http://www.counterpunch.org/plummer08042003.html

Privacy Villain of the Week President's Commission on the US Postal
Service 
By JAMES PLUMMER

Next week, a special commission created by President Bush will present
him with a final report on "articulating a proposed vision for the future
of the United States Postal Service." That vision includes the idea that
no person should be able to mail a letter without the USPS and their pals
in Homeland Security knowing about it.

According to PostalWatch, the Final Report of the President's Commission
on the United States Postal Service will include the Final
Recommendations of a number of Subcommittees, including this gem from the
Technology Challenges and Opportunities Subcommittee:

The Subcommittee believes that a more secure system could be built using
sender identified mail. The Subcommittee recommends that the Postal
Service, in coordination with the Department of Homeland Security,
explore the use of sender identification for every piece of mail,
commercial and retail.

And among the other recommendations of the Commission is the maintenance
of the monopoly on first-class mail.

Taken together, those two key recommendations mean that this special
Presidential Commission is pushing for the legal abolishment of the right
to correspond anonymously.

Yet this nation's very Constitution was founded on anonymous
correspondence -- the Federalist Papers, which swayed public opinion in
favor of its ratification, were authored under the pseudonym "Publius" by
John Jay, Alexander Hamilton, and James Madison. Presumably if those
fellows were alive in the Commission's "vision for the future," they
could not mail their pamphlets without a Homeland-designed mailbox
snapping a few pictures and running the images through face-recognition
software.

The Commission's document is extremely vague, of course -- the "sender
identification" they wish for could take the form of any number of
biometric identifiers, or possibly some other scheme. But its
implementation will close the circle and end any remaining scraps of
privacy in the US mails. For it was four years ago that the USPS
announced that it would not deliver to private mailboxes -- like those at
Mailboxes, Etc. -- unless the proprietor collected and delivered to the
Postal Service peronal information that USPS itself is not allowed to
collect.

When, as per current policy and the Commission's recommendations, one
entity -- USPS -- has a monopoly on first-class mail and demands its
customers forsake any and all claims to privacy, the consumer choice is
gutted. Consumers should be able to decide for themselves whether the
risk of an "insecure" mail system (though something tells me those
Priority Mail guarantees will remain insecure regardless) is worth the
cost in privacy. With a legal monopoly and Orwellian policy, the
President's Commission would make that impossible; for this week's
Privacy Villains would have us all scrutinized and tracked "Under the
Eagle's Eye".

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