Re: Fingerprints
Ok, so I live in the beautiful country the Netherlands. Who is b#m deep into the European Union. They passed a new law a while ago saying that every inhabitant of the Netherlands is now required to give his fingerprints in order to get a passport or an ID-card.
Dutch law says everyone is required too ID themselves when asked by the police, so basically if you leave your home without it you are breaking the law and can get fined.
So here's my problem with it.
- They implemented this new law, too minimize the number of cases of identity theft. Which in 2011, was an astonishing 16 reported cases!
- They will put a biometric facial scan, your fingerprints and other important personal info an a RFID chip. So all your info is nicely stored in one spot. Its rather easy with a RFID scanner too pick up that signal and hack into it.
- All the data of this will be stored in a datacenter of a French company called Morpho, which is a sister company of a American company, which falls under the patriot act, so the US can even more easily than before get all the personal info of the Dutch people. (I know when you go to the US they get this stuff anyways, but at least than you know you are giving it to them).
- My personal beliefs
- My personal philosophy
- The requirement of giving fingerprints goes into the fundamental laws for the protection of personal freedom and physical integrity
- Storage is storage. In contrary to what the minister said they will keep the info for 5 years
- At first it was only supposed to be used by the local authorities, now they merged it with the central intelligence and safety agencies.
- Nothing is unhackable, so if any hacker would succeed he will have more info than he'd need to mess up your life. In this digital world the government will always be chasing the facts.
(Recently servers of a company working for the government got hacked into...they were running the servers on a system that was 5 years old without the necessary updates and patches and they still had the standard logg in, so everybody who knows how to google can get into it.)
- They already tested this system and in 25% of the cases, the fingerprints can't be matched with the ones on your ID-card.
So as I said, this has been implemented in order to fight identity theft. Too minimize the astonishing high number of 16 cases a year ![]()
There is a long road left to go for me. thank god I am not the only one in my country who can still think for himself. Some other people are already further than me, but as expected the government is stalling with every loophole they can think off.
I wrote my appeal a year ago already, the hearing will be at city hall tonight, where I can defend myself and give further explanations.
They were supposed to answer me within 8 weeks, but they lost/can't find me appeal, so I had to sent it over again and the starting time of it moved too.
So basically this is the entire track I will have too follow:
Decision - government decides not to give me an ID card and they send me a letter to which you can send your appeal.
Objection - average length of 12 weeks. (here's where I am atm)
Court - max 2 years
Higher court - max 3 years
European court for human laws. (whatever decision they make will be final and will be the same for all the separated cases)
So just needed this to wright it off and I am interested to know how you all feel about this, if you'd do the same, if you can't understand why I am doing this or perhaps if you might have some suggestions for me that I didn't think of yet.
7.5h left ![]()
We are all immigrants
We all make a difference
How are we all immigrants?
- Our souls are not from here