Remarks: FANOS PANAYIDES FB Live Australia When Did The Government Forget They Are There To Serve Its People!!! Emerging Technologies The real Big Brother Is Here; Why did this happen and what are you going to do about it. FULL STORY HERE: https://www.4cmitv.com/2020/04/21/2020-apr-18-australia-when-did-the-government-forget-they-are-there-to-serve-its-people/
When you are not happy with the captain, you take the ship
LINK FOR EMERGING TECHNOLOGIES
The real Big Brother: Inquiry into the Privacy Act 1988 (23 June 2005 © Commonwealth of Australia 2005 ISBN 0 642 71498 3)
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Chapter 3 – Emerging technologies aph.gov.au
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3.1 This chapter will consider issues raised in submissions and evidence in relation to the capacity of the Privacy Act to respond to new and emerging technologies, including:
a) the capacity of the Privacy Act to respond to new technologies in general;
b) Smartcards and National Identification (ID) schemes;
c) Biometric Data, including proposed Biometric Passports;
d) Genetic Testing and discrimination;
e) Microchip Implants and (Rfid)Radio Frequency Identification technology; and
f) other technologies and related issues”
PSD (Public Source Data)
Data Mining.
Pattern-Recognition (applied to car number-plates)
IPND [Integrated Public Number Database]
Auto-Identification (of telephone callers)
Location and Tracking (of mobile phones)
Drug Testing and Fingerprinting (of school children)
Electronic Health Records.
Online Activities Surveillance(of activities by internet users)
NATIONAL IDENTIFICATION (ID)
2005 APR
National ID Scheme (2005-2006)[1]see URL https://privacy.org.au/campaigns/id-cards/natidscheme/
The Government floated the creation of a national identification scheme during 2005-06. The APF campaign ran this vital and highly successful campaign from April 2005 until 26 April 2006. By then, multiple Liberal Ministers and backbenchers had become very nervous about it, and the rhetoric about it defeating terrorism was noticeable by its absence. It was subsumed into what the Government dubbed a ‘Human Services Access card’/ ‘SmartCard’/ ‘ConsumerCard’ project. Read More
2006 MAY 28
Access Card / National ID Card[2]see URL https://www.efa.org.au/Issues/Privacy/accesscard.html
Article: by Paul Chadwick[3]Victorian Privacy Commissioner, The Value of Privacy, 23 May 2006
On 26 April 2006, the Prime Minister announced that the “Australian Government has decided to proceed in principle with a new access card for health and welfare services“. However, the so-called Access Card system is, in effect, a national identity card system and should be opposed as such. The Access Card project was subsequently abandoned by the newly elected Labor Government in December 2007. Read More
“Any government that wants to issue a unique identification number to most of the population and then to compile and link information about them using increasingly powerful technology bears a heavy onus to justify its case. …
‘Nothing to hide, nothing to fear’, directed at each member of the public.
Should be turned around and directed at government as:
‘No legitimate reason to know, no legitimate reason to ask’.”
2010 SEP 29
ID cards for Australians?
Article: by Lucy Saunders[4]see URL https://www.abc.net.au/news/2008-04-04/31898
How long until we see the introduction of an ID card back on the political agenda? Australian governments, regardless of political affiliation, have been salivating for decades over the prospect of a national identity card. The benefits of a national identity card are extremely dubious and the sinister underbelly of the program has always been clear enough to most Australians. Read More
2016 OCT 31
National identity card for Australians? Digital government lessons from Estonia
Article: by Marie Sansom[5]see URL https://www.governmentnews.com.au/25432/
As Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull’s digital transformation agenda gathers pace and renewed urgency in the wake of the botched 2016 Census and the new Digital Transformation Agency gets going, the PM would be wise to seek a meeting with government tech heads in Estonia, where 99 per cent of the country’s services are accessible online. Read More
2018 OCT 18
Preventing another Australia Card fail
Article: by Fergus Hanson[6]see URL https://www.aspi.org.au/report/preventing-another-australia-card-fail
(i) The government is now building two digital identity schemes that will compete against each other. The first, which is already operational, was built by Australia Post at a cost of $30–50 million and is known as Digital iD. (ii) The second scheme, GovPass, secured $92.4 million in the 2018–19 Budget to create the infrastructure that will underpin it and fund its initial rollout. Neither GovPass nor Digital iD is governed by dedicated legislation, beyond existing laws such as the inadequate Privacy Act 1988, leaving Australians vulnerable to having their data misused. Read More
AUSTRALIA’S NATIONAL DIGITAL ID IS HERE
2020 JAN 28
Australia’s National Digital ID is here, but the government’s not talking about it.
Article: by Dr Patrick Scolyer-Gray, Deakin University[7]see URL https://theconversation.com/australias-national-digital-id-is-here-but-the-governments-not-talking-about-it-130200
The Australian government’s Digital Transformation Agency (DTA) has spent more than A$200 million over the past five years developing a National Digital ID platform. If successful, the project could streamline commerce, resolve bureaucratic quagmires, and improve national security. Read More
WHAT IS BIOMETRIC DATA:
TYPES OF BIOMETRICS[8]see url https://www.csoonline.com/article/3339565/what-is-biometrics-and-why-collecting-biometric-data-is-risky.html
A biometric identifier is one that is related to intrinsic human characteristics. They fall roughly into two categories: physical identifiers and behavioral identifiers. Physical identifiers are, for the most part, immutable and device independent:
- Fingerprints: Fingerprint scanners have become ubiquitous in recent years due to their widespread deployment on smartphones. Any device that can be touched, such as a phone screen, computer mouse or touchpad, or a door panel, has the potential to become an easy and convenient fingerprint scanner. According to Spiceworks, fingerprint scanning is the most common type of biometric authentication in the enterprise, used by 57 percent of companies.
- Photo and video: If a device is equipped with a camera, it can easily be used for authentication. Facial recognition and retinal scans are two common approaches.
- Physiological recognition: Facial recognition is the second most common type of authentication, according to Spiceworks, in place at 14 percent of companies. Other image-based authentication methods include hand geometry recognition, used by 5 percent of companies, iris or retinal scanning, palm vein recognition, and ear recognition.
- Voice: Voice-based digital assistants and telephone-based service portals are already using voice recognition to identify users and authenticate customers. According to Spiceworks, 2 percent of companies use voice recognition for authentication within the enterprise.
- Signature: Digital signature scanners are already in widespread use at retail checkouts and in banks and are a good choice for situations where users and customers are already expecting to have to sign their names.
- DNA: Today, DNA scans are used primarily in law enforcement to identify suspects — and in the movies. In practice, DNA sequencing has been too slow for widespread use. This is starting to change. Last year, a $1,000 scanner hit the market that can do a DNA match in minutes — and prices are likely to keep dropping.
GENETIC TESTING
2014 NOV 20
The FBI Is Very Excited About This Machine That Can Scan Your DNA in 90 Minutes
Article: by Shane Bauer[9]see URL https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2014/11/rapid-dna-profiles-database-fbi-police/
Rapid-DNA technology makes it easier than ever to grab and store your genetic profile. G-men, cops, and Homeland Security can’t wait to see it everywhere. Schueren grabbed a cotton swab and dropped it into a plastic cartridge. That’s what, say, a police officer would use to wipe the inside of your cheek to collect a DNA sample after an arrest, he explained. Other bits of material with traces of DNA on them, like cigarette butts or fabric, could work too. He inserted the cartridge into the machine and pressed a green button on its touch screen: “It’s that simple.” Ninety minutes later, the RapidHIT 200 would generate a DNA profile, check it against a database, and report on whether it found a match. READ MORE
2017 DEC 14
A Chinese province is collecting DNA and iris scans from all its residents
Article: by Tara Francis Chan[10]see URL https://www.businessinsider.com.au/china-collects-dna-fingerprints-biometrics-from-residents-human-rights-watch-2017-12
Authorities in one Chinese province are collecting DNA, iris scans, fingerprints and blood types from residents. The biometric data collection appears to be mandatory. This province also monitors residents with facial-recognition cameras, surveillance apps, and voice-recognition technology. All residents between 12 and 65 are having DNA samples, fingerprints, iris scans, and blood types collected. READ MORE
2018 JAN 31
Pocket-sized DNA reader used to scan entire human genome sequence
Article: by John Timmer[11]see URL https://arstechnica.com/science/2018/01/pocket-sized-dna-reader-used-to-scan-entire-human-genome-sequence/
A few years back, a company called Oxford Nanopore announced it was developing a radically different way of sequencing DNA. Its approach involved taking single strands of the double helix and stuffing them through a protein pore. With a small bit of current flowing across the pore, the four bases of DNA each created a distinct (if tiny) change in the voltage as it passed through. These could be used to read the DNA one base at a time as it wiggled through the pore. READ MORE
2019 DEC 11
New DNA-Scanning Software Can ID You in Minutes
Article: by Philip Perry[12]see URL https://bigthink.com/philip-perry/new-dna-scanning-software-can-id-you-in-minutes
They’ve created software which can identify someone’s DNA in minutes. This has implications for crime scene investigation, emergency management, and scientific research. Their findings were published in the journal eLife. In their report researchers write that they have developed, “a rapid, inexpensive, and portable strategy to robustly re-identify human DNA.’” It’s also highly accurate. READ MORE
MICROCHIP IMPLANTS
2018 MAY13
Thousands of people in Sweden get microchip implants for a new way of life
Article: by Agence France-Presse[13]SEE URL https://www.scmp.com/news/world/europe/article/2145896/thousands-people-sweden-get-microchip-implants-new-way-life
Small implants were first used in 2015 in Sweden and since then people have become active in microchipping. Swedes have gone on to be very active in microchipping, with scant debate about issues surrounding its use, in a country keen on new technology and where the sharing of personal information is held up as a sign of a transparent society. Conductors scan passengers’ hands after they book tickets online and register them on their chip. Sweden has a track record on the sharing of personal information, which may have helped ease the microchip’s acceptance among the Nordic country’s 10 million-strong population. READ MORE
2018 SEP 21
Why You’re Probably Getting a Microchip Implant Someday
Article: by Haley Weiss[14]SEE URL https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2018/09/how-i-learned-to-stop-worrying-and-love-the-microchip/570946/
Microchip implants are going from tech-geek novelty to genuine health tool—and you might be running out of good reasons to say no. When Patrick McMullan first heard in early 2017 that thousands of Swedish citizens were unlocking their car doors and turning on coffee machines with a wave of their palm, he wasn’t too impressed. Sure, the technology—a millimeters-long microchip equipped with near-field communication capabilities and lodged just under the skin—had a niche, cutting-edge appeal, but in practical terms, a fob or passcode would work just as well. READ MORE
2018 NOV 08
The rise of microchipping: are we ready for technology to get under the skin?
Article: by Oscar Schwartz[15]SEE URL https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2019/nov/08/the-rise-of-microchipping-are-we-ready-for-technology-to-get-under-the-skin
As implants grow more common, experts fear surveillance and exploitation of workers. Advocates say the concerns are irrational. Workers at Three Square Market, a Wisconsin-based company specializing in vending machines, lined up in the office cafeteria to be implanted with microchips. One after the other, they held out a hand to a local tattoo artist who pushed a rice-grain sized implant into the flesh between the thumb and forefinger. The 41 employees who opted into the procedure received complimentary t-shirts that read “I Got Chipped”. This wholesale implant event, organized by company management, dovetailed with Three Square Market’s longer-term vision of a cashless payment system for their vending machines – workplace snacks purchased with a flick of the wrist. And the televised “chipping party” proved to be a savvy marketing tactic, the story picked up by media outlets from Moscow to Sydney. READ MORE
2019 MAR 31
Article: by Andrew Brown[16]SEE URL https://www.canberratimes.com.au/story/6005383/more-than-a-hundred-canberrans-have-implantable-microchips/
A convicted hacker is selling implantable microchips able to store data including credit card details, and more than 100 Canberrans have signed on to the new technology. The microchips are the size of a grain of rice and are implanted into the webbing between the thumb and forefinger in a procedure that takes less than a minute. The procedure can be carried out by specialists in Sydney, and a Canberra-based clinic is slated for the coming months. READ MORE
2019 AUG 27
The Future of Microchip Implants in Humans
Article: by Staff Writer[17]SEE URL https://www.thomasnet.com/insights/the-future-of-microchip-implants-in-humans/
As technology evolves, devices continue to grow smaller and more compact. Electronic devices once limited to the household, such as phones and computers, can now be carried around in our pockets. Now – for some people – the concept of portable and convenient technology has been taken a step further with microchip implants. In Sweden, a country known for its technological innovations, thousands have already implanted microchips into their bodies. The Swedish firm, Biohax International, was founded six years ago by former professional body piercer, Jowan Osterlund, and currently dominates this market. READ MORE
RFID[18]Radio Frequency Identification
2007 NOV 05
How RFID Works
Article: by Kevin Bonsor & Wesley Fenlon [19]SEE URL https://electronics.howstuffworks.com/gadgets/high-tech-gadgets/rfid.htm
Long checkout lines at the grocery store are one of the biggest complaints about the shopping experience. Soon, these lines could disappear when the ubiquitous Universal Product Code (UPC) bar code is replaced by smart labels, also called radio frequency identification (RFID) tags. RFID tags are intelligent bar codes that can talk to a networked system to track every product that you put in your shopping cart. Imagine going to the grocery store, filling up your cart and walking right out the door. No longer will you have to wait as someone rings up each item in your cart one at a time. Instead, these RFID tags will communicate with an electronic reader that will detect every item in the cart and ring each up almost instantly. READ MORE
BACKGROUND INFO
RFID Systems
Article: by OMRON Corporation [20]SEE URL http://www.omron.com.au/service_support/technical_guide/rfid_system/index.asp
RFID Systems enable non-contact reading and writing of data. Also called electronic tags, IC tags, ubiquitous ID systems, and RF tags, RFID Systems enable non-contact reading and writing of data.
An RFID system makes it possible to read and write data without contact, using electromagnetic or electric waves. Information can be read irrespective of the quality or surface condition of the item to be read. The large communication area helps to achieve high reliability in communication. The implementation of a RFID makes it possible to “unite items with their information”, which allows for the creation of a highly flexible and highly reliable system. READ MORE
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Tags: 4cminewswire, Fanos Panayides, Big Brother, Emerging Technologies, Australian Government, 4cminews, 4CMiTV, #4CM2020APR18,
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SOURCE ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Original-Source: Fanos Panayides FB Live
Original-Source-Published: 2020 APR 18
Original-Source-URL: https://www.facebook.com/fanos.panayides.5/videos/10157148246303148
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References
↑1 | see URL https://privacy.org.au/campaigns/id-cards/natidscheme/ |
---|---|
↑2 | see URL https://www.efa.org.au/Issues/Privacy/accesscard.html |
↑3 | Victorian Privacy Commissioner, The Value of Privacy, 23 May 2006 |
↑4 | see URL https://www.abc.net.au/news/2008-04-04/31898 |
↑5 | see URL https://www.governmentnews.com.au/25432/ |
↑6 | see URL https://www.aspi.org.au/report/preventing-another-australia-card-fail |
↑7 | see URL https://theconversation.com/australias-national-digital-id-is-here-but-the-governments-not-talking-about-it-130200 |
↑8 | see url https://www.csoonline.com/article/3339565/what-is-biometrics-and-why-collecting-biometric-data-is-risky.html |
↑9 | see URL https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2014/11/rapid-dna-profiles-database-fbi-police/ |
↑10 | see URL https://www.businessinsider.com.au/china-collects-dna-fingerprints-biometrics-from-residents-human-rights-watch-2017-12 |
↑11 | see URL https://arstechnica.com/science/2018/01/pocket-sized-dna-reader-used-to-scan-entire-human-genome-sequence/ |
↑12 | see URL https://bigthink.com/philip-perry/new-dna-scanning-software-can-id-you-in-minutes |
↑13 | SEE URL https://www.scmp.com/news/world/europe/article/2145896/thousands-people-sweden-get-microchip-implants-new-way-life |
↑14 | SEE URL https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2018/09/how-i-learned-to-stop-worrying-and-love-the-microchip/570946/ |
↑15 | SEE URL https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2019/nov/08/the-rise-of-microchipping-are-we-ready-for-technology-to-get-under-the-skin |
↑16 | SEE URL https://www.canberratimes.com.au/story/6005383/more-than-a-hundred-canberrans-have-implantable-microchips/ |
↑17 | SEE URL https://www.thomasnet.com/insights/the-future-of-microchip-implants-in-humans/ |
↑18 | Radio Frequency Identification |
↑19 | SEE URL https://electronics.howstuffworks.com/gadgets/high-tech-gadgets/rfid.htm |
↑20 | SEE URL http://www.omron.com.au/service_support/technical_guide/rfid_system/index.asp |