this post was submitted on 12 May 2024
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Privacy

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[–] [email protected] 11 points 6 months ago (3 children)

Via the government ID system, the state exerts a monopoly on identity and an obsession with tracking people from “birth certificate” to “death certificate”. Disproportionate KYC regulations actively exclude people without government-issued ID from necessary services, including jobs, housing and healthcare and even everyday things like online shopping, receiving mail, buying a sim card, doing volunteer work, taking classes, or visiting the gym or library.

The author must be American... it is a given an accepted fact** across Europe that you're required to carry around and show if requested by authorities your govt id. **Nobody consider this a big deal, and yes, it is obvious that if you don't produce it then you won't be able to get a job as registering for a job requires the company to enter both your tax ID number and your social security number in at least one govt platform so they can pay your and retain the required amount for taxes and social security you can can later have a retirement...

Americans like to play very loose with identities and then you get tax frauds, identity theft and ultimately SIM swapping attacks that are almost zero in Europe because every single mobile carrier will require your govt id to buy a SIM card in the first place and will also require it if you need a new one.

In an ideal world, people would be judged on their actions and intent, rather than on circumstances of birth and decisions of bureaucrats. For housing, only your ability to pay rent would be relevant. For a job, only your skills and work ethic would be relevant.

Yes... and how you're expecting to have a pension and prove you've worked x years and some place if you don't provide a govt id?

For healthcare, only your medical condition would be relevant (it would be against the Hippocratic Oath to deny medical treatment to people without ID, especially if they are paying out-of-pocket in cash).

Yes... and how are you expecting the hospital to keep a medical record that contains important information about your health and is required to provide you with decent healthcare without actually requiring a govt id / identification?

[–] [email protected] 3 points 6 months ago (1 children)

Not quite Europe, but here we have mandatory KYC on simcards too (you can get an illegal anonymous one still, but this is a different story). Guess what, it does nothing to prevent simswapping, it very much still happens.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 6 months ago (1 children)

If you require KYC for buying and changing cards then SIM swapping becomes impossible as nobody can get a new SIM card with your phone number by social engineering the carrier.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 6 months ago (1 children)

There can still be a bribed insider. And social engineering can get people to behave way off-protocol I guess.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 6 months ago

Yes, but those things need to have procedures and employee authentication. If someone employee is found to be accepting bribes for SIM swaps then it should be fired on the spot and hold legally liable for all the damages - you can easily add this into a work contract. If a carrier doesn’t do this and doesn’t log those kinds operations then it’s just poor management and people shouldn’t buy services from it.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 6 months ago* (last edited 6 months ago) (2 children)

Oh boy, the jingoism.

You can't legally work in the US without a Tax ID (generally your social).

Hospitals used to track you by name and address, with no problem. They did for me for decades. Using a government ID number isn't necessary, organizations just like exerting control.

And no, in the US you don't need to have ID to go anywhere. You can drive from California to Maine never having to show an ID - why should you?

I just did a 7 hour road trip, never once even opened my wallet.

Also, your social security number is not to be used as an ID - states so right on the card. Let's think about the implications of that statement, vs what is occurring today.

[–] [email protected] 10 points 6 months ago

You would have to show ID if a police officer pulled you over. It's literally how the previous commenter described. The EU has the schengen area, which is an open boarders agreement that works nearly identically to the open boarders agreement between US states.

The reason the social security card says not to use it for identification is beause it's really bad at it. But it is used as an ID number anyway. The US doesn't have a national ID system in theory, but in practice it does. Not having an official national ID number just makes it less secure and convenient.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 6 months ago* (last edited 6 months ago)

Hospitals used to track you by name and address, with no problem. They did for me for decades. Using a government ID number isn’t necessary, organizations just like exerting control.

Yes... and then you've those same hospital selling your data to insurance companies (or being owned by them) because that's mostly the way they've to keep track of people and have updated medical records across the country.

Meanwhile in Europe what you get is the govt manages your healthcare data and hospital simply access and update the data in a controlled and organized fashion by typing your social security number into a govt provided system. You, as patient, also get an SMS message asking for permission whenever they want to access information / do certain actions or just notifications of data access. Prescriptions use the same system, you walk out of a clinic / hospital without any papers, just go into a pharmacy and they can pull what's prescribed to you.

And no, in the US you don’t need to have ID to go anywhere. You can drive from California to Maine never having to show an ID - why should you?

Well I can drive across multiple countries in Europe using highways without ever stopping or showing IDs... however if some police officer appears and asks for it I'm required to show it by law.

Also, your social security number is not to be used as an ID - states so right on the card. Let’s think about the implications of that statement, vs what is occurring today.

Yes, because the US doesn't have the concept of a citizen ID / identity card and people are identified by stuff like a social security number or a driving license (lol)... there's almost no standardization when it comes to identifying people in the US (especially across states) and social security shouldn't be used to identify people mostly because in the US there's no useful central database thus those numbers might not be correct, unique etc.

In Europe countries have way more autonomy and sovereignty than any US state yet there's a cross-border framework for identifying people. Every country has it's own citizen card that follows certain rules, usually includes a single (or multiple) numbers that are used as citizen ID, social security ID for taxes. Those cards are also required to contain a chip (smartcard), allowing for the secure digital identification and authentication as well as the digital signatures - you can login into any govt service with your card a PIN and/or sign contracts with it for instance. Some people such as lawyers, doctors and accountants are even required by law to sign documents with those cards instead of handwriting because forging signatures is doable while forging a X.509 digital signature isn't possible.