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  1. #1
    Senior Member agrneydgrl's Avatar
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    New ID Scanners at Borders Raise Privacy Alarm

    This is why we need to get rid of the real id. People who make excuses for this plan are in self denial.

    http://www.newsmax.com/insidecover/priv ... ode=725A-1


    New ID Scanners at Borders Raise Privacy Alarm

    Monday, December 1, 2008 6:19 PM

    By: Dave Eberhart Article Font Size




    The federal government has already deployed new detection machines that can scan citizens without their knowledge from as far as 50 feet away and "read" their personal documents such as passports or driver's licenses.


    The Homeland Security Department touts the high-tech devices as increasing security at border crossings, but privacy advocates are raising all sorts of red flags.


    Critics say the new machines, which read one's personal information right through a wallet or purse, do so without consent or a warrant and may set a worrisome precedent.


    The devices, called Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) machines, allow officials to read remotely any passports, pass cards, and driver's licenses that contain special chips with personal information.


    The RFIDs are so sensitive that, even before a vehicle pulls up at a border checkpoint, agents already will have on their computer screen the personal data of the passengers, including each person's name, date of birth, nationality, passport or ID number, and even a digitized photo.


    The new gadgets are in place, or soon will be, at five border crossings: Blaine, Wash.; Buffalo; Detroit; Nogales, Ariz.; and San Ysidro, Calif. They are slated to have a dramatically expanded presence in June.


    Lee Tien of the Electronic Frontier Foundation argues that the technology could make Americans less secure because terrorists or other criminals may be able to steal the personal information off the ID cards remotely.


    Tien and other critics warn that people up to no good can use their own RFID machines in a process called "skimming" to read the information from as far as 50 feet.


    Indeed, consumer privacy expert Katherine Albrecht maintains that the chips create the "potential for a whole surveillance network to be set up." Among other abuses, she says police could use them to track criminals; abusive husbands could use the technology to find their wives; and stores could trail the shopping patterns of patrons.


    Homeland Security, however, rebuts the criticism, arguing that the embedded chips surrender only a code to machine readers. That code is then broken in order to display the personal information on the border agents' screen.


    Meanwhile, the same agencies that are issuing the newfangled IDs supply a sleeve that keep out all prying electronic eyes when not in use.






    © 2008 Newsmax. All rights reserved.


  2. #2
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    Such horse hockey!!!! Meanwhile 5,000 to 10,000 illegally cross our joke of a wide open border and no one in the black hole of Washington knows who they are, what their intentions are and many simply don't care. And to think an undercover government security team successfully sneaked enough simulated fissile material across an unguarded part of the border right up to the steps of the Federal Building in Phoenix and not a peep from House Homeland Insecurity Chairman Bennie the Clown Thompson or any other of the clowns that disgrace this government.
    There is no freedom without the law. Remember our veterans whose sacrifices allow us to live in freedom.

  3. #3
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    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

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