FC: James Glassman wants national IDs: "We have to give up" privacy

From: Declan McCullagh (declanat_private)
Date: Thu Oct 25 2001 - 19:17:23 PDT

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    [You can see James Glassman's bio here: 
    http://www.techcentralstation.com/Bios.asp?FormMode=Bio&ID=6 His column is 
    not merely poorly-reasoned, but poorly researched as well: He makes some 
    factual errors, such as saying the lack of a national ID card makes the 
    U.S. "almost unique."  Try Canada, New Zealand, Australia, Ireland, the 
    Nordic countries, Sweden, Mexico, and so on. --Declan]
    
    ***********
    
    From: "Jack Dean" <JackDeanat_private>
    To: "Declan McCullagh" <declanat_private>
    Subject: A National I.D. Card? Yes; Run By Larry Ellison? No
    Date: Thu, 25 Oct 2001 18:16:40 -0700
    
    http://www.techcentralstation.com/NewsDesk.asp?FormMode=MainTerminalArticles&ID=95
    
    Thursday, October 25, 2001
    
    A National I.D. Card? Yes;
    Run By Larry Ellison? No
    
    By: James K. Glassman, Host, Tech Central Station
    
    Would you trust this man with a National I.D. System?
    When I first heard that Larry Ellison, the CEO of Oracle Corp., had proposed
    a national I.D. card to help fight terrorism, I thought it was a joke. Not
    the I.D. card idea. But that Ellison was proposing it.
    
    [...]
    
    Dershowitz contends that the cards might actually increase freedoms. "Four
    Arab-looking guys reading the Koran are much less suspicious if they have
    the cards and can just slash them through card readers," he said.
    
    It is the lack of an I.D. card, however, that makes the United States almost
    unique among nations. "You do have a right to be left alone in the most
    literal sense," says Nadine Strossen, president of the American Civil
    Liberties Union.
    
    "If you have an I.D. card," says former Rep. Tom Campbell (R-Calif.), now a
    law professor at Stanford, "it is solely for the purpose of allowing the
    government to compel you to produce it. This would essentially give the
    government the power to demand that we show our papers. It is a very
    dangerous thing."
    
    Dangerous? Yes, there are dangers to a mandatory national I.D. card, but
    there may be greater dangers without one. The fact is, to live in a society
    as vulnerable as ours, we may have to give up something - but I disagree
    that what's lost is freedom. Instead, it's privacy, and maybe not even that.
    
    In an interview with SiliconValley.com, Ellison expressed this reality in
    his typical over-the-top fashion, showing once again why he is the wrong guy
    to be making the pitch. "This privacy you're concerned about is largely an
    illusion. All you have to give up is your illusions, not your privacy."
    
    The truth is that an I.D. card may force you to give up some of your
    privacy - though probably no more than driver's licenses, Social Security
    cards, credit cards and even electronic toll-readers like EasyPass force you
    to give up now. But even if privacy is lost, the question is whether such an
    exchange is worth the benefits? More and more, I believe that it is.
    
    ###
    
    
    
    
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