~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ PRIVACY 101, LECTURE III IDENTITY INFORMATION RISKS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sender: owner-privacy101@c2.org Precedence: bulk "What's your name?" The most common question used to invade your privacy. "Who are you?" Another version. "Papieren, bitte!" -- from the World War II movies. It seems everyone wants to know who you are. Why? They want to judge you. To determine your guilt or innocence your worthiness or unworthiness for some purpose based on your past activities as documented in their memories or databases. Those of us in the US are in the middle of a long-running debate about whether or not the government should impose a national ID card of some kind. Australia recently defeated one (for now) as did Holland. The French police have started a system of street ID checks in an attempt to find illegal aliens. They are converting what is nominally a voluntary ID system into a mandatory one. Identity-based information systems whether as simple/complex as the county sheriff's brain of the last century or as complex/simple as the data-mined, supercomputed, profiled data sets of this; hold enormous risks for individuals. Let's see what these are. 1) That others will find out who you are. The primary risk. As we move through life, we accumulate a lot of "baggage." From our pre-natal medical records through the probate of our estates there is a lot of juicy information attached to us. In addition to physical records, there are the personal views of us formed by everyone we meet. We may not mind some of this information being shared with some other people, but most of us would like to exercise *some* control over it. The one thing that links all of this personal information together is, of course, the person. You are the "key field" that connects all of this disparate data. I am not speaking only about formal documentation of our activities but also your reputation in the community and general information about yourself. Much of this information when stored in a networked database is available to thousands of people spread out over uncounted future years. 2) That others will find out what you are. A big part of your identity extends beyond your "name, rank, and serial number" to include your racial or ethnic heritage, religion, political beliefs, hobbies, and other interests. All of these aspects of your identity can cause you problems in certain times and in certain places. It doesn't matter what characteristics you possess. You name one, and I'll give you and example of when and where persons with that characteristic were punished. It doesn't matter who you are. You've got something to hide. 3) That others will find out what you used to be. You have to be aware that when you protect your identity you are not just guarding against the release of *current* information about you. You don't just have to worry about your place in the *current* social environment. You are also making a bet that that environment will not *change* for the rest of your life. This seems a pretty sure loser of a bet. "Are you now or have you ever been a smoker/gun owner/lothario/ carnivore?" As I like to point out, when I was born smoking was a virtue and sodomy a vice. (Note for those incapable of reading English -- the above sentence implies *absolutely* nothing about my view of either smoking or sodomy so no nasty email please.) Your social/legal surroundings are sure to change whether you do or not. Are you willing to bet your life that some fact about you or activity you engage in will not render you unpopular in forty years. You certainly are making that bet. 4) That others will find out who your children/grandchildren are. Remember -- you are not protecting yourself alone when you preserve the privacy of your identity. Even though the US Constitution prohibits "punishments that work a corruption of the blood" (punishments that extend to descendants) vendettas of various kinds are not unknown. Most of the world's people live in countries where there are laws or strong traditions that "visit the sins of the fathers upon the sons." This works in both directions, of course. If your identity is linked to that of your parents and grandparents, you may find yourself "punished" for their sins. 5) That others will mistake you for someone else. In addition to worrying about your own information trail, you have to worry about being mistaken for other people. Digitally- stored information is usually not based on any personal knowledge. Just like last year's sci.crypt postings, digital information about you just sits somewhere. It may be searched for juicy tidbits but it is rarely verified or modified. Any errors are very hard to correct. You'd better hope that no one makes any mistakes. This problem will grow in future years as the authorities deploy "profiles" as a method of identifying miscreants. Since a profile system is guaranteed to produce plenty of "false negatives," a fair chunk of the future population may be forced to prove their innocence from time to time after they fit some future IRS/Inland Revenue tax cheat profile. The Risks And what are some of the problems that can occur when people link together disparate information about you? You know the possibilities: 1) Death 2) Imprisonment 4) Loss of property 5) Loss of standing or reputation in the community 6) Loss of professional licenses and permissions 7) Loss of income What to do In future lectures, we'll teach you how you can integrate identity privacy into your daily life without having to vastly alter your habits. One hint from Barry Reid, author of "The Paper Trip": Give the government the paper it wants, and it will give you the paper you want. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ (c) 1994, Frissell and Sandfort 332 Bleecker St., #F-34 New York, NY 10014 USA Permission is hereby granted to reproduce and distribute any or all of "Privacy 101" provided this statement and the above copyright notice and address are included.