It just repeatedly amazes me that, with every story about identity theft, nobody points at the core of the problem: the social security number. The social security number was originally created only for The Social Security Administration; but, since its creation, it is now the key to credit, bank accounts, drivers licenses, medical records, and even video rental histories. If use of the social security number for anything other than for The Social Security Administration were prohibited, incidents of identity theft would be far more rare. Return-Path: <http://www.sneakemail.com/~data> Received: from monkey.sneakemail.com ([207.106.87.13]) by mta009.verizon.net (InterMail vM.5.01.05.20 201-253-122-126-120-20021101) with SMTP id <20021205204111.http://www.monkey.sneakemail.com/~LCDH16060.mta009.verizon.net> for <http://dummy.us.eu.org/robert>; Thu, 5 Dec 2002 14:41:11 -0600 Received: (qmail 16418 invoked by uid 48); 5 Dec 2002 20:41:10 -0000 Date: 5 Dec 2002 20:41:10 -0000 Message-ID: <20021205204110.16417.http://www.monkey.sneakemail.com/~qmail> To: http://www.scriven.com/~kim From: http://dummy.us.eu.org/robert Subject: speech recognition grammar Encoding: 8bit Old-Priority: D X-header-match: http://dummy.us.eu.org/robert X-to: http://dummy.us.eu.org/robert (robert) Status: OR Kim - We spoke at the RSI Drop-In about your having a command-and-control grammar. Do you have this in computer form and are you at liberty to share it with me? This could be quite useful for the project I'm working on. Thanks, robert