Probably due to taxing laws. Citizens get a discount, tourists don’t. Or you get a discount dependant on your age, etc.
Also: the fact that you bought a metro tickets contains zero actionable information for any “agency”. Great, you have a ticket. When will you use it, though?
And, again, the entirety of Central Europe has mandatory IDs for decades. Just look at how incompetent the police over there is to see how little it does for “spying” or “controlling the population”.
Bah! Poland’s communist government imposed upon them by the USSR made the IDs mandatory and they still got toppled by the student and worker underground. Where was this “control” then?
Also: the fact that you bought a metro tickets contains zero actionable information for any “agency”. Great, you have a ticket. When will you use it, though?
Yes it does. It links my identity to the locations…
I bought it
I entered the metro system
I exited the metro system
My travel through the city is now in a database. It’s the sort of thing that a authoritarian state would find very useful to track down dissidents.
I’m not saying that Spain’s current government would use it in this way, but they’ve constructed a system that would be very useful to a future bad actor. It’s naive to think governments will always be benign and never abuse such systems.
Probably due to taxing laws. Citizens get a discount, tourists don’t. Or you get a discount dependant on your age, etc.
Also: the fact that you bought a metro tickets contains zero actionable information for any “agency”. Great, you have a ticket. When will you use it, though?
And, again, the entirety of Central Europe has mandatory IDs for decades. Just look at how incompetent the police over there is to see how little it does for “spying” or “controlling the population”.
Bah! Poland’s communist government imposed upon them by the USSR made the IDs mandatory and they still got toppled by the student and worker underground. Where was this “control” then?
Yes it does. It links my identity to the locations…
My travel through the city is now in a database. It’s the sort of thing that a authoritarian state would find very useful to track down dissidents.
I’m not saying that Spain’s current government would use it in this way, but they’ve constructed a system that would be very useful to a future bad actor. It’s naive to think governments will always be benign and never abuse such systems.
By the same token you we should be campaigning for everybody being fully anonymous and wearing a mask at all times.
Feels like throwing the baby out with the bathwater.
Well I’m certainly against forced face reveal so facial recognition cameras can work. I think privacy is something we need to reclaim.