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Passports will be needed to buy pay-as-you-go mobile phones

Repost | 21.10.2008 15:01 | Other Press | Repression | Terror War

'Everyone who buys a mobile telephone will be forced to register their identity on a national database under government plans to extend massively the powers of state surveillance.'


 http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/politics/article4969312.ece

Passports will be needed to buy mobile phones

David Leppard
'The Times':
October 19, 2008

Everyone who buys a mobile telephone will be forced to register their identity on a national database under government plans to extend massively the powers of state surveillance.

Phone buyers would have to present a passport or other official form of identification at the point of purchase. Privacy campaigners fear it marks the latest government move to create a surveillance society.

[article continues]


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- Homepage: http://www.statewatch.org

Comments

Hide the following 6 comments

As well as curtailing civil liberties,this would loose phone companies including

21.10.2008 15:34

phone coops a hell of alot of money in call charges. Are they going to block the millions of sims already out there?, hacking of mobile phone networks would become extremely popular.
That said this is still definetely worth resisting.

James


State Control!

21.10.2008 15:43

The excuse for this is to prevent drug dealers and such like from using "pay as you throw" phones for one off deals, thus avoiding detection. However, we all know it's just an excuse so the gov't can keep tabs on us.

This will also increase crime, as criminals won't register with a passport, they will merely steal a phone from a tax paying citizen (or peaceful activist), pushing insurance through the roof to feed the capitalist system.

Result:

Gov't, corporations and criminals (no difference between these 3) get richer
Citizens get poorer and more oppressed

Fuck the system!!!!!

Fightback


have they thought of this??

21.10.2008 16:56

there is nothing to stop a professional terrorist getting false documents. or getting an offshore sim card.
this won't work.
its crap. like most kneejerk legislation.
but it might just placate the tabloid readers. a case of government being seen to be doing something about the "problem".
pathetic.

only me


stupid

21.10.2008 17:06

When I was at school we all used to swap phones all the time meaning that your phone could be 2nd, 3rd, 4th hand etc. This surely just couldn't work?

Me


what a pointless piece of legislation

21.10.2008 19:36

The moden mobile phone is just a way to read a sim card for billing purposes.

The telephone industry has been lobbying hard to get all phones on contract. Nothing to do with the creeping database state. To do with the fact that pay as you go phones have much tighter margins. If it takes a bit of moral panic among the legislators to get that then the Talk Talk, Carphone, BT, Virgin, Yourcomms and the rest are only too happy to throw in "guidance" that helps the advance of the database state.

The problem with the proposal is that the WTO might not approve. Because the sign up will invariably bind the handset user to a single supplier. Fundamentally it is an anticompetitive practice. Yes, the Government are seeking additional ways to ensure their identity database gives them information. But, increasingly, it is being driven by commercial requirements and not security.

The original claim was the National Database would be for security and all sorts of state services. With this proposal it becomes quite clear that the Niational Identity Register is a commercial project. Just like Equifax and Experian - who sell your details to determine your "credit rating" this step is part of restricting life through excessive choice. You can choose a contract or a pay as you go but you will be registered in different ways. perfect for marketing.

technology worker


'call to arms'

22.10.2008 09:33

Besides 'Freedom Not fear' and other anti-surveillance movements, is there any planned mobilisation to oppose the Big Brother database and introduction of the Communications Data Bill? The time is now to start planning before it's too late.

phantom mobile