Declan McCullagh says that Howard Dean's temper may be the least of his worries.
Dean's current stand on privacy appears to leave little wiggle room: His campaign platform pledges unwavering support for "the constitutional principles of equality, liberty and privacy."
Fifteen months before Dean said he would seek the presidency, however, the
former Vermont governor spoke at a conference in Pittsburgh co-sponsored by
smart-card firm
Dean also suggested that computer makers such as Apple Computer, Dell, Gateway and Sony should be required to include an ID card reader in PCs--and Americans would have to insert their uniform IDs into the reader before they could log on. "One state's smart-card driver's license must be identifiable by another state's card reader," Dean said. "It must also be easily commercialized by the private sector and included in all PCs over time--making the Internet safer and more secure."
The presidential hopeful offered few details about his radical proposal. |
There's probably a good reason why Dean spoke so vaguely: It's unclear
how such a system would work in practice. Must Internet cafes include
uniform ID card readers on public computers? Would existing computers
have to be retrofitted? Would tourists be prohibited from bringing
laptops unless they sported uniform ID readers? What about Unix shell
accounts? How did a politician who
Perhaps most importantly, does Dean still want to forcibly implant all of our computers with uniform ID readers?
Unfortunately, Dean's presidential campaign won't answer any of those questions. I've tried six times since Jan. 16 to get a response, and all the press office will say is they've "forwarded it on to our policy folks." And the policy shop isn't talking.
Then there are the privacy questions. To curry favor among the
progressive types who form the backbone of his campaign, Dean has
positioned himself as a left-of-center civil libertarian. He's
It's difficult to reconcile Dean's current statements with his recent support--less than two years ago--for what amounts to a national ID card and a likely reduction in Americans' privacy. "Privacy is the new urban myth," Dean said in that March 2002 speech.
I know of no other Democratic candidate who has this view on national
ID.
Chris Hoofnagle, Electronic Privacy Information Center |
Dean's March 2002 speech to a workshop at Carnegie Mellon University--given just six months after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks--was
designed to throw his support behind a standard ID proposal backed by the American Association of Motor Vehicle Administrators (AAMVA). At
the time, Dean was
"I'm not surprised," said
It's true that most American adults already carry around driver's licenses. But the AAMVA proposal would have mandated biometric identifiers such as digitized fingerprints or retinal scans. Depending on how the system was implemented, your license could be equipped with a smart card (which Dean suggested) that could store information about your movements whenever it was swiped in a reader. It could also be tied to a back-end database so all verifications would be logged with the time, date and location.
The idea never gained traction in Congress because of
One prominent group that did support a standardized ID at the time is
the New Democrats' public policy wing, which
It's possible that Dean has a good explanation for his uniform ID card views, and can account for how his principles apparently changed so radically over the course of just two years. Perhaps he can't. But a refusal to answer difficult questions is not an attractive quality in a man who would be president.