Thursday 15 March 2012

Big Brother in the UK


Soon it will be people who are behind in tax payments. It will be people who have bad debts. It will be people with a credit score below 500... As pure evil steps nakedly into view for all to see we must remember that this phase, although it will kill many, will pass relatively quickly, I would say in well less than three years. After that most gasoline stations will just be... gone as the infrastructure goes and as civilization fails.
After that, then what? We prepare to survive in stages. Working on immediate concerns but moving towards the direction of being totally free and self-sustaining within small and well-prepared communities. Those who make the most progress now will suffer least. -- MCR
Cameras at U.K. gas stations will block uninsured drivers from refueling


14 March, 2012

A new plan from the British government will use closed-circuit television (CCTV) cameras at gas stations that will automatically prevent uninsured drivers from filling up their gas tanks—that is, until their vehicle information has been logged in the system.

The Mirror reports that the plan is meant to address the 1.4 million uninsured motorists in Britain and act as a deterrent. That may not sound like a huge number compared with the estimated 13.8 percent of uninsured American motorists, but the 1.4 million figure represents four percent of all U.K. drivers.

The British government decided to make use of the CCTV cameras after hearing a presentation from accounting firm Ernst & Young, which will help implement the new system. And while the proposal comes from the private sector but will be used by the government, it's hard to not immediately think of British author George Orwell's seminal novel "1984."

"The key to this is simplicity. Connecting the existing technology ... is relatively inexpensive and wouldn't be a big information technology program" Ernst & Young partner Graeme Swan told the Telegraph. "There shouldn't be concerns about 'big brother' because there is no new database, no vehicles are tracked and no record is kept. It's simply a new rule of no insurance equals no fuel."

The decision is already being met with complaints from gas station owners, who say the proposed law puts them in a compromising position.

"Staff are already getting stick [flack] from motorists for high fuel prices," Brian Madderson, from RMI Petrol, told the Mirror. "This proposal will increase the potential for conflict. Our cashiers are not law enforcers."

Several thousand CCTV cameras, which are currently being used to deter drivers from leaving the station without paying for their gas, have already been installed at stations around the country.

So could British gas attendants start seeing a line of uninsured drivers with empty tanks filling up their station lanes? Not exactly. The Mirror notes that uninsured drivers will still be able to fuel up, but only after the camera has captured and logged their license plate numbers.

And the inconvenience works both ways: Insured drivers will have to wait for their information to be verified before they are allowed to fuel up too. Which leads us to wonder, just how much of a deterrent to driving without insurance will this new system be?

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