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Posted by agreene on August 28, 2007, 5:56 pm
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said the yearbooks
* had no constitutional protection. "Too bad. It's not illegal," he said
* at a City Hall news conference on NY1 TV.
What is this?
* "E-Z Pass Living Up To Its Name", By Jane Gross, NYT, 3/25/1997
*
* 570,000 people have decided to use the new E-Z Pass system for commuting
* tolls. Lanes are being switched over to accept only the E-Z Pass.
*
* Under a five-state, 10-agency consortium agreement, E-Z Pass will work
* from Buffalo to Baltimore. [NY, NJ, PA, MD, DE]
*
* Users receive a minutely itemized statement each month on their trips.
*
* The E-Z Pass is a transponder people put in their windshield.
*
* Concerns about privacy were met with assurances that information about
* commuters' whereabouts would be released only under court subpoena.
People are buying the transponders because they eliminated the regular
discount tokens and moved the discount availability to E-Z Pass.
Wow.
It does have a kind-of Singapore feel to it...being able to track cars.
Well, it's not like they're going to go nutcake and
install a monitoring grid over the entire metropolis.
They wouldn't do that, right?
: "Above the Law", by David Burnham, ISBN 0-684-80699-1, 1996
:
: In New York City, the FBI spent millions of dollars to
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