Real ID? No, Say DHS’s Advisors

The U.S. Government is proposing to implement a national identification scheme, yet the department that is supposed to implement it can’t get its own advisors to agree:
The Department of Homeland Security’s outside privacy advisors explicitly refused to bless proposed federal rules to standardize states’ driver’s licenses Monday, saying the Department’s proposed rules for standardized driver’s licenses — known as Real IDs — do not adequately address concerns about privacy, price, information security, redress, “mission creep”, and national security protections.

Homeland Security’s Own Privacy Panel Declines to Endorse License Rules, Ryan Singel, Threat Level, Wired Blog Network, 7 May 2007

The committee says REAL ID is not “workable” or “appropriate”.

This doesn’t mean DHS won’t implement REAL ID, however, with is approx. $21 billion cost to taxpayers and greatly increased paperwork required of all citizens, increased likelihood of identity theft, not to mention the obvious surveillance state implications.

Today, 8 May 2007, until 5PM EST, is the last chance to comment to DHS about REAL ID.

-jsq