The current system is full of waste and inefficiency, and the possibility of fraud.
As such people using it take great care and don't trust it.
This is actually a hidden benefit of the system.
If you introduce an ID that everyone 'trusts' implicitly (esp. relating to online commerce) then the scope for fraud widens greatly. You can assume the system will get corrupted because of the great benefits accruing to those who can breach it.
The vast majority of contracts entered don't need much; if it does go wrong, usually little damage is done. As the risk profile increases, then so does the amount of verification, purchasing a business requires reams of documentation, an iPhone cover shipped out of hong kong can stay anonymous.
As IT people, we all naturally love a world that fits into a relational model, one where all people have a unique ID. As citizens, however, we have to resist this because of the lopsided risk/reward profile for individuals. In cases if centralised ID, you gain a little but lose a lot.
As such people using it take great care and don't trust it.
This is actually a hidden benefit of the system.
If you introduce an ID that everyone 'trusts' implicitly (esp. relating to online commerce) then the scope for fraud widens greatly. You can assume the system will get corrupted because of the great benefits accruing to those who can breach it.
The vast majority of contracts entered don't need much; if it does go wrong, usually little damage is done. As the risk profile increases, then so does the amount of verification, purchasing a business requires reams of documentation, an iPhone cover shipped out of hong kong can stay anonymous.
As IT people, we all naturally love a world that fits into a relational model, one where all people have a unique ID. As citizens, however, we have to resist this because of the lopsided risk/reward profile for individuals. In cases if centralised ID, you gain a little but lose a lot.