basingwerk wrote:
The reason I have re-ignited the technology thread is because of the recent announcement by Alistair Darling that there will be a major government thrust to put high tech monitoring equipment into the road system.
Just a lot of guff from him so far with no mention of how they intend to deal with the problems of nearby parallel routes requiring different pricing, or the inevitable arms race that will develop between the techy types designing the in car gadgets and the techy types publishing ways to defeat the things on the web.
basingwerk wrote:
If we are to do anything about anything, we have to prepare to acknowledge that this is a possible eventuality.
Oh, it's a possibility, sure. And while it remains a possibility it's worth making sure it gets questioned, scrutinised and opposed every inch of the way. I'd hate complacent "Oh, it'll never get off the ground anyway" attitudes letting the power crazed pollies get their way over this.
basingwerk wrote:
These are BIG questions, that don’t need knee-jerk ad-hominem responses, but reasoned rebuttals.
Okay, how about this? There is already a very effective road pricing system in the fuel duty. 20K miles a year will cost me ten times as much in fuel duty as 2000. Choosing congested routes that have me sitting in traffic costs me more in fuel duty. Having a gas guzzler costs me more in fuel duty. Short of stealing fuel there is no way to avoid payment. The system can't go tits up and charge me the wrong amount. It's practically foolproof and cannot possibly be remotely as costly to run as a high tech system will inevitably be.
Now this raises another question. Personally I don't believe the government is collectively so stupid that this has escaped their notice. So why do they want a hugely expensive and complicated system that might be troubled by strategic use of bacofoil to replace a cheap, simple one that has a proven record of as close to 100% effectiveness as mankind is ever likely to get? Frankly I can't imagine an answer to that without sounding like a conspiracy theorist, aside from the not too original observation that charging via fuel duty is very low tech and doesn't involve all the computer systems and satellites and other sexy technology that the government is so enamoured with. If that's the real reason then I'll have to revise my estimate of their stupidity from "occasionally daft" all the way down to "outright f

ckwittery".