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New Database Will Expose Uninsured Drivers to Cops



In this country, all 50 states require motorists to have car insurance. However, because tracking the status of a driver's insurance is up to local and state governments, many uninsured drivers are able to avoid detection unless they're stopped for other offenses. That's set to change, as a company called InsureNet is looking to simplify the detection of uninsured drivers by building a list of the nation's uninsured and allowing law enforcement officials to access the list in order to match license plates against it.

According to an article in Wired, InsureNet envisions police and traffic cameras being able to immediately check the status of a vehicle's insurance and, if necessary, issue a citation on the spot or through the mail.

Is the new driver database a threat to privacy?


The city of Chicago has already expressed interest in the system, believing that it could raise up to $100 million annually through increased fines, not to mention reduce the number of uninsured drivers on the road (which is estimated at about 16-percent nationwide). The ACLU has expressed concern that the system poses a threat to privacy, but we're pretty sure they're contractually obligated to say that about everything. [From: Wired]

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