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Governments are using credit card purchase data as “contact tracing’ Fauci Flu surveillance


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2021 Jul 16, 5:27pm   304 views  12 comments

by Patrick   ➕follow (55)   💰tip   ignore  

https://reclaimthenet.org/governments-are-using-credit-card-purchase-data-as-contact-tracing-covid-surveillance/


The ongoing “war on cash” that far preceded the pandemic, whose goal is to steer people towards using traceable forms of payment, is coming in very handy in the COVID era precisely for the reason the policy is criticized in the first place – it makes it easy for authorities to keep tabs on individuals who use card transactions.

Reports now mention instances of Australian residents receiving a mandate to quarantine after using their credit card to pay at an establishment, where somebody known to be infected with the virus had stayed.

Credit card receipts led back to the person that was then forced to self-isolate (although they did not have coronavirus) – and apparently led the person to consider what, if anything, is left of their privacy in a world where more and more people leave long “data trails” behind them.

Stop-gap measures like switching to alternative browsers etc (while probably running it on Windows) aside – the takeaway is that the only way to regain some privacy in the world of mass surveillance and tracking is to turn to alternatives – but do it consistently, and be prepared to pay for the privilege of removing oneself from the closed ecosystems like those ruled with an iron fist by Google, Apple, or Microsoft.

As for using card transactions to do COVID contact tracing, Australia is far from being the only country that is doing it. In fact, those lauded as most successful in even getting their contact tracing efforts off the ground, like South Korea, pioneered the practice. Data surveillance, reports said, was used by authorities there to make sure that people who were either unable or unwilling to share their every move are eventually forced into doing it.

Australia has “distinguished” itself for being willing to jeopardize people’s privacy with a series of COVID surveillance and control measures over the past 18 months, and last November, the National Contact Tracing Review, whose chair is Australia’s Chief Scientist Alan Finkel, recommended using consumer credit card data for track and trace purposes.

But what about privacy? Privacy rules will apply – until they don’t, seems to be the gist of it.

“Privacy rules will apply,” the Review said, but then added, “and in some jurisdictions legislative change may be required.”


I may simply stop using my credit card.

Comments 1 - 12 of 12        Search these comments

1   WookieMan   2021 Jul 16, 9:07pm  

That's Australia. I wouldn't be overly worried about it here. You'd cut GDP overnight by 10% if you started tracking and linking it to Covid. Maybe down the road with something else, but it ain't happening here anytime soon. Contact tracing via CC would destroy our economy almost immediately. People simply don't have money.
2   Patrick   2021 Jul 16, 9:11pm  

One could argue that the nefarious powers that be have already destroyed our economy by shutting it all down for no good reason.

So maybe they wouldn't mind using everyone's CC for the additional ability to track people.
3   WookieMan   2021 Jul 16, 9:25pm  

Patrick says
One could argue that the nefarious powers that be have already destroyed our economy by shutting it all down for no good reason.

So maybe they wouldn't mind using everyone's CC for the additional ability to track people.

I don't trust anything anymore. That said, if they did start tracking it for non-criminal reasons, the economy would shut down. No one has actual cash. Everything is leveraged. We're a service economy and the only way that survives is on debt. Credit cards are a huge portion of that debt.
4   Patrick   2021 Jul 25, 7:31pm  

https://reclaimthenet.org/adelaide-cctv-card-data/

Adelaide authorities say they will use CCTV surveillance and shop purchase data to enforce contact tracing and quarantine
A surveillance state.


A good reason to avoid visiting Adelaide.
5   NuttBoxer   2021 Jul 25, 8:22pm  

WookieMan says
That's Australia. I wouldn't be overly worried about it here. You'd cut GDP overnight by 10% if you started tracking and linking it to Covid. Maybe down the road with something else, but it ain't happening here anytime soon. Contact tracing via CC would destroy our economy almost immediately. People simply don't have money.


Actually, this premise would mean the NSA could never be. The money already spent spying on Americans is exorbitant. Adding CC tracking(trust me, they already have it), would be a drop in the bucket. Remember the press conference held at the Pentagon right before 9/11?

I pay cash almost all the time, everywhere. Online I use prepaid cards exclusively. The only exception is when I have to pay for something attached to my real info. It's not that hard. But if you carry your cellphone everywhere, and aren't careful about how you use it, it's only going to give you partial success.
7   richwicks   2021 Sep 3, 1:01am  

WookieMan says
That's Australia. I wouldn't be overly worried about it here. You'd cut GDP overnight by 10%


Right, because our government would never falsify statistics.
8   Patrick   2021 Sep 3, 10:49am  

I have been using cash everywhere it's accepted, and if some business won't take cash, I leave.

Maybe I miss some credit card points, but that's OK. Freedom and privacy are more important to me.
9   HeadSet   2021 Sep 3, 1:17pm  

Patrick says
if some business won't take cash

Doesn't that violate legal tender laws?
10   WookieMan   2021 Sep 3, 1:54pm  

HeadSet says
Patrick says
if some business won't take cash

Doesn't that violate legal tender laws?

Who knows? My dictator of a governor has mandated we wear masks. The rule of law is kind of over in my opinion.
11   NuttBoxer   2021 Sep 3, 1:56pm  

HeadSet says
Doesn't that violate legal tender laws?


You mean the law that worthless pieces of paper are accepted for transactions in the first place? Or the law that says only silver and gold serve as legal tender? The first has to exist or no one would ever take federal reserve dollars. The second is an acknowledgement of a natural law, that gold and silver have served as money since the beginning of time.
12   Patrick   2021 Sep 3, 2:49pm  

HeadSet says
Patrick says
if some business won't take cash

Doesn't that violate legal tender laws?


As I understand it, business have to accept US paper cash for debts, but can refuse to allow you to purchase without a credit card.

So the trick is to incur a debt to begin with, after which they have to take cash.

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