July 24, 2006
Universal surveillance of vehicle movements
- Last December, Bruce Schneier documented the UK’s near-term intention to track the movement of every vehicle in the whole country, mile-by-mile. He further reported that there are (longer-term, of course) plans or hopes to track people’s personal movements, via face recognition and the like.
- Forrester Research apparently now reports (I found out via Ian Turvill) that pay-as-you-drive insurance in Europe is on the rise. This is a clever idea, for a variety of reasons, but it requires tracking almost every choice a driver makes.
- Meanwhile, cruder movement tracking is provided by electronic toll payment, something that is bound to skyrocket due to time savings, to pollution/congestion benefits, and eventually also to the benefits of time-of-day pricing, which can further reduce traffic congestion.
This is scary stuff. And we’re not going to wind up stopping it, even if we try. We can only hope to blunt its ill effects, by adopting new laws and legal principles that prevent misuse of data the government has already collected.
Categories: Privacy, censorship, and freedom, Public policy and privacy
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