Log in

View Full Version : Iris Scans:



eg420ne
07-18-2006, 06:56 PM
Its nothing but a conspiracy, go back to sleep, your government loves you:thumbsup:

Keeping an Eye on Sex Offenders
Newsweek
July 24, 2006 issue - Authorities have gained a new high-tech tool to keep track of sex offenders: the Sex Offender Registry and Identification System (SORIS), a biometric database that stores images of sex offenders' irises. The system will be introduced this week in Mecklenburg County, N.C., the first to adopt the technology. Deputies take a photo of an offender's irisesâ??a unique human identifierâ??and enter it into a laptop that connects wirelessly to a national database managed by BI2 Technologies, which makes the equipment. As the database grows, law enforcement will be able to scan the irises of a suspected criminal and check for a match. The response is instantaneousâ??quicker than trolling through regular databases of sex-offender names. The main goal is to identify the tens of thousands of sex offenders nationally who fail to register in the county where they reside, as required by law. "We're going to track down every sex offender," says Mecklenburg Sheriff Jim Pendergraph.

For SORIS to succeed, of course, counties nationwide will have to sign up. Though the technology was unveiled only a few weeks ago, many have already expressed interest, says BI2 CEO Sean Mullin. Pendergraph plans to photograph the irises of every sex offender in the county, either visiting them at home or calling them into the station (he says they can't refuse). And once his deputies get soon-to-be-offered PDA devices that connect to the system, they plan to scan the irises of people they pull over and suspect of having committed a crime. All of which dismays civil-liberties advocates. "The potential privacy invasion ... makes me nervous," says Richard Wright, a member of the Massachusetts ACLU board. He also doubts whether it will even be effective. "If a sex offender wants to commit a crime they will commit a crime," he says. "It doesn't matter what technology police put together."

â??Lynn Waddell and Arian Campo-Flores

URL: http://msnbc.msn.com/id/13880045/site/newsweek/?GT1=8307

Marlboroman
07-18-2006, 07:09 PM
Well this quikly brings to mind something my grandma used to say.

"The path to hell is paved with good intentions."

This and the RFID thing for criminals, along with infants (to protect them from being kidnapped), screams population control to me.

While all admittedly good reasons for doing these measures, actually doing them sets presedents for further such actions.

I dont trust it more than I disagree with the reasons for it.

eg420ne
07-18-2006, 07:21 PM
Its for your own good man, whos gonna protect you from yourself..The Government will, we should obey & be good lil citizens for they know best & cant do no wrong........they plan to scan the irises of people they pull over and suspect of having committed a crime-all of us is criminals or terrorist, but if you put them blinders back on then everything will be ok:thumbsup:

Marlboroman
07-18-2006, 07:22 PM
but if you put them blinders back on then everything will be ok:thumbsup:

No blinders for me, but thanks for the offer.:thumbsup:

eg420ne
07-18-2006, 07:34 PM
No blinders for me either, but some here do wear em religiously............

Marlboroman
07-18-2006, 11:36 PM
No blinders for me either, but some here do wear em religiously............

On both sides id say.......:thumbsup: