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- Newsgroups: alt.privacy
- Path: sparky!uunet!spool.mu.edu!uwm.edu!ux1.cso.uiuc.edu!bradley.bradley.edu!dave
- From: dave@bradley.bradley.edu (David Vessell)
- Subject: Re: Job ad from Computerworld - want SSN/drug test
- Message-ID: <1993Jan21.054737.24968@bradley.bradley.edu>
- Organization: Bradley University
- References: <93020.095246MBADBH@rohvm1.rohmhaas.com> <1jk591INN96s@tamsun.tamu.edu> <218@complex.complex.is>
- Date: Thu, 21 Jan 93 05:47:37 GMT
- Lines: 38
-
- frisk@complex.is (Fridrik Skulason) writes:
-
- >Now, this may seem like a silly question to some of you, but....
- >
- > ...why are so many people in the US opposed to the use of a single
- > personal identification number, which would be used by everybody - all
- > companies and government organizations ?
-
- I think the folks over in alt.privacy or alt.politics.libertarian could
- probably give a better answer, but I'm going to take a shot at it anyway.
-
- For one thing, the potential for abuse is incredibly high. The U.S. has
- laws which restrict the use of the Social Security Number by the
- government, but those laws do not apply to private citizens or
- corporations. This has led to an entire cottage industry of information
- gathering, and many many people see that as an invasion of privacy, because
- normal citizens like you and me don't normally get access to these
- databases, and as quite a few consumers' advocacy groups have shown, a lot
- of this information is wrong, and it can be a real pain in the ass to have
- this information corrected. Wrong information can wreak havoc on one's
- life, especially from a financial perspective.
-
- And, of course, since many Americans have immigrated from countries with a
- history of government control and repression, they're not all that keen on
- giving the government a quick and easy way to track their habits and
- movements. And while the government is prohibited by law from using the
- SSN to collect and cross-reference information, there probably isn't
- anything to stop the government from simply bypassing the law by accessing
- the same private databases mentioned above and getting what they want.
-
- Becoming a number in the government's eyes gives people the impression that
- the government is less likely to treat them like people. I'm sure this
- sounds like raving paranoia to a non-American, but to some of us, control
- over what other entities know about us is a big part of personal freedom.
-
- --
- ==========davE....making the world safe for intelligent dance music.==========
- ### David Vessell -- SituSongs Ltd. -- Orange City, FL -- dave@bradley.edu ###
-