Britain to log all vehicle movement 914
dubbayu_d_40 writes "Using a network of cameras that can record license plates, Britain plans to build a database of vehicle movement for police and security services: rollout begins in March. Can't someone just swap/steal/disable the tracking device? Seems to me just another way to track the average citizen and not those wishing to avoid authorities."
Just like gun legislation (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Just like gun legislation (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Just like gun legislation (Score:5, Insightful)
Think of the recent bombings.
Anyone who drove through that area, from a suspected bad area, is now a suspect.
I know that many times, I've driven through bad parts of town, to commute to work. Some of the worst parts of town have the least traffic, so I've taken liberties with traffic control devices, like rolling stop signs. The police don't care, because if I'm not even stopping for stop signs, then I'm not buying drugs, or picking up some nasty hooker.
Now, being that I drove by a neighborhood with suspected bad people, I could now be bulked into that group. I'd still be perfectly innocent, because I don't know the people in those areas, but I'd look guilty as sin.
They'd be able to take liberties of when to pick me up too. It's easier to follow me, and pick me up in a grocery store parking lot, than to wait until I'm at home or work.
The world is rapidly becoming more big brother-ish. I don't like saying it, but it's something we'll have to get used to, until plenty of administrations change. As we innovate newer technologies, they'll continue to be used against us.
Re:Just like gun legislation (Score:5, Insightful)
Serious, yo.
Re:Just like gun legislation (Score:5, Funny)
*ducks*
and why else do it? (Score:5, Insightful)
Fake license plates... (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Fake license plates... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Fake license plates... (Score:5, Insightful)
This will, of course, make such thefts more common.
Of course, it would be possible to detect that there is a duplicate plate around, but not easy. For a start, having stolen a plate the thief will have several days' grace until the victim purchases another plate. For normal criminals that would be sufficient for their purposes.
For terrorists - especially suicide bombers - they're not worried about capture and are seldom known to the security services until after their attack, so this technology would be of little use for prevention. The only value it would have is to track their movements after the fact and build maps of their relationships, and I'm far from convinced that this would be terribly useful if the terrorists took a few elementary precautions.
Re:Fake license plates... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Fake license plates... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Fake license plates... (Score:3, Insightful)
However, the point I am making is that considering the prevaling situations at a few of these intersections, they didn't lengthen the
Re:Fake license plates... (Score:5, Insightful)
No, this is the very problem for eternity with violating the rights of people by a government.
Outlaw guns, only outlaws own guns.
Outlaw drugs, people will now kill, steal, and do other things to provide a desired good on the black market.
Outlaw abortion, women and their child die from kitchen table abortions.
Oh, well, it keeps us busy I guess.
Swapping... (Score:4, Interesting)
If you were to pull into a parking lot of a mall and swap plates with a car of the same make/model (shouldn't be hard to find), how many days/weeks would it take your average person to notice that their plates have changed? Okay, so then someone has your plates, but create a chain of swapping plates on 5 cars and they'll never quite find it in time... giving you a few days to do your damage. Find someone on vacation, go into an underground garage of an apartment and find a covered car or car where someone looks like they've been in Florida all winter.
-M
Re:Fake license plates... (Score:3, Interesting)
In the UK, most of the traffic police have been pulled off the roads and put onto other duties. Usually, this happens after a press release showing an increase in the public/a focus group's perception of what crime is currently the most scary. As a result, you can drive thousands of miles on the UK's motorways without encountering a police car because there may only be one traffic car within 50 mile
Re:Fake license plates... (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm not so sure about that. Assuming for a moment it managed to capture an image of every license plate of every car that went by every capture device, statewide. What kind of database and processing power are you going to need to find "hits", duplicates, fakes, etc.? In addition, you've got to keep info like date, time, and location, for each number, at each capture point.
I think it will be a while (years) before the authorities will get real time results. Unt
Re:Fake license plates... (Score:5, Funny)
If only this technology could be applied to Slashdot!
Re:Fake license plates... (Score:3, Informative)
*shakes head* What part of "Duh!" do the
Re:Fake license plates... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Fake license plates... (Score:5, Informative)
Hmmmm. PC Sharon Beshenivsky was shot around the 18th November, and there was the story about the fab new CCTV system that tracked the car to London [bbc.co.uk], but then the story all went cold.
Come the 25th of Nov there's a story about how they appear to have lost the car [bbc.co.uk] and are appealing to the public for info on it's whereabouts. But hang on, I hear you ask, there was all that news about how great the system was and they caught the purps? Hmmmm.
Now it's 13th Dec and the public are again asked to help find a suspect [bbc.co.uk]. But you had the car right? You told us your fancy new system followed it to London right?
How's this any different from just looking up the owner of the car and going and knocking on their door?
I submitted a story to Slashdot (that didn't get accepted) about this very thing. There was the story (referenced in the parent) about how great this new system was, but it had privacy issues, then it turns out all it has is privacy issues, because it didn't actually work in the first place.
Also funny how the Gov. were shouting from the rooftops about how this new APNR system was going to keep us safe in our beds, but nothing, zip, zilch, nada, to say Ooooops - actually we fumbled that one and we didn't catch them in the car in London after all!
Re:Fake license plates... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Fake license plates... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Fake license plates... (Score:4, Funny)
...issue you with a speeding ticket, I imagine.
Re:Fake license plates... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Fake license plates... (Score:3, Informative)
Not very nice, but cheaper.
If you have a suitable printer (not all are), you can print to non-absorbent paper in reverse and then apply the ink directly to the T-shirt. Ironing it from the back of the paper will fix it so that it doesn't come off when you take the paper away.
I haven't tried this, but it should work on any inkjet printer where the head doesn't make contact with the pape
Re:Fake license plates... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Just like gun legislation (Score:2, Informative)
Then again, if guns were banned for psycho's in the US then I guess profits would take a serious hit.
Re:Just like gun legislation (Score:5, Insightful)
The problem with US gun control is that we keep adding on new laws and fail to simply enforce the ones we have.
Re:Just like gun legislation (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Just like gun legislation (Score:4, Insightful)
Very true.
Gun laws are the most obvious because they have the most impact.
Way off base. The US is practically alone in the democratic world in having such lax gun control. Gun regulations (that apply equally to everyone) are about as typical of fascism as breathing oxygen is.
It's a tragedy that certain forces have managed to convince so many americans that rights really worth fighting for are things like the right to guns and the right to not have health insurance. People use their attention on these total red herrings while they're being robbed blind of the rights that really matter. Wake up! You're giving up your gold for worthless glass beads, for christ's sake.
Now, this british "war on privacy" on the other had (and the similar suff in the US, with the EU trailing close behind), that is scary stuff. That is what people should be rallying in their millions against. Same with undue industry power over legislation and enforcement. Those are true hallmarks of fascism, and that trend is moving with swiftness and momentum over the entire western world, and hardly anyone is speaking up.
So shut up about the worthless guns already, and get down to real business.
Re:Just like gun legislation (Score:4, Insightful)
So if everybody jumps off a cliff, we should as well? Seriously, there's a reason for the lax control: the US is also practically alone in the democratic world in having the right to self-protection being enshrined in its constitution.
Last time I checked, the "right" to free healthcare was missing from said constitution, along with the "right" to a job, the "right" to free housing, etc...
Re:Just like gun legislation (Score:4, Insightful)
The right to bear arms is to protect your sovereign, unalienable rights (not, as implied disingenuously in the Second Amendment, to field a militia). The right to keep arms is the right to rebel. When you lack that right, you've abdicated your sovereignty to those who retain their own right to bear arms (i.e., the government).
The US is probably distinct from most of Europe in that the federal government actually has no sovereignty. The only sovereigns are the states and the people, and the national government is their de jure servant. Sovereignty implies self determination. All fascist/dictatorial-type regimes exist to serve themselves. You must keep government enslaved to your sovereign will and not vice versa, erst you become the slave.
Re:Just like gun legislation (Score:3, Informative)
In the meantime average Joe-middle-class gets the shaft, picks up the tab, and sends his son/daughter off to die in Iraq
Nothing to hide! (Score:5, Funny)
wow (Score:5, Insightful)
It seems like we are getting closer and closer to that futuristic dystopia and it scares the hell out of me.
future interrogation (Score:3, Interesting)
authoritarian voice over loud speaker: 671476! on march 3, 2006 your vehicle was observed crossing the San Francisco Bay Bridge. There were 2 people in the vehicle. Who was the other person and where were you going?
subject: WTF? Whois 671476? My name is rodgster. I have no idea what the F@$& you're talking about. That was 5 years ago.
authoritarian voice over loud speaker: 671476, don't play games with us. Our records go back even fu
Re:future interrogation (Score:5, Informative)
Outrage! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Outrage! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Outrage! (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Why are we discussing this... (Score:5, Insightful)
Ah, the "Yeah, well Clinton did it, too" approach. The Carter wrinkle's a new touch, though. Very nice. For clearly what's going on right now is nothing that hasn't happened before, these measures are here to protect us, to strengthen us in a world that's out to get us, you're all just overreacting and if something is wrong, then it's Clinton's fault. Substitute Clinton with "the Jews," and you've got Hitler's platform down pat. If things get as bad as we fear, it'll be on the head of nationalistic morons like yourself.
America isn't a baseball team; you don't cheer for it no matter what. This is not a Republican-Democrat issue. It is not a conservative-liberal issue. This is about keeping your leaders in check by watching what they do instead of listening to what they say, because every word that comes out of their mouth is something you want to hear. They've turned the country into a partisan sinkhole, where people are so busy choosing sides and playing favorites that they've forgotten what really matters, namely what the guys are actually doing. It was a master play.
The natural inclination of any organization, including a governmental administration, once it has succeeded, is to dominate. In the US at least, this must been done at the expense of the system that brought them to power in the first place, for that system discourages domination. The inclination to dominate has nothing to do with political ideology or the personality of the leaders, though clearly the people currently in power are showing little or no restraint whatsoever. In business, antitrust legislation prevents large businesses from destroying the economy. In government, similar restrictions were put in place to prevent administrations from attacking its internal enemies in order to perpetuate itself and grow in power. If you let these go without a fight, you are a fool.
Re:Why are we discussing this... (Score:3, Informative)
The main problem is that the Ames searches happened before the law was changed to permit physical searches. The law was modified as a result of the Ames case.
Were the actions of the Clinton administration correct? No, not
Welcome to 1984! (Score:5, Insightful)
I would be interested to see an impact study of this in a couple of years.
I'll guess it'll show to be effective against common crimes, but little else.
I'm opposed to police state measures. I'm not afraid and I see little reason for anyone to be afraid. You have a much better chance of winning the lottery than being killed by terrorism.
The fascists are playing on people's unjustified fears.
Re:Welcome to 1984! (Score:2)
This cant stop "terrorists", they can go and buy a car for £1000 from any used car dealer whenever they like, or OMG they could get a bus or train.
Re:Welcome to 1984! (Score:3, Funny)
Clearly you haven't used the public transport system in the UK
Re:Welcome to 1984! (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Welcome to 1984! (Score:5, Insightful)
Or, shock horror, they could use their own damn car! Didn't one of the London bombers drive his own car to Luton?
What the authorities don't seem to have grasped is that with suicide bombers, they tend to have no "history", as their first offence tends to be their last!
May I suggest UK people reading this visit Write To Them [writetothem.com] and fax their MP suggesting that this is perhaps, you know, a trifle off, don't you know, what.
Re:Welcome to 1984! (Score:3, Interesting)
With the transit union strike going on in NYC right now, it seems more appropriate than ever to quote what a certain Canadian songwriter wrote almost 25 years ago:
Re:Welcome to V! (Score:3, Insightful)
A much more appropriate and unused comparison is "V for Vendetta":
http://www.shadowgalaxy.net/Vendetta/vmain.html [shadowgalaxy.net]
1984 + Dark Knight + Utra Violence = V for Vendetta
Re:Welcome to V! (Score:3, Insightful)
A sad day. (Score:5, Funny)
Good bye privacy.
Hmmm (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Hmmm (Score:5, Funny)
Another tremendous CCTV victory. (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Another tremendous CCTV victory. (Score:5, Insightful)
Labour changed how crime was 'counted', its how they hit most of their 'targets'.
Things like this dont get mentioned much beca...look celebritys!!
Re:Another tremendous CCTV victory. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Another tremendous CCTV victory. (Score:5, Informative)
I didn't refer to reported crime for exactly the reason you state. I'm way ahead of you.
Read your own article? (Score:4, Insightful)
What I found most inane was the notion that a vehicle traveling near another vehicle of interest can be incriminated by association. How did they ever come up with THAT idea?
Re:Read your own article? (Score:3, Insightful)
RFID numberplates (Score:3, Interesting)
from http://www.aatrust.com/index.asp?PageID=31&Year=20 05&NewsID=64 [aatrust.com]
Last year, in the 26 UK police forces that now record the crime, there were 14,176 confirmed thefts of number-plates. Up to one in 250 vehicles may be entering the London congestion charge zone on false number-plates and more than £14 million is lost annually by petrol stations from drive-offs, mostly involving cloned cars.
To counter this it looks like that the British government is looking at RFID tags in numberplates
from
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
worse than nothing (Score:5, Insightful)
Logging might actually feed the police with false information: I mean it's not a hard to make replicas of plates belonging to someone else... someone with the same kind of car.
That way the terrorists or whatever can actually use the system against the police
So now I'm asking, why put this system up in the first place... only to scare people into quiet submission? Seems that way to me...
sig?
Re:worse than nothing (Score:2)
Re:worse than nothing (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:worse than nothing (Score:5, Interesting)
And of course, don't forget that the simplest form of misdirection doesn't require counterfeiting plates at all. Just steal one from a similar make & model & swap it out someplace outside of the view of the cameras. If you attach the plate with Velcro, you can swap out the plate in probably 15 seconds.
The more I think about it, the more I realize that this is -exactly- like CD copy protection. It does little, if anything, to stop the purported targets (organized pirates, terrorists), but is very effective at it's real goal (forcing people to buy multiple copies of their favorite CD's, control the masses & collect revenue from speeders). Hopefully the scheme will backfire as badly for the British government as it has for Sony.
Speedtraps (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Speedtraps (Score:3, Informative)
I know I'm being pedantic, but it's my nature - I'm an ex-physicist programmer, I've been trained and am paid (in part) to be pedantic...
Re:Speedtraps (Score:3, Informative)
The OP said:
The time it takes to move between cameras can tell exactly how fast you're going. (Emphasis mine)
You said:
If your average speed is above the speed limit (Emphasis mine)
In what way is your average speed your exact speed?
So the idea of a "point" measure of speed is silly _and_ technically violates quantum theory.
I wasn't entirely clear perhaps, but I didn't say anything about a point measure of speed - when I said "point", I didn't mean in the mathematical sense, I meant it in the general
Setting the stage for horrible governments (Score:5, Insightful)
I, for one, am worried about the world my 3-year-old will come to know.
Just never do anything wrong (Score:5, Funny)
Big whoop (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Big whoop (Score:2)
Re:Big whoop (Score:5, Informative)
1) Give you a traffic ticket.
2) Track your every move.
3) Run your plates every 5 seconds.
4) Use the above things to get a mistaken police report and hunt you down at any moment while you are on the street. (These things happen in nornal police work; I expect Britain's cameras to amplify this problem.)
5) Force you to participate in the system whether you like it or not.
6) Force you to pay for the system if you disagree with it. (IE-Taxes paying for cameras.)
People need to understand the difference between a business and a government. Businesses have no power over you; government does. Government can and will do all the above things with their own systems. OnStar provides a service, and if you don't like it then you don't pay for it and you don't participate in it. Try that with the government and they take away your driving rights and through you in jail. And of course if the government does start reglating OnStar, forcing them to provide the cops with an OnStar backdoor, you can always cancel the service.
So in summary:
OnStar / private business == Voluntary services
Government == Involuntary coersive force
The Transparent Society (Score:3, Insightful)
You hit the nail here.... (Score:3, Insightful)
privacy schmivacy (Score:5, Funny)
So much information... (Score:2, Insightful)
transfered data rate for 1 vehicle = 300kbps
so for 10 million
data rate = (10000000 * 300) / (1000 * 1000 ) gbps = 3000gbps = 3.65 GB/sec
What kind of network infrastructure do you think is needed ?
I think they are out of their minds to even think of doing this. They can very well have police man on every block running after the vehicals instead.
Re:So much information... (Score:2)
Re:So much information... (Score:2)
I've always wondered... (Score:2, Troll)
coincidence - Police woman get shot.... (Score:5, Insightful)
Coincidence????
Re:coincidence - Police woman get shot.... (Score:5, Insightful)
Instead of going for the outright conspiracy theory, consider that authorities were just waiting for the right opportunity to spring their plan into action. If there's a high profile shooting, roll out the surveillance...
I'm sure some of this went on with 9/11 - if there's a terrorist attack, roll out freedom limiting changes to the law, attack Iraq, etc...
You can always request copes of CCTV (Score:2, Interesting)
Hire cars (Score:5, Informative)
When a police woman was recently shot dead in Bradford [bbc.co.uk], the gang who were responsible had bullied a man into hiring a car in his name [bbc.co.uk]. The man went to the police before the murder had been committed, but the police just filed his complaint and didn't link it to the murder until too late.
The car was tracked on the camera network (it already partly works), but as it had been hired in his name the police arrested him instead of hunting down the gang.
As this network becomes more widely known, this is going to become more common - gangs will bully and blackmail people with no criminal record into hiring cars, and may even, to prevent them going to the policeabduct or kill them.
And, of course, criminals will habitually carry several sets of false number plates, so that they can change the 'identity' of their vehicle several times in the course of a journey.
Cloning is sophisticated. (Score:3, Informative)
Criminals will travel around looking for a car which perfectly matches the colour and model of the car they want to disguise. They will then note the registration and clone the plate.
Hence when the registration of the criminal's car is put through the PNC or ANPR systems, it shows an 'innocent' car of the correct make, model and colour matched to an apparently correct plate.
Spray-On Mud (Score:5, Informative)
The UK has a minimal fine for no licence plate! (Score:5, Interesting)
More Information (Score:5, Informative)
Moving forward they need to really start working hard at defeating the uninsured, untaxed cars from the roads. Its not that hard to do have several big crack downs. At the end of the day it will reduce the overall cost of motoring in the UK as there will be less risk of being hit by an uninsured/untaxed motorist which costs everyone more.
Some of the implications of the system they are implementing is that they will be able to calculate distances between cameras and KNOW if people are speeding, They will also be able to proove that particular cars/trucks/bikes are in certain areas at certain times. That in itself is a great benefit for tracing criminal activity.
In many places in the UK they already have the CCTV cameras in action and they do record the cars going along the roads. However they are just adding the ability to track the number plates.
How about... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:More Information (Score:3, Insightful)
Average city speeds are so far below the speed limit that I doubt this will catch all but the most extreme offenders.
Fed up... (Score:5, Insightful)
What pisses me off the most is the usual 'this is being done to try and catch terrorists' - ffs, we've had ONE single Al Qaeda related attack happen in this country so far and THAT was from people that the government never suspected as they were British Muslims. How exactly would license plate tracking catch legal residents of the united kingdom if they so desire to blow themselves up in a public area?!
Why can't they spend the countless billions this service is going to cost to implment where we bloody well WANT and NEED it - in the schools, in the hospitals, on pensions for our old people.
Fucking fuckers. It really makes me mad. The priorities are fucked - this terrorism 'excuse' for taking away our rights is just really starting to piss me off.
Funny Number Plates (Score:3, Interesting)
Plus for the terrorist angle; what are they going to do about foreign number plates, and cars from other EU countries.
It sounds to me like Blair and his gang are lying again, what a surprise.
Well you could ride a bike instead. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Well you could ride a bike instead. (Score:3, Insightful)
As a Glasgow cyclist, I regularly encounter car drivers opening doors without looking, pulling out in front of me without looking, overtaking and then cutting me up when they want to turn into a junction ...
When the average driver (perhaps you are an exception), encased in their armoured pollution-generating cage, oblivious to the niceties of human interaction and frustrated by being perpetually stuck in traffic, has so little regard for
England seems not to have changed, but (Score:5, Insightful)
Family courts meet in secret, names of those appearing before them cannot be published, and there is no appeal from their judgments. It protects children.
Foreigners can be subject to preventive detention without trial. To defeat terrorism.
Anti social behaviour orders can make any act by anyone, and them alone, a criminal offense. We have to do something to restrain people making everyone's life around them a misery.
We will be tracking dysfunctional families, and interventing to help children at risk of future criminal careers. Why wait until it is too late and they have already started?
We have covered the streets with cameras, to defeat street crime. Now we will track all vehicle movements, to deny cars to criminals. Next we will film all faces on all streets, so that we can track down the wanted and the terrorists.
We will have compulsory mental health medication. It will cut down on crimes committed by those in care in the community who stop taking their medication.
We will record all details about an individual on an ID card and will make this card the access point for benefits and medical care. We have to do something about benefit fraud and illegal immigration. And having all medical records available instantly will dramatically improve emergency room care.
I am not being ironic. We really do not have to worry much about this government. The intentions really are good. But the effect is increasingly to make practical liberties dependent on the goodwill of either the government or officials. I don't know what the answer is, but the lesson of history is that you cannot always rely on this, given swings of popular feeling in times of crisis, which may coincide with elections. But this is an argument you never hear in the UK.
Can anyone deny we are heading to 1984? (Score:5, Informative)
I wrote [slashdot.org] about this yesterday.
Oh, did you also know this Government passed an identical law to Hitler's Enablement Act [blogspot.com]? This law enabled Hitler to assume absolute power after he burned down the Reichstag and blamed it on communists.
My Grandfather fought Hitler across two continents to protect Britain from this kind of totalitarianism. The least we can do is help the resistance campaigns at Privacy International [privacyinternational.org] and No2ID [no2id.net].
Re:Can anyone deny we are heading to 1984? (Score:3, Interesting)
I am increasingly convinced that the sacrifices of his generation count for less and less in today's world. It has always amazed me how government behaviour such as this or the recent revelations about the NSA in the US not only fail to alarm citizens but are widely defended.
I was recently reminded during a conversation with a someone who grew up in Soviet Russia of the saying that the USSR didn't fa
Re:I'm cool with cameras (Score:5, Insightful)
Until you get pulled in by the police on a murder charge because you happened to be near a murder scene...
I keep seeing broad laws being passed with people saying "well it's ok for them to be really broad because noone will ever abuse them" and then they get abused _every time_.
For example: does shouting "nonsense" in a political debate make you a terrorist? The government seem to think so [bbc.co.uk]. Just days before that happened, the Prime Minister argued that it was ok for the anti-terrorism laws (the same ones used to detain someone for shouting "nonsense") to be so broad because the police would never use them inappropriately.
There are similar examples of abuse of the DMCA, EUCD, PATRIOT Act, etc. I've got nothing to hide either... oh wait, yes I do - I play legally purchased DVDs under Linux and that's illegal.
Well, then here's something to complain about (Score:5, Informative)
Another victim of the new tyranny, John Catt [guardian.co.uk], was subjected to a stop-and-search by police, who recorded the purpose of the search as 'terrorism' and grounds for their intervention as 'carrying plackard and T-shirt with anti-Blair info'. There you go, then: an anti-Blair slogan on your T-shirt is grounds for suspicion of terrorism, even if you're 80 years old.
GPS toll is about tracking every vehicle in Europe (Score:3, Informative)
The documents for the GPS system [dft.gov.uk] all claim that it's about reducing road congestion, but I do not find this justification to be credible.
Firstly, there are ways for charging tolls on congested roads that are far cheaper and easier to implement than putting a "Little Brother" in everyones car. A mandatory RFID unit in the number plate and a pickup loop in the road come to mine. And secondly, it's not credible that road pricing is any more effective at reducing congestion on