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To: WildHighlander57

Considering this is the same bunch that came up with the link tax and meme ban articles, I think we can safely assume this will indeed be used to infringe in people’s rights.


13 posted on 06/02/2021 1:33:30 AM PDT by mewzilla (Those aren't masks. They're muzzles. )
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To: All

Might interest you to know the EU is wondering exactly how this tech will work... in several years’ time, when they’ve finished constructing it. Of course this is all a bit “blue sky” thinking but one protocol that I’ve seen in mock-up goes roughly like this:

1. Citizen installs app on phone, and links app to digital wallet. Like their online banking (which already uses the same regulatory principles), it’s bound to their device and their biometric, and ALL data they choose to share is stored in an encrypted file, locally, not uploaded to any central server.

2. Citizen opts into medical data sharing and specifies what can and cannot be shared with emergency responders.

3. Emergency workers have to register with a licensed provider of services - usually their employer. As part of mandatory employment checks, their identity has to be confirmed, along with their qualifications (this is Captain Obvious stuff - you don’t want someone with a fat jacket of criminal prosecutions who’s merely pretending to be a cop / paramedic / whatever, getting access to national and/or EU-wide and/or Interpol databases).

4. Once vetted, they are given access to an app. Just like the citizen one (and just like their own bank’s app already does), it needs THEIR biometric to be presented in order to use it.

5. In the event that you’re a victim of crime or in an accident, then no matter where you are in the EU, the emergency responders can nominate a person to lead the team. The apps then sync up so a team is created for that one “encounter”, and all named qualified attending personnel are added to the list.

6. Before they can do ANYTHING with ANY data, they need your consent. If you’re conscious they can just ask. If not - how can you give it? Simples - your app on your phone has your pre-approved “I’m happy for the emergency responders to identify me” rule enabled AS WELL AS the “even if I’m unconscious or dead” rule.

7. One nominated responder uses NFC to link their device to yours, all this does is ask your device for approval. Since you may have pre-approved that, it’ll say YES. If you didn’t pre-approve, it might ask you to swipe left for yes or right for no, subject to your fingerprint unlock.

8. At this point the back end of the responders’ app tells the backoffice that you’ve given your consent, and it then establishes a full audit trail for everything they do after that. If they ask for your blood group, it captures the team members, the encounter, who requested the blood group, and when they asked. It then requests the information from the phone.

9. Cleverly, the proposition also includes some provision for natural language translation, so if all your vital statistics have been captured in English and you’ve been involved in an accident in Slovakia, there’s not going to be any language barrier.

Now, this all sounds immensely complicated - and technology-wise it will be - but there’s nothing insurmountable. And the upshot of it is, we’re not talking about a system that’ll be here next year.

In 20 years’ time this will all come to pass, and crucially by the time it arrives the citizen and the emergency responder will have had 20 years to get the hang of it.

It’ll be far less complicated to any end user than trying to ask and answer a bunch of questions verbally while slipping in and out of consciousness.

If you think that sounds completely nuts, consider how completely effortlessly a ten year old “digital native” can navigate their way round computer tech that would’ve baffled a college graduate 20 years ago.

It’s the same as how, twenty years before that, many of my dad’s generation couldn’t even figure out how to set a VCR timer via the remote control, while I (even as a tender 7 year old) could do it blindfold without even reading the instruction book.

In twenty years’ time this technology will be so intuitive to any millennial that any argument that the old way of doing things was “simpler” will be simply laughed at.


22 posted on 06/02/2021 3:43:07 PM PDT by MalPearce
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