DocumentCode
786532
Title
Britain´s identity crisis [biometric ID cards]
Author
Guizzo, Erico
Volume
43
Issue
1
fYear
2006
Firstpage
42
Lastpage
43
Abstract
To help in its fight against fraud, illegal immigration, organized crime, and terrorism, the British government proposed the issuance of a national identity card and an accompanying identity verification database system. The card-database combination is expected to provide a foolproof identify check for every person living in the UK. There are, however, several organizations such as the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE) who are critical of the initiative for lacking well-defined goals and for its high cost. They claim that the design of the system is based on unreliable and inadequate technologies that could result in privacy and security problems. The LSE suggests an alternative method based on a distributed approach, which eliminates the need for a central identity verification system. The verification would instead only take place locally, making it simpler to implement and radically cheaper. As supporters and critics further scrutinize the ID cards´ proposed legislation, the debate continues in Parliament.
Keywords
biometrics (access control); database management systems; government data processing; Britain; UK; biometric ID cards; government-controlled central database; identity crisis; identity theft; microchip; personal information; terrorism; Biometrics; Computer architecture; Cryptography; Data privacy; Data security; Databases; Government; Identity management systems; Insurance; National security;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Spectrum, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9235
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/MSPEC.2006.1572352
Filename
1572352
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