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by ryanlol
2313 days ago
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That’s clever, but still leaves a significant edge case. I’d hazard to guess that 101-year-olds don’t travel very much and are therefore rather likely to be forced to get new passports for this specific purpose. (But perhaps the home office accepts expired passports?) >But I doubt this 101-year-old got much choice in exactly what format his passport contained his DOB I’m sure he didn’t, this definitely isn’t his fault. > so the software needs to handle it Does it though? It’s a rare edge case that should be trivial to solve with minor human intervention. |
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Apparently[1] centenarians make up 0.02% of the UK population; how well this statistic transfers to EU nationals in the UK I don't know, but if it's 1:1 then this issue affects about 600 people. A large proportion of those will however have some trouble rectifying the problem themselves; the over-90-year-olds I know certainly would all struggle with this sort of thing. In the article, the activist who volunteers helping people with the registration process is quoted as saying it required 2 calls to the Home Office. This is someone who presumably has some practice dealing with the process and the Home Office and they couldn't get it sorted out trivially. If it's an accepted failure case of the automated process, there needs to be an established alternative process; it sounds like no consideration was given to this edge case at all. So, not "minor human intervention."
[1] https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/birthsde...