Events
The Taub Faculty of Computer Science Events and Talks
Jonathan J. Klinger (Legal Counsel, Digital Rights Movement)
Monday, 02.09.2013, 18:30
In this talk, I shall discuss the use of biometrics for personal
identification by governmental authorities: The establishment of
biometric databases and the use of biometrics as unique identifiers
against state actors and other establishments. My main hypothesis is
that the use of biometrics is an apparatus for control that was first
used on inmates, criminals and other risk groups, then conveyed to
immigrants and other weak points in society. After this was concluded,
then the application on the entire population was imminent.
I shall use Israel as a case study for this research. Israel has a vast
census, which is quite different from other states and results from its
history. Since the 1990s, the ideas of applying a central database was
introduced to Israel, where it began by collecting DNA and Biometrics
from prisoners and suspects, then to immigrants workers, and from 2009,
a pilot relating to the entire population was enacted, which will soon
commence a pilot.
The other thread of my hypothesis is the informatication of the person,
by identifying him as no more than a record in a database, the person
becomes no more than a number, and is treated as such.