From: “Robert A. Rosenberg” <hal9001@panix.com>
To: liberty@gate.net (Jim Ray)
Message Hash: e9912d33d22994780ba4fb0fb6209d2f1f2b487fce68464d44feb16d12f79127
Message ID: <v02130506ac63e9ef8d55@[166.84.254.3]>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1995-08-26 05:00:17 UTC
Raw Date: Fri, 25 Aug 95 22:00:17 PDT
From: "Robert A. Rosenberg" <hal9001@panix.com>
Date: Fri, 25 Aug 95 22:00:17 PDT
To: liberty@gate.net (Jim Ray)
Subject: Re: Florida Drivers Permits
Message-ID: <v02130506ac63e9ef8d55@[166.84.254.3]>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain
At 13:10 8/25/95, Jim Ray wrote:
>I saw the same story. The name, address, age, & height mentioned
>are already obvious on licenses, but this may preclude incorrect data entry
>by FL cops, and counterfeiting (a problem here for *years*). I saw nothing
>on the digitized photo, but we could be looking at different stories.
>Phase-in in July, '96. The story I saw suggests that other data, such as
>tickets, criminal violations (presumably convictions) and "other
>biographical information" [welfare, credit info] could eventually be
>included, depending on FL's state budgetary considerations. No author,
>just "Associated Press," listed on the story, and the card uses a magnetic
>strip "like those on credit cards" rather than a chip, which may be a
>mistake [considering the renewal period & my experience with bank-cards].
>Story doesn't say it, but it sounds like FL *may* be the first state to do
>this. Are any other states doing this already?
NY has Photo Drivers Permits with Mag Strips on the back and Computer
Generated Pictures (I've even seen them being created when I was on an
assignment at the DMV office in Albany that creates them).
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