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Japanese Government Ends its Floppy and CD-ROM Obsession in the Age of Online Forms

btarunr

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Ever wondered why optical disc drives and floppy drives are still a thing in Japan? Turns out that government forms require Japanese citizens and businesses to mail in their data (forms, electronic attachments, etc.,) in physical media such as floppy disks, CD-ROMs, or MD cards (a floptical memory card)! They could also submit USB flash drives, but why would you give away a $5 flash drive when you could keep an optical- or floppy drive handy for when you have any business with your government? Rather use cheaper consumable storage media? Sharing information with the government over the Internet is forbidden for security reasons. Japan is finally changing this policy. Under the new policy, every citizen gets a unique identification number, called MyNumber, and can fill up online forms. Electronic attachments can finally be securely uploaded to an online database.



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hehe, i think they still be using fax
 
It thought Japan already living high-tech with Gundam flying around and people just teleporting.
 
hehe, i think they still be using fax

Thing is here, you can fax a legally signed document that is valid whereas an email would not be.
Sadly Fax is not supported anymore and yes I say sadly because it honestly is handy for such occasions
 
Their "Senpai" culture is too deep

in today digital world they still selling Magzine, CD and using old tech such as Fax

The young generation did not have chance to give idea, they must follow their senpai off old boomer
 
Blu-ray Disc is the best :)

1662446779354.png

Blu-ray - Wikipedia
 
My 4G internet can download only one DVD disk in one hour. USB 1 speed.
 
Why would you use a Blu-ray to send the government a few PDFs and spreadsheets totaling 900 KB?
He's just being obtuse. Personally, I find those discs to be a pain in the ass because any kind of scratch or nick on them ruins it. My one music CD needs to be replaced just because of a couple 0.5mm scratches.
 
Don't forget the personal seals.
i think personal seals useful, each person has their own unique seals, they use it for govt docs..
 
Why would you use a Blu-ray to send the government a few PDFs and spreadsheets totaling 900 KB?
Why send PDFs and spreadsheets when you can send them a video of you completing the forms by hand and then hold up the completed forms to the camera. With ta-da music /sarc
 
Thing is here, you can fax a legally signed document that is valid whereas an email would not be.
Sadly Fax is not supported anymore and yes I say sadly because it honestly is handy for such occasions

Have you ever heard of electronic signing? We each have our personal citizenship ID capable of doing so via an smart ID app or directly via card reader and browser extension. Hello 2022.
 
Have you ever heard of electronic signing? We each have our personal citizenship ID capable of doing so via an smart ID app or directly via card reader and browser extension. Hello 2022.
Exactly, and even data transparency seems to slowly become a thing. We have the EU to thank for moving this forward.

The ideal situation is that you have personal access to the same data government uses for / on you, similarly for medical and all other things that matter, and that you can choose who to disclose what to. That's how digital trust needs to work.
 
Interesting... it's been ages since I've seen a floppy. I suppose it would work for sensitive documents, but these days I'd be worried that a floppy wouldn't be large enough to handle said forms, unless it's literally a .txt file. Fancier word processing applications and such have gotten heavier over the years, and 1.44MB may not be enough...
 
Interesting... it's been ages since I've seen a floppy. I suppose it would work for sensitive documents, but these days I'd be worried that a floppy wouldn't be large enough to handle said forms, unless it's literally a .txt file. Fancier word processing applications and such have gotten heavier over the years, and 1.44MB may not be enough...

You would be surprised about the scale of the industrial devices still using it. As long the production line runs, nothing should or will change.
 
You would be surprised about the scale of the industrial devices still using it. As long the production line runs, nothing should or will change.
I'm surprised, I thought they've been largely replaced by floppy drive emulators. Is it even possible to buy good quality FDs and FDDs these days?

Have you ever heard of electronic signing? We each have our personal citizenship ID capable of doing so via an smart ID app or directly via card reader and browser extension. Hello 2022.
As it appears, the Japanese have heard of that:
In 2000, Japan first passed The Electronic Signatures and Certification Business Act. This law determined that eSignatures may be used to sign general business contracts. The law also states that electronic signatures are admissible in court, though both parties may be required to submit additional proof.

In regards to electronic signatures, Japan has a tiered legal model. This means that it recognizes qualified electronic signatures (QES) as a distinct type of signature and gives it the same legal weight as a handwritten signature.
... but they seem to not approve of this new tech.
 
I'm not sure which is worse, this or how my country still handles official/government related things for the most part.
Here we still use paper form for most of that stuff and good luck if you lose any of it when some bullshit issue happens years down the line and you need to dig a specific paper out of your 'collection'.
Thats the reason why my parents have an entire big drawer full of such papers, sure theres some slow improvements in this area to make it online/digital based but if you want to be safe/sure then better keep the paper form.

If my mother wasn't keeping all that crap then we would have quite some problem a few years ago when we got told to pay some extra taxes/bills that we weren't supposed to, my mother found all the papers related to that dating years back and sent the copies in and that fixed the issue. 'which they barely even responded to, only that its not needed then not even an excuse or anything like oh we fucked up on our end'
 
MD cards (a floptical memory card)
Correction: MD stands for Minidisc. It was a semi-popular hi-fi format in the late 90s (it was primarily made for recording music), pushed by Sony, but mp3 players killed it overnight. In Japan it was around for a lot longer, you could buy actual albums on MD even in the 2010s.

Technically it is a magneto-optical media and it is the size of a card, but come on, editors of a tech site should be aware of the format.

It thought Japan already living high-tech with Gundam flying around and people just teleporting.
They did build an actual life size Gundam but it's more like a statue, it can move its body but can't really walk around.
 
Correction: MD stands for Minidisc. It was a semi-popular hi-fi format in the late 90s (it was primarily made for recording music), pushed by Sony, but mp3 players killed it overnight. In Japan it was around for a lot longer, you could buy actual albums on MD even in the 2010s.

Technically it is a magneto-optical media and it is the size of a card, but come on, editors of a tech site should be aware of the format.
Hey, I have a couple of those in a drawer somewhere...
And one of these:
1662479388434.png


I read up on those; they only store audio data (!) How tf do you put signatures in an audio format? You have to be the one reading it and they match voice waveforms?
 
i think personal seals useful, each person has their own unique seals, they use it for govt docs..
They also buy a replacement from the dollar store, when they forgot theirs. So not really useful and not hard to forge.
 
Boeing 747s still use the floppy disk for firmware updates. So I don't think you can get rid of them completely.
 
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