Don't Worry, We're Not From The Government
PolarBear3 writes "It seems that MSNBC.com is reporting that the government (U.S.) is looking to the private sector to data mine against it's [citizens|terrorists] since they are prevented by law from doing so themselves. Two quotes: 'People in the government, very much so in the Justice Department, have been playing out a lust for information that is not consistent with who we have been as a nation' & 'A range of laws limits how government can collect and use information on its citizens. The private sector, by contrast, operates under fewer restrictions.' Seems to show a nation fighting itself."
Soviet Russia?
Haw haw. It's April 2nd now. No more jokes. This is a joke, right?
Hoax #101 : USA is democratic country; a land of freedom where the government respects it's citizen's privacy.
...
How do the government spell "totalitarian" ? d-e-m-o-c-r-a-c-y ???
sigh
Irrelevant news and morons using moderation to mod down what they disagree on. 2018 resolution: so long.
The US government has been doing this for decades. It may be illegal, but they've been bypassing the law. There is the UKUSA agreement: the US and the UK spy on each others' citizens then swap the information with each other. So yes, the NSA and M16 really does filter through your email and some phone calls to boot.
Name me a corporation you would trust personal information with. Micro$oft? GE? IBM? Heck, I don't even trust my bank with my social security number!
In the process they have gathered records of people who are not suspects, he said. "Once they get it they like to keep it, because you never know when it might turn out to be useful."
So, we've got a ever growing database that's now got a HUGE budget to fuel it's growth. Anyone else scared?
Find out about my new childrens book: SS Death Camp Criminal Batallion Go To Monte Carlo For The Massacre
What will happen to me, now that John Ashcroft knows I bought a bottle of Evian water last weekend?
This is sadly VERY OLD news... a huge firm in FL doing it ages (gigantic cross referenced system, including "6 degree-of seperation telephone "buddy" connections) and addresses etc.
They first started doing it for the CIA.
They have huge amounts of hard drive storage and lots of programmers.
now they sell to all big brother agencies... to SPY on americans on a per-lookup action.
The us is just "buying access"not administering the sickeningly complete database (all utility bills, all credit card transactions, all bank accounts, all phone call records (including local, etc etc)
I told you guys on slashdot about RFID transmitters in tires a complete year ago and everyone called me a liar until finally all the truth came out (the us gov to track car movement by RFIDs in tores at canadian borders and on I-75 and in bay area california).
I will not reveal the FLA corp. BUT its a fact... semi-first hand knowledge.
We can sue the h@ll out of a private company...
Nice to see how the neo-conservatives are eroding the rights of individuals by refusing to legislate any controls over corporaions, and all in the name of freedom.
Makes me glad I live in the EU where at least the governments will take on multi-nationals if it is in the public interest. In the US it seems as though most of the Republicans are in the pockets of corporate America and cracking down on any kind of social rights where-ever it will help the multinationals.
What it really does is prevent the legislature from protecting the little guy against large and powerful organisations. Claiming that all these things are done in the name of reduced government intervention, i.e. freedom, is the master stroke though. Unfortunately a large enough proportion of the population believe this and therefore vote for what is really an erosion of their rights.
This seems to be of dubious legality.
If government is prohibited by law from gathering this sort of intelligence for itself, using information gathered by others seems a flimsy defense against the law. If an FBI agent, paid by the government, snoops around it's illegal. But if a grocery store, paid by the government, gives you the info it is legal? I don't buy it.
Every credit card application I get in the mail has a little check box and requires my signature: "I authorize ----- to check my credit record and verify the information provided on this application....." So if companies can't check my credit rating w/o my approval, how is the government going to get it, as the article suggests?
This is a weak end-run around existing legal protections. While I would like to think that when the next airplane explodes in a huge ball of flame the citizenry will say "Wait! You told us we gave up our freedoms for protection. If you can't do that, we at least want to be able to fly unmolested!" But I fear all we'll hear is a government cry of "See? We've saved you from everything up to this, but we need more information to stop these attacks in the future." and the people will say "Ok, if you say so."
The Republicans are distracting everyone from their machinations by beating up on Iraq. The Democrats are meekly going along with it in some misguided attempt to "show support for our troops" when any idiot could tell you the best way to support the troops is to send them back home where there aren't people shooting at them, and spend that war money sending their kids to better schools.
High-speed Road Trip (18.000KPH)
This sounds to me very much like what Poindexter is doing/wants to do with DARPA and their various projects. Check out the TIA (Total Information Awareness) programme in particular, if you haven't heard about it yet.
This is old news, but somehow those things manage to remain fairly hidden, and just resurface once in a while. Esp. when America is at war, and people are just focused on Iraq news.
If it's illegal to collect this info and use it, then why would it be more legal if they used the private sector to achieve the same goal? Why don't they just admit the truth; that democracy and freedom is gone, that the constitution and bill of rights are nothing more than meaningless words?
And why the hell is USA trying to give democracy and liberty to other nations? USA doesn't have enough of that for themselves. They should concentrate on cherishing the little democracy and liberties they have, for it may well be gone in a few years. Enjoy it while you can.
USA really does seem to thrive on paranoia, and the people with most paranoia seems to be fast-tracked to high positions in the government and assorted TLA's. USA is already very very close to the type of state described in '1984' by Orwell, and it seems to do all it can to surpass the nightmare portrayed in the book.
Hopefully the citizens of USA will realise what is happening and either overthrow the government that is doing this against them, or leave the country behind on a permanent basis.
For being a country striking its chest and proclaiming to be the only true democracy in the world, USA is one of the most un-free countries in the world considering the continuous manipulation of its citizens to ensure that no-one speaks up too loudly against what is going on.
Just my 0.02 Euro
Swedish, but resident in the UK since 1996.
You are either with us or against us.
I don't know why they don't just make up new names for things to get round silly restrictive laws. If there is a law that says government departments cannot pry into cizitens too much, why don't they just create a new department and call it, for instance "Not a Government Department". Then when lawers say "you can't do that" they can say, but it's "Not a Government Department", so your silly laws don't count! Even better, they could move "Not a Government Department" to another country with less restrictive laws.
After all, this is exactly what they've done with Guatemalan Bay and the "Unlawful Combatants".
Its scary how accurate data mining can be. Taking a small scale example I have a loyalty card for my local supermarket. Every 3 months they send me some vouchers for money off on certain products. First time none of the vouchers really intrested me. However each time they have been getting more and more accurate until last time I actually used all of them on things I wanted.
Now if we scale this up I can almost see the US goverment getting more accurate but not without have a lot of false positivies. Scary prospect..
Rus
Cheap UK and US VPS
I can't believe how much Americans are being dumped down, people what was hijacked in 911 was NOT your planes but your civil rights, freedom of speech..., and recently your government has been acting really really childish. wakeup before its too late, your grandsons will curse you for doing nothing about it.
... as Evian is actually owned by Coca-Cola...
I don't need a signature.
A form of government in which the people choose between one of two candidates selected Party leaders, the real authorities. Both candidates and both parties equally suck but hardly anyone will vote outside the two parties for fear of "wasting their vote."
Each Party is controlled by one or more Corporations Blatantly obvious libertarian advertisement goes here.
You can't judge a book by the way it wears its hair.
like this guy
R Tape loading error, 0:1
very definition of "Fascism".
A government working closely with private institutions to seek and maintain control over its populace.
That is THE basic definition of a fascist system. Just like pre-nazi germany, our leader seeks to maintain greater control over us with surveillance and fear tactics...
"Voice or no voice, the people can always be brought to the bidding of the leaders. That is easy. All you have to do is tell them they are being attacked, and denounce the peacemakers for lack of patriotism and exposing the counrtry to danger. It works the same in any country"
-Hermann Goering. Hitler's designated successor, before being sentenced to death at the Nuremberg trials.
"A dictatorship would be a heck of a lot easier--there's no question about it."
-G.W. Bush 8/6/01 (It may be out of context, but... there you go)
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U.S. Eyes Personal Commercial Data in Terror Search
Sun March 30, 2003 09:43 AM ET
There are a lot of unstated assumptions in the posts here that attack the US government. One is that our everyday activities are somehow private.
What we buy, where we go, where we live, and a great many other detials about our lives are not private; they are facts that are available to anyone who might be interested, and we have no God-given right to get upset if somebody collects them. We are not private entities, we are social entities, and that means that only those things that we deliberately hide are private: if we lock our secrets away, encrypt our messages, act so as to mislead anyone who MIGHT be watching, then we have privacy. But privacy is a condition, not a right.
There is no statement in the Bill of Rights, no part of the US Constitution that deals with privacy, because the fact of privacy has always been correctly recognized to be a state that is totally up to the individual to create regarding his affairs.
Now what you do in the sanctity of your residence is something else again, as the Constituion makes very clear: you are protected against unreasonable searches, for example. This reflects the feeling that "a man's home is his castle," a very English sentiment. It also expresses a concern for property rights. The framers of the Constitution could not justify denying protection from unreasonable searches to renters, but they were not defining privacy when they limited police power by placing it under judicial control (the court, not the police agency, issues the warrant to search).
The courts have presumed an aspect of privacy in their attitude toward abortion, however, and if this is extended, we may see a judicial effort to define privacy. It really should be done by Congress, if it is to be done. There is no constitutional concept of privacy, but that could be changed through constitutional amendment.
At present, the laws restrict the government from doing some things that any private citizen is free to do legally. This is the approach found in the Constitution: it clearly states that "Congress shall make no law..." and so on. It does not say that other entities, other than Congress, shall be restricted from, for example, limiting free speech. (Only after the Civil War were the restrictions on the federal Congress extended to the state legislatures. There for a while, the federal government could not do what the states could, and did.) We are, in other words, on solid legal ground with our current attitude toward privacy. And yes, it does seem to me illegal for the government to contract for private companies to do what the government is forbidden to do! "I won't bite you, but my dog will."
As for paranoia, it seems to me that the folks who are throwing a hissy-fit about data mining are the paranoids. Much ado about darn little, as I see it. But suppose the public disagrees with me. Well, if there is to be a comprehensive definition of privacy, along with an assertion that it is a fundamental human right -- so far there really is nothing substantial in this area -- it is up to the voters to tell their government what to do. Does anyone actually think the legislators would resist such a request from the public? There are many precedents to show that they would not, Prohibition and its repeal being just one. We can and will change the Constitution as we see fit, period.
One thing seems likely, IMHO: privacy is a legal area in which we need to spend some serious thought before we act. And our first act might well be to stop the government from hiring firms to do for it what it is not allowed to do itself.
For now, however, the basic situation is very simple: if you want privacy, then take the steps necessary to get it. You are able to select those aspects of your life you wish to hide from public view, and you will be able to do a very good job indeed of misleading the "Watchers."
So go to it, you nervous conspiracy theorists: hide from Them. After all, They are listening every time you call, aren't They? They a
I don't understand why it is that when a company enters into a work contract they are not held to the same standards of the employer.
-= alphaFlight =-
it's always amazed me that people will complain bitterly about the us govmint collecting/extracting/stealing/whatever personal data for whatever reason *THEN* they turn around and sell it major corps for pennies (store discount cards).
there are other corp data collection systems that don't even pay, but that's another story? poeple worry about the dept of homeland defense knowing what you watch, but the satalite companies know and (i suspect) will sell it to whoever wants to be a business partner.
e
An interesting Constitutional question - when Bush privatizes every government function, will the private contractors be bound by the same restrictions as is a governmental body? When private cops arrest you, do they need due cause? Do you get your rights read to you? Do you get to see a lawyer? Can they beat information out of you?
Chief Justice Thomas won't have a problem with that - it's not strictly proscribed, so let it rip!
If Slashdot were chemistry it would look like this:Cadaverine
This kind of oppression by proxy has been going on for decades, if not since America's conception. Workers have always lost many of their rights (including free speech and privacy) when they sign an employment contract. The only new aspect of this is that information technology allows the government to collate disparate information flows smoothly, so they can assemble a complete picture of what you're doing from your employer, utility services, and credit card bills.
The only way out of this is to monitor what information goes out. Don't do business with unethical companies, pay with cash when possible, etc. This kind of monitoring won't stop smart criminals -- it just keeps the population on a leash.
Genocide Man -- Life is funny. Death is funnier. Mass murder can be hilarious.
That line has been blurring steadily since I have been alive. I think Jello Biafra said it best:
"We are living in New Corporate Feudalism."
(And just in case you have never heard of him, Jello Biafra was/is: the lead singer of The Dead kennedy's, San Francisco mayorial candidate, spoken word performer, World Trade activist and owner of Alternative Tentacles Records - the home of Noam Chomsky's recording archive)
---- The real Slashdot is still here. You just have to browse at -1 to read the comments.
I work in the IT group of a financial firm, members of our department have been tasked with running our base of clients through software that attempts to match them against known suspects wanted by various U.S. goverment departments such as the FBI and Secret Service as well as agencies of foreign government. If we find matches we are to freeze the assets of the individuals in question and notify the U.S. government. This are all to be done in accordance with the USA PATRIOT act.
The problem we ar having is that the software gives you a confidence rating of how sure it is that this person is actually the person wanted in connection with a crime. We are an IT department we have no legal powers to nor the means to investigate this individuals to insure that we are not freezing assets of innocent people. Thus far we have been holding back on actually freezing accounts until we have more information but with the specter of government fines being placed against we are eventually going to have to act.
I don't like the idea of the government having private citizens doing their dirty work. As I said earlier I have no investigative authority nor the means to perform investigations. This means that we need to make poorly educated decisions based only upon matching name(s) and addresses against those that the government is looking for. Eventually some one is going to get burned and have a potentially good name and reputation drug through the mud.
I suggest you ask any number of the maimed Iraqi's (a bit too late to ask the dead ones) whether no major acts of terrorism have occured.
They might have a different perspective to you.
Nice to see how the neo-conservatives are eroding the rights of individuals by refusing to legislate any controls over corporaions, and all in the name of freedom.
... doing business with the government? This makes no sense.
Let me get this straight: the government is to blame for not putting any controls on corporations that keep them from
The knee-jerk Leftist response is, "Greedy corporations want to take over all our rights." The unsaid response is, "Don't pay any attention to that Federal Government behind the curtain." Do people not see that it is, in fact, the government that wants to complile data on everyone and intrude on everyone's rights? Do people not see that a government with an insatiable hunger for power will stop at nothing to get what they want, and that includes paying corporations (who exist to make money, and here comes a paying customer with a guaranteed* paycheck) to bypass all of those pesky laws that limit the government?
Where does this "government good, corporations bad" nonsense come from? It is the government which imprisons thousands upon thousands every year for the mere act of smoking marijuana. It is the government which forcibly takes money from citizens to blast its propaganda on the Super Bowl. It is the government which forces people to pay money into a bankrupt, guaranteed-to-lose-money income redistrubution and vote-buying scheme (yes, it's Social Security). It is governments which killed millions in Germany, Russia, China, and Cambodia.
Corporations and governments can both be evil because of the fact that they are made up of fallible humans, not infallible angels. Governments have one power that corporations don't: the legal right to use deadly force to acheive their goals. It is for this reason that the power of government should be limited, not expanded.
*Guaranteed because if the government ever wants more money, all they have to do is haul out the guns and take it. They don't have to worry about working hard for money.
I don't make the rules. I just make fun of them.
right this minute I am working on a program for a professor that is doing work with UNL on datamining weather and drought information. She has been contacted by the NSA, they are interested in her datamining techniques for tracking terrorist activity. Crazy stuff.
Sir Timbly of Cannatuna, offical Knight of the Heptagonal Table
Someone's not really believing this.
Are they hiring?
They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither safety nor liberty.
Ben
Is anybody else reminded of how back during the Inquisition the actual torture was done on the Church's behalf by princes and other subcontractors?
This is not my sandwich.
Each Party is controlled by one or more Corporations Blatantly obvious libertarian advertisement goes here.
Jeez, here I was thinking you were a Green, what with the wasting-your-vote thing. Who'd have thunk?
"Fundamentalism" isn't about divine morality. It's about human authority.
No, I believe government to be bad *and* corporations to be bad. And while you never argued that corporations weren't capable of causing major harm, asking "where does this government good, corporations bad nonsense come from" sure implies it.
:)
I didn't mention any of the points you raised because I agree with them. It's just that I don't see anything that can counter corporate excess other than government, especially when the media is owned by large corporations.
Get rid of Social Security. Pull US troops out of Europe and South Korea. Legalize, regulate, and heavily tax pot and other recreational drugs. Cut way back on foreign aid and tie it to human rights. Eliminate all business subsidies and tax breaks, and eliminate the alternative minimum tax too. Cut out all the crap in the government and cut taxes by increasing the standard exemption by about $10000.
But the budget for the SEC needs to go from 500 million to 2 billion. There's a tax on stock trades that's supposed to fund the SEC, and that money should go to the SEC. And some people at companies like Firestone do need to go to jail. This part of government that oversees corporate behaviou is the *one* part that needs to be expanded.
And I agree with going into Iraq. As far as Pol Pot, Stalin, Hitler, etc., all I'm seeing these days is people around the world being perfectly content with leaving monsters alone to brutalize their own people. Hell, the US didn't even get into WWII until we were attacked. Don't really see how to deal with NK without millions of people dying, but in the long run removing that regime would save lives.
And as far as the govt being able to "haul out the guns and take it" whenever they need money, I can recall one recent president that didn't get re-elected precisely because he did that.
As I see it, in the last 200 years, America has dragged large parts of the world towards democracy and freedom, while at the same time we've been dragged away from democracy and freedom by the world (major hits were caused by Civil War, Depression, WWII, Cold War, now terrorism). We're still the freeest country in the world, which isn't saying much, and about the only way to reverse the downward spiral is if some country is created/has a revolution and gets something going that's better. Don't know where or how that can happen, though. Maybe Mars