Selon "Curtis L. Olson":

> Frederic Bouvier wrote:
> > Quoting Vassilii Khachaturov :
> >
> >
> >>> It looks like a breach of individual's privacy to me. You can track
> >>> people's travel ( owner names are apparent ) and I doubt it would be
> >>> permitted this side of the Atlantic.
> >>>
> >> in this particular case the FAA tail number registry gives a charter
> >> company flying exec jets. No client names disclosed.
> >>
> >
> > Not true when people are flying their own plane. Here a counter example :
> > http://flightaware.com/resources/registration/N555CA
> >
> > And don't tell me a PA28 is an airliner ;-)
>
> I think there is some gray area here.  When you drive your car, you post
> your license plate # in plain and easy view both front and back.  An
> airplane will also have it's registration number prominently displayed
> for all to see, and you need to transmit your identity and location in
> order for ATC to track you and maintain the safety of everyone in the
> airspace.
>
> When you enter the airspace (or the roadways) you give up some of your
> privacy and freedoms and agree to play by a common set of rules ...
> usually for the sake of safety, or the environment, or justified for
> some greater common good.

As far as I know, there is no mean for the public, to link a plate # to a
owner's name. It is illegal here.

> I don't know what the correct answer is for this particular case, and
> being able to go back and lookup a complete history of a private pilot's
> travels (start, destination, times, dates, etc.) seems like it could be
> a little over the line.
>
> The ability of computers to collect and index and sort and preserve
> massive amounts of public information creates definite privacy issues.
> Where as before you were protected by being a needle in a haystack and
> an observer has to watch you fly over to get any public data on you, now
> anyone can specifically lookup all public data about your flights, and
> the sum of that public data might be infringing on your privacy rights.
> Interesting debate. :-)
>
> The gov't could track how well you hold your heading, altitude, and
> speed, and revoke the licenses of the bottom 10% every year ... there's
> all kinds of fun stuff you could do with this data. :-)

It is normal that public agencies ( police dept, justice, Aviation authorities
... ) can make a link between tail or plate # and identities, just to enforce
regulations and play their role, as long as they don't make 'Big Brother Is
Watching You' their creed. My concern is that Joe Public is able to get this
kind of informations.

-Fred

--
Frédéric Bouvier
http://frfoto.free.fr                      Photo gallery - album photo
http://www.fotolia.fr/p/2278/partner/2278  Other photo gallery
http://fgsd.sourceforge.net/               FlightGear Scenery Designer

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