. Unless, y'know, they start in with childish opinions and legal porn...

    1. Kurt Meyer

      Re: "ignored most of the time"

      Erik Barnett says:

      "The license plate's identifiers are ignored most of the time by law enforcement"

      That is a lie Mr. Barnett. The identifiers are NEVER ignored.

      Police vehicles in the US have license plate readers integrated into the vehicle's computer system. The readers automatically scan the plate number of EVERY vehicle in front of them, and check it against any database they can access.

      The most discussed aspect of all this is the length of time the data will be retained. The coppers want to hold it indefinitely, the more astute members of the public believe the data should be discarded immediately after the plate is shown to be clean.

      1. allthecoolshortnamesweretaken

        Re: "ignored most of the time" / license plates

        Interesting piece on that here:

        http://boingboing.net/2016/01/27/vehicle-surveillance-company.html

        (And to think I always felt a bit uneasy when travelling in the GDR way back when...)

        1. Kurt Meyer

          Re: "ignored most of the time" / license plates

          @atcsnwt

          Thanks for that. I wonder what Mr. Barnett would have to say about that.

          I know what Elwood said.

          btw: sorry for the acronym, but I'm a wretched typist, and the full panoply of your handle is currently more than I can bear.

          1. Michael Wojcik Silver badge

            Re: "ignored most of the time" / license plates

            I wonder what Mr. Barnett would have to say about that.

            It doesn't matter. He's a surveillance addict, like (it seems) most in his line of work. Addicts will rationalize their way out of any argument. They're not interested in debate, except as a way of confirming their own beliefs.

            It's not surprising that surveillance is addictive. Humans are social animals; we find each others' activities interesting, generally speaking. And surveillance is powerful and profitable. So it both satisfies an innate need and brings pleasure. Not surprisingly, it's very like other forms of interpersonal dominance in that way; but it's unusual in that it can be exercised in secret, which makes it appealing to those who have negative affective reactions to confrontation, and makes it easy to achieve through technological means.

            Consequently, we'll never stamp out the government inclination toward surveillance, and probably the best - probably the only - way we have of slowing its growth is to push for a popular reaction against it on civil-rights grounds, which can at least throw up some impediments to it. Historically, that's been the most successful strategy against systemic oppression in the modern era. The combination of popular agitation in the short term and changing prevailing attitudes in the longer term has achieved moderate success on a number of areas that have been framed as essential human rights.

            The more-accomplished proponents of surveillance, like Barnett, are aware of this, of course, which is why they couch their position in terms of anecdotes and vague warnings about violations of those same rights (Papism, witchcraft, sex trafficking, terrorism, international Communism - whatever the bugbear of the day). And there is some benefit to debunking those arguments, for the benefit of third parties who are still open to reasonable persuasion. But you aren't going to get the policing types to admit a mistake, and for the masses you'll need to appeal more directly to liberal1 ideology.

            1In the political-science sense, not the US "I don't know what 'liberal' means but I don't like it" one.

      2. Voland's right hand Silver badge

        Re: "ignored most of the time"

        The readers automatically scan the plate number of EVERY vehicle in front of them

        Not just USA. When I drive across Europe the state of affairs is:

        UK - In theory, a nation under ANPR. In practice, the smaller roads and small cities are not covered

        NL - well, the birthplace of GATSOMeter corp, shall we say more

        DE, CZ, A - All motorways, supposedly for toll enforcement. They read all plates, unclear what they do with them

        Hu - All motorways, road tax enforcement, considering the inclination of the government there ....

        Ro - A camera here and there for road tax enforcement, not even close to rest of Eu (they are surprisingly law abiding down there).

        Bg - All A roads and all motorways, supposedly for road tax enforcement which interestingly enough is not done. So god only knows what is done with the data.

        Greece - what camera? Camera? You expect a country which did not even have a national birth register till less then 5 years ago to have working ANPR? You mean someone will pay tax? You are joking, right.

        E - I have not noticed any cameras, but that does not mean there aren't any.

        F - camera at every toll and by god, they have more tolls than USA.

    2. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: "ignored most of the time"

      Cars should? Cars do. Buy a BMW M-whatever, and floor the 'gas' pedal, and KNOW that it phones home to daddy. They know who you are, they know how you drive, and are itching to cancel your warranty. You're already on lockdown dumbass!.

  4. Chris G

    Feck Off

    Back to your HOMEland!

    What the Feck is HOMEland security doing with a European attache?

    Aren't there enough other US agencies blundering around other people's countries trying to keep the terrists out of 'The Land of The Free'?

    We'll have the TSA with their rubber gloves at boarding gates for US bound flights soon.

    1. Mark 85

      Re: Feck Off

      If one reads the articles coming out of the EU, the UK and just about every other country, they're all pulling this crap. Not sure who's leading who here but it is more widespread than just in the US. Our masters want to know everything...

      I'm surprised we're not all living in glass houses and driving glass cars so they can see that we're not doing anything illegal. So far, no one's suggested that we all walk around naked so they can see if we're carrying bombs, guns, or anything else illegal.

      <sarc>Maybe the 'no clothing" part is coming once global warming is embraced. Then they can mandate it without worrying about anyone freezing.</sarc>

    2. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: Feck Off

      We'll have the TSA with their rubber gloves at boarding gates for US bound flights soon.

      We most certainly will:

      http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3367396/US-guards-guns-patrol-British-airports-time-controversial-new-plans-discussed-London-Washington.html

      Excuse the source, just the first news link to this story that Google chucked up.

      1. Kurt Meyer

        Re: Feck Off

        I've just read the article you've linked, and while it isn't a done deal yet, the very fact that HM government did not immediately tell the DHS to sod off, is very depressing. I hold out hope, against the evidence it seems, that the Europeans will resist the blandishments of their counterparts in Washington.

        Please, please, please, tell them to fuck off.

    3. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      They're already in Dublin

      by invitation *sigh*

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: They're already in Dublin

        You forgot to put "invitation" in quotes. "Gunboat invitations" are in quotes. Same as "Gunboat diplomacy".

  5. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Digital Fingerprints... here's one for you

    You want to see my digital fingerprints? I can only let you see one.... (or two if your european)...

    Same tired arguement that is used by LE whenever they want to invade our privacy...

    "It will stop kids from being molested, and of course, if you are against that you are obviously one of the pedos!"

    I bet these same "law enforcers" would not like us going through their computers and emails en masse either.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: Digital Fingerprints... here's one for you

      Call ze 'angman! We 'ave caught ze Black Fingernail!

    2. dajames

      Re: Digital Fingerprints... here's one for you

      You want to see my digital fingerprints? I can only let you see one.... (or two if your european)...

      That's a nice attempt at a gesture in the right direction...

      ... but they can't actually see the prints when you hold your hand like that!

  6. Pirate Dave Silver badge
    Pirate

    I see the problem...

    "As the use of technology by human beings grows..."

    There's the problem. Right....there. Perhaps we should henceforth ban human beings from using technology and just teach panda bears how to run everything. I mean, who could ever get angry at a cute, fuzzy panda bear? They seem peaceful enough, just let them take care of it all while we spend our lives growing bamboo. Human beings, especially ones in positions of power over other human beings, are stupid, power-hungry, selfish critters. But mostly just stupid.

    I, for one, welcome our adorable ailuropoda overlords.

    1. allthecoolshortnamesweretaken

      Re: I see the problem...

      Penguins.

    2. Prst. V.Jeltz Silver badge

      Re: I see the problem...

      "As the use of technology by human beings grows..."

      I think this guy has only just found out about the internet and is suitably scared / outraged.

      The clue is when he calls it the "Infomation Superhighway"

  7. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    The right to anonimity

    There are situations where people are legally entitled to anonymity. For example the victim of child abuse, name one online and you could end up doing time. So say a victim of abuse is looking for help is this idiot saying they aren't entitled to this basic legal right while on line?

    Think again cretin, I bet you don't.

    Actually you probably don't give a shit about the victim.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: The right to anonimity

      The argument probably goes: "they shouldn't use the Internet"

      No, I don't agree with that point of view either. I don't think one should have to be a victim of abuse to claim anonymity if they feel a need to do so.

      Paradoxically, by forcing everyone to be identifiable, the US government is more or less making everyone a victim of its policies, thus pretty much giving everyone all the reason they need to make themselves anonymous.

    2. Robert Helpmann??
      Childcatcher

      Re: The right to anonimity

      He played the "Think of the Children" card right off, didn't he? The problem is that people saying this never are concerned with the actual children and want us proles to focus on the horrible predators out in the wilds of the internet. When we stop to consider what we would actually want for our children (and ourselves), the answer is usually the opposite of what is being requested.

  8. chaosmagnet

    I guess this is one of many in the US administration who wants to repeal the First Amendment.

  9. John Smith 19 Gold badge
    Big Brother

    Try it this way. Top cop wants to make his life easier. Invokes "4 horseman of the infopocalypse"

    But as Joseph Wambaum (who was a street cop) wrote.

    "Police work is only easy in a police state."

    1. Kurt Meyer

      @ John Smith 19 Re: Try it this way.

      A minor correction, if I may.

      Joseph Wambaugh

      I highly recommend "The Onion Field" and "The Choirboys"

      1. John Smith 19 Gold badge
        Unhappy

        Re: @ John Smith 19 Try it this way.

        "Joseph Wambaugh"

        True. I went from memory on that one.

        The quote (IIRC) is from the film version of "The New Centurions."

  10. Lysenko

    Seriously?

    I get that this is based on a French article and the quotes are likely translated, but did he really say: "digital super-highway" ??!!

    Paging Mr. Barnett ...Al Gore for you on the white courtesy phone.

  11. Sway

    We do have "IDs" on the net, it's called an IP, just like a car license plate it can change and others can use it, If you dont know what to do with it then please grab your coat on the way out.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Thanks to CGNAT, you get to share your "license plate" with (in theory) up to 65536 others.

      1. storner
        Boffin

        So? Make IPv6 mandatory!

        1. Anonymous Coward
          Anonymous Coward

          That won't help for the majority of the Internet who are still partying like it's 1984.

  12. Da Weezil

    "When a person drives a car on a highway, he or she agrees to display a license plate. The license plate's identifiers are ignored most of the time by law enforcement [unless] the car is involved in a legal infraction or otherwise becomes a matter of public interest."

    Not in the UK... Registration plates are routinely scanned by roadside ANPR equipped cameras and the details stored on a database.... Hardly "ignored" are they?

    There are too many plastic policemen wanting total oversight of our lives.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Ssh, don't tell the Yanks that's what the dhSS wants to do next.

      1. Kurt Meyer

        @Mycho

        Too late. They've been doing it for years. See my post above.

    2. John Robson Silver badge

      More importantly driving a motor vehicle requires a license.

      Does he have an internet license? If not then he shouldn't be browsing, and we should probably not let his comments pass...

    3. Prst. V.Jeltz Silver badge

      Not in the UK... Registration plates are routinely scanned by roadside ANPR equipped cameras and the details stored on a database.... Hardly "ignored" are they?

      they are already on the database , weezil.

      The cameras look at the plate , check the database(s). THEN ignore

  13. Chewi
    FAIL

    License plates?

    The Internet is not a big truck.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: License plates?

      You're right. Its a super highway.

      If they wish to impose surveillance on websites I put forth that websites used to gather intelligence be painted yellow and only be deployed when a certain number of accode ts have occurred.

  14. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    As someone

    Who has been molested I see no benefit in trying to push " guilty until proven innocent". The law most certainly fails most of the time with people like myself. That's the beauty of revenge.

  15. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Ban governments

    Get the hell off my internet, DHS wankers!

  16. AdamWill

    "Level of extremism"?

    "Who determines the level of 'extremism' of a group? Few would disagree that law enforcement and intelligence services should have the ability"

    Few people, I suppose, except the hundreds of peaceful and legitimate political organizations that were infiltrated by intelligence agencies in the US, the UK and elsewhere, apparently for no particular reason other than someone in a position of authority didn't like the cut of their jib?

    (see the unfolding story about undercover spooks *getting engaged to people* in such organizations, thus entirely ruining their lives...)

    1. Malcolm Weir Silver badge

      Re: "Level of extremism"?

      Well, quite. In 2006, Benjamin Netanyahu attended a commemoration of a clear act of terrorism... the bombing of the King David Hotel in 1946 and the death of 91 people and one terrorist. Yesterday he claimed there could be no justification for terror. This illustrates both the hypocrisy of politicians (bombing hotels is OK if you're fighting for The Right Cause(tm), but not otherwise), but also the fungible nature of "terrorism" vs "freedom" or "independence" fighters.

    2. John G Imrie

      Re: "Level of extremism"?

      You missed out the bit about undercover cops getting female activists pregnant.

  17. Stoneshop
    FAIL

    He's just astroturfing

    for Farcebook

  18. Camilla Smythe

    As I tried to explain to Plip Plops....

    Unfortunately I am unable to stroke you any more. He was rather insistent butting his head against me but I remained strong and ignored him. He died the next day. I am a good citizen and do not miss him.

  19. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    > When a person drives a car on a highway, he or she agrees to display a license plate.

    Hey, wait a cotton-picking minute?

    Agrees?

    When was I even asked?

    1. Kurt Meyer

      @skelband

      It's in the EULA. ;-)

  20. Wommit

    The terrorists can sit back, have a bee... er fruit juice, and relax. This twit is doing their job for them.

  21. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Bestiality is pretty awful too!

    He can still go fuck a duck though.

  22. BitDr

    Trouble is

    When given access to power, or even when put in close proximity to great potential power, and information is power, people will ultimately do exactly the wrong thing. If there are rules in place to prevent abuse of power, then those rules will eventually be whittled away until they are no longer a concern. It is not a matter of "if", it is a matter "when".

    Free societies are supposed to be above the tools of the "bad-guys", the likes of which killed millions of people in the first half of the 1900's. Eternal vigilance is indeed the price of liberty; vigilance against those who would peddle fear to undermine those liberties.

    "All good is hard. All evil is easy. Dying, Losing, cheating and mediocrity are easy. Stay away from easy"

    -- Scott Alexander

  23. Chris Daemon

    Trail Balloon

    So, how much for a license? Can it be revoked? Is it like EasyPass? Are at least the political elite exempt as usual?

    But then again, why not just tiptoe around common sense and silly documents like the US Consttution and just request the "digital fingerprints" on the "Information Super-Highway" from the Google and Facebook directly? Why not just regulate ISPs to cough up traffic data? It's been done with AT&T on phones, can be done again?

  24. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    legal infraction or otherwise becomes a matter of public interest.

    ah, yes, the "otherwise", the gate to a black hole of otherwise interests.

  25. JustWondering
    Meh

    What's the difference ...

    ... between USA and USB?

    One connects to all your devices and accesses your data. The other is a hardware standard.

  26. JustWondering
    Unhappy

    This remind me

    A while back, here in the northern colony, our government came up with The Protecting Children From Internet Predators Act, similarly designed to invade our privacy. Funny thing though, except in the title, neither children nor internet predators were mentioned.

  27. Andrew Jones 2

    There is a tiny bit of difference though between being able to lookup someone's license plate and find out if there is anything dodgy about the car or the owner - and being able to type in a license plate and find out every vehicle ever linked to the owner, every location the owner has ever driven and every person the owner has ever had contact with (including a handy lookup to explore the entire history of these people too) - even though the owner doesn't have a criminal record or any involvement ever with law enforcement - what is being suggested is very much more like the latter situation than the former.

  28. Wade Burchette
    Childcatcher

    When I think of it

    You know, cameras should regulated too. After all, you cannot have child pornography without first taking a picture. And terrorists use video messages to spread their hate. So, every picture and movie should require you to enter your ID before it can be operated so that a watermark can be embedded in the images. You shouldn't mind. After all, if you have nothing to hide ...

    (Maybe I shouldn't be given these bureaucracies ideas.)

  29. a_yank_lurker

    Ohe Word

    Traitor

  30. Winkypop Silver badge
    Devil

    In-groups and the elite

    They have always hated the spread of knowledge.

  31. Someone Else Silver badge
    Devil

    WDYHASM

    (Why Do You Hate America So Much?)

    Barnett bleats:

    "As the use of technology by human beings grows and we look at ethical and philosophical questions surrounding ownership of data and privacy interests, we must start to ask how much of the user's data is fair game for law enforcement to protect children from sexual abuse?"

    A: Any and all of it...once you have a properly sworn warrant for it, and not one millisecond earlier! (Mr. Barnett, you do know what a millisecond is, don't you?)

    Anything else is unconstitutional, and sponsoring or advocating anything that is unconstitutional makes you an unpatriotic, anti-American mongrel worthy of the most loathsome of contempt and scorn.

    Oh, and you're also a fuckhead.

  32. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Private space

    The internet is not a public space like a road.

    It's a semi-private space, like a party in my house. A couple of other students wander in, and I don't know them but they seem cool so grab yourselves a beer.

    A cop walks in ... hey GTFO fascist pig! Do you have a warrant? No, so GTFO.

  33. Christian Berger

    Democracy requires the option of anonymity

    particularly when you deal with issues regarding forming an opinion. This is one of the most basic rights in any society.

    We do accept number plates on cars since driving a car usually isn't a form of political expression, however you can potentially harm other while doing so. This is something completely different, though there are edge cases where you are driving with a car to a demonstration or something.

    A completely open society won't work either, since certain people can just create new legal persons (companies) and use those to obscure their actions.

  34. Steven Roper

    Think of the children

    We need to agitate for a law that requires any politician, spook or cop who uses the "think of the children" excuse for any reason, to mandatorily spend a year in this schoolteacher's shoes.

    1. BitDr

      Re: Think of the children

      What we're actually discussing here is making a change to our entire society from "Rule Of Law" to "Rule By Law", and these are two VERY different things. A good explanation of the differences between these at can be found at http://branemrys.blogspot.ca/2005/08/rule-of-law-vs-rule-by-law.html. Below are two snippets from that blog;

      "Rule of law is an intrinsically moral notion. Indeed, I don't see how one can have a consistent theory of rule of law without appealing either to natural law theory or to some higher rule by law (e.g., divine command theory)."

      "Rule by law is very different, despite some superficial similarities. Rule by law is prudential: one rules by law (properly speaking) not because the law is higher than oneself but because it is convenient to do so and inconvenient not to do so. In rule of law, the law is something the government serves; in rule by law, the government uses law as the most convenient way to govern."

      That sums it up pretty nicely. What we are seeing today is a movement to change society in a subtle yet detrimental manner. Enforcing the rule of law while maintaining a free society is not an easy task, nor should it be. Making it an easy task by turning to "rule by law" may ultimately lead to despotism, which, history shows, will eventually crumble. When that happens (not in my lifetime (I hope)) it may involve a great cost of life and set humanity back into a dark age.

  35. WatAWorld

    Privacy versus Anonymity

    Internet anonymity is almost akin to wearing a burka or a ski mask.

    Privacy does not require anonymity. Privacy the public not knowing. Anonymity is nobody knowing.

    Privacy is something people historically have had going back centuries. Anonymity that few people used to have until most of the population moved to large cities. Even then we lived in communities where everyone knew us. Only transients had anonymity.

    Replacing anonymity with privacy would mean less desire to monitor us because there would be less criminal activity on the internet.

    Replacing anonymity with privacy would mean less cyber crime because cyber criminals could be more easily tracked and arrested by police.

    It is the blanket monitoring of everyone by the NSA, GCHQ, etc. that I most hate.

    I think I would give up my internet anonymity in exchange for privacy of a sort where a judicial order would be required to lift my internet aliases to reveal my legal name.

    Just think fewer DDoS attacks, fewer viruses, fewer trojans, and less phishing emails -- not zero DDoS attacks, viruses, trojans and phishing emails, fewer. And improved odds of the culprits being found and prosecuted.

    That is my current thinking. But again, the sort of privacy where a judicial order would be required to breach my anonymity. Anything easier just leaves us all open to Doxing and dirty tricks by bureaucrats.

  36. David Knapman

    Has anyone noticed that when people are out and about in public and *not in cars*, they're not displaying *any* kind of license information? That means that they can't be tracked and identified. Surely, this means we should tattoo license numbers onto everyone's foreheads.

    For the sake of the children.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      "Surely, this means we should tattoo license numbers onto everyone's foreheads."

      Your face and your gait are now the identification targets of CCTV tracking.

  37. tempemeaty
    WTF?

    Can't go well...

    I've seen the way people attack each other on internet forums and get savagely over emotional about the littlest things. If one could find the other there would be a hate crime. Multiply this by the number of forums on the web and we'd have an explosion of stalkers and hate crimes on Armageddon-like levels across the US. It's anonymity that's been keeping the peace...

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: Can't go well...

      It could be argued that many of the people who exhibit such behaviour are those who have an overriding need to control the world about them.

  38. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    USAs IT

    An anagram of U Stasi - a coincidence? I think not.

  39. Drefsab_UK

    ermm

    would you kindly GTFO my internet you cockwomble!

    This idea will never work, it will cost money, reduce fredoms and security and won't have the desired effect.

    The interenet is argueably one of the more important tools ever developed. It got to be so without regulation and tard's like this meddling, you start messing with it with your typical BS red tape and incompitence then your just going to fuck things up.

    1. Someone Else Silver badge
      Pint

      Cockwomble

      Now, there's a word that I haven't heard in a while. Nicely played! Have an upvote!

  40. kmac499

    Licence Plates??

    What a Dumb Ass

    The plate identifies the vehicle not the driver. So let's all pop around to his house 'borrow' his Wi-Fi and IP address, and order up a few kilos of Ricin for a laugh.

  41. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    "The unnamed email provider uncovered this exchange..."

    I suppose they'll need to remain unnamed if they expect to keep any customers after revealing that they've been snooping on the content of emails sent through their service.

  42. DJO Silver badge

    Platitudes - geddit

    A great idea, for the crooks.

    To push the car-plate analogy it's a good thing no criminal ever worked out how to use false plates on a vehicle involved in a crime.

    Enforce this and it would be circumvented in minutes while wasting millions of pounds/dollars/euros to introduce.

  43. Al fazed
    Thumb Up

    Logical response

    Well, if this view point is to be given any value, then the rest of the world should be equally entitled to track and identify all of the political associations, financial investments, personal interests, family members holdings, sexual partnerships including boyfriend/girlfriends in the wings, etc. of every person wishing to be a politician or statesperson, on the grounds that at least 10% of them are caught red handed doing naughty stuff - like, preying on young boys (Janner), State Hacking (Stuxnet), Guns for Dope (Columbia), financing and training terrorists (Al Queda).

    Need I go on ? These people would need a licence to breathe in my world.

    ALF

  44. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Why don’t we just ended an RFID in ever human being on the planet.

    In the name of fighting terrorism, these people have gone mad.

  45. randm

    Maybe that's the point...

    Speaking as someone who was a child rape victim when they were three, I'd like to point out a few things about this proposed law:

    (1) No one should want to be a child rape victim, and

    (2) Banning the transmission of images hides the acts, which helps them flourish, however

    (3) hiding the ugliness will help make everyone feel better, but also

    (4) in terms of lives lost, law enforcement tends to be a bigger threat than terrorism, but also

    (5) government is not in the business of backing down from supporting their own enforcers, and

    (6) hiding the ugliness will help make everyone feel better - or at least shut them up.

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