No, we don’t need to “up our game”. It’s simply not a legal requirement for laypeople—civilians—to identify fakes. And it shouldn’t be. That’s not our role. We help prevent fraud by emphatically communicating, through our words and our affect, that signing your name to something is a big fucking deal.
Auditors don’t need to “up their game” either for systems to be effective. The role of venues is to communicate the mandate to its targets (the general public), not to “enforce” it.
Employers are another matter because they have the infrastructure to implement engineering controls (chipped ID cards, key fobs, turnstiles, panic buttons)
No, we don’t need to “up our game”. It’s simply not a legal requirement for laypeople—civilians—to identify fakes. And it shouldn’t be. That’s not our role. We help prevent fraud by emphatically communicating, through our words and our affect, that signing your name to something is a big fucking deal.
Auditors don’t need to “up their game” either for systems to be effective. The role of venues is to communicate the mandate to its targets (the general public), not to “enforce” it.
Employers are another matter because they have the infrastructure to implement engineering controls (chipped ID cards, key fobs, turnstiles, panic buttons)