Marcus Wigan
Owning identity-one or many-do we have a choice?
Wigan, Marcus
Authors
Contributors
Katina Michael
Editor
M G Michael
Editor
Abstract
The rapid growth of databases, biometrics, and RFID has led to an environment where identity-related technologies are approaching a critical mass as a potential means of controlling the population. The essential aspects of these diverse technical advances are the links between identity and accelerating intensification of dataveillance capacities. DNA databases are perhaps the most salient example, but their comprehensive application has yet to materialize on a large scale. The legal infrastructure to expand DNA databases more rapidly is already enabled by recent legislation, but the cost and complication (and indeed vulnerabilities) of building such databases mean that at present we can consider them as simply fresh opportunities for function creep. DNA's high profile potential is dwarfed by the risks inherent in the many other cross-linkages now being enabled. These links may be direct (via formal data matching legislation), or indirect, i.e., the result of rapidly expanded powers to secretly monitor parties on a prospective (trawling) basis by creating assemblies of data from many sources. The links enabled by a "unique identity" are central to both direct and indirect data and physical surveillance. Identity is now commonly treated in legislation as if it were a unique item. This supposition has many ramifications. These effects were either unintentionally emergent or consciously intended; in either case the social impact is not widely appreciated.
Citation
Wigan, M. (2007). Owning identity-one or many-do we have a choice?. In K. Michael, & M. G. Michael (Eds.), From Dataveillance to Überveillance and the realpolitik of the transparent society (61-70)
Conference Name | Second Workshop on Social Implications of National Security |
---|---|
Start Date | Oct 29, 2007 |
End Date | Oct 29, 2007 |
Publication Date | 2007 |
Deposit Date | Jun 25, 2013 |
Publicly Available Date | Jun 25, 2013 |
Peer Reviewed | Peer Reviewed |
Pages | 61-70 |
Book Title | From Dataveillance to Überveillance and the realpolitik of the transparent society |
ISBN | 978-1-74128-141-5 |
Keywords | DNA databases; RFID; biometrics; dataveillance capacities; identity related technologies; intensification acceleration; legal infrastructure |
Public URL | http://researchrepository.napier.ac.uk/id/eprint/6141 |
Contract Date | Jun 25, 2013 |
Files
wigan07.pdf
(1.2 Mb)
PDF
Publisher Licence URL
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
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