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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."

26 of 332 comments (clear)

  1. No more April Fool's. by Daleks · · Score: 5, Funny

    Haw haw. It's April 2nd now. No more jokes. This is a joke, right?

  2. April fools? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    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.

  3. Yeah Right. . . by AlaskanUnderachiever · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Like THIS is a recent thing. I mean maybe the fact that they're being "honest" about the sheer amount of it. To quote the article. . .


    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?

    --
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    1. Re:Yeah Right. . . by HoneyBunchesOfGoats · · Score: 5, Insightful
      ...[it's] got a HUGE budget to fuel it's growth.
      One has to wonder how long this can last. I cannot RTFA, it doesn't work for me (msnbc.com redirects me to msid.msn.com, which is a disturbing thing in its own right), so I don't know how much this costs. However, I remember reading that next year's budget deficeit is projected to be around $300 billion. What kind of other things will have to be cut in order to keep the US going? Or, how long until the country is bankrupt? I sense major economic whiplash approaching.
      Anyone else scared?
      Yes, I'm still scared.
    2. Re:Yeah Right. . . by ratamacue · · Score: 4, Insightful
      you never know when it might turn out to be useful

      For those in power, it already has been useful. Any expansion of government -- that is, anything which costs the people money or grants more power to government -- represents profit for those in control. If you are the chief of the DEA, would you support new restrictions on when your firm can raid the houses of suspects? Of course not. Increased funding for research on illegal drug use? No doubt! If you are the head of the "homeland security" program, do you support legislation giving you powers to monitor innocent civilians as if they are criminals? Of course -- it makes your job easier, and it makes you look better. Restrictions on free speech as it relates to "homeland security"? Bring it on. Due process and fair handling of criminal suspects? That only gets in the way.

      We need to realize that positions of power attract not those who wish to live in peace and mind their own business, but those who wish to control others and profit off this control. Is it any wonder that the US government grows more expensive and more oppressive nearly every year?

      The founders had it right when they put strict limits on the scope of government. Limited government is the only road to liberty and true justice.

  4. Oh no! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    What will happen to me, now that John Ashcroft knows I bought a bottle of Evian water last weekend?

  5. VERY OLD news... huge firm in FL doing it ages by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    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.

  6. 1984 through corporations... by mark2003 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    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.

    1. Re:1984 through corporations... by asciimonster · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I agree that legislation is a first step, but how are you going to uphold that law? The problem is so diverse (from security camera's to e-mail). And where is the line: A security camera can help prevent crime, but can it be used againt you if you commit e.g. adutery?
      And moreover: if the information is never disclosed to you, how can you file a complaint or press charges?

      Most people are completely oblivious to the amount of information that is gathered about themselves. If you can compile all the scattered information of a particular person you can obtain a reasonable complete picture: Medical history, education, spending habits, income, where you live, what sports you do, etc. etc.
      In the end there is only one way your privecy is protected: just another face in the crowd. Just like zebra-stripes. One zebra is very visible, but a heard is just like a striped ocean. Just make sure you are and stay a number, you have no problems.

    2. Re:1984 through corporations... by mark2003 · · Score: 5, Informative

      I am.

      I know we have some dodgy stuff going on here as well but at least our privacy legislation is far more developed over here. Particularly with respect to an individuals rights over the data kept on them.

      We also have a government and judicary who is more likely to take on and prosecute big business than in the US. If you want to see some examples (relating to food safety) then read Fast Food Nation to see how big business in the US can literally get away with murder or occasionally have to pay a ridiculously small fine...

  7. Legal? by ottffssent · · Score: 5, Informative

    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.

    1. Re:Legal? by lennart78 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Besides the doubtless legality of all this, you might wonder if it is the correct approach towards the problem.

      Pattern recognition can maybe point out an individual collecting materials to build a bomb of some sorts, but I doubt if it will be very effective against a group of potential terrorists plotting for a major strike, who are while making preparations, carefully avoid any member sticking out in any way.

      I don't think that it's possible for the American Government to stop every terrorist attack directed at American targets. If a terrorsts wants to strike, he is able to, regardless of what is done to prevent him from it.

      Maybe thought should be given to the question why a terrorist wants to strike...

    2. Re:Legal? by fopa · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Maybe thought should be given to the question why a terrorist wants to strike...

      I had this conversation with some Afghans just after the conflit there. It went like this:

      Me: Why do you hate Americans?
      Them: They invaded our country.
      Me: But they kicked out the Taliban?
      Them: Yes. It's much better now.
      Me: So if they made it better, then why do you hate them?
      Them: Because they invaded our country.

      Of course it was more complicated than that, but the feeling I got (and my friend from the Ukraine tends to agree) was that they are just so used to hating us that they want to believe the worst, and it will take a long time to change that kind of impression.

      I saw a similar report from deserting Iraqi soldiers.

      Iraqis: I am glad that our country will be liberated, but it's too bad it has to be by those American devils.
      Reporter: Would you rather they didn't come?
      Iraqis: No, No, we want them, but they are still devils.

      Hypocrits.

      I think Bush is concentrating on this question as well. I think he really belives that a democratice Iraq will give America a good face in the Mid-East that will slowly change the impression after many years. He has been right so far that the area didn't erupt into Anti-American riots as many people predicted and no major terrorism has yet occured. Hopefully it will continue as such.

  8. DARPA project? by flokemon · · Score: 5, Insightful

    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.

  9. Hardly Surprising by MeanSolutions · · Score: 4, Insightful

    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.
    1. Re:Hardly Surprising by dusty123 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Sorry, some of your statements are misleading or untrue:

      > Stores are only open 9am-8pm weekdays, and 11-4 (I think) Saturdays, never Sundays.

      That's right but this is merely because people want it like that. Of course, many are embarrassed if he can't go shopping after 8pm - but on the other hand, people just want it like that. To me, this is a democratic decision.

      > Owning a store or restaurant requires gov approval.

      This is also right, but there is quite a consensus about this.

      > You cannot fire them unless they commmit a working violation like stealing from the office.

      This is not quite true: If someone steals, he can be fired immediately. If someone is incompetent or lazy or there is simply not enough work, he also can be fired - but normally he has to be told 3 month beforehand.
      You are right that employing people and firing them is not that easy like in the US, but employees are somehow happy about their rights.

      > no one wants to hire handicapped personnel
      Well - why would someone hire handicapped personnel in the US if he can choose?

      You are probably right that a lot of things are over-regulated and that a lot of unneccessary bureoucracy is taking place in Europe. But on the other hand people simply want social security here, for this convenience these regulations are somehow the price you have to pay.

      To me, democracy happens if well informed and uninfluenced citizens choose freely between several options. I think this is happening in Europe better than in the US, espacially if you focus on "well informed and uninfluenced".

      It's true that the US is one of the first nations in the world who successfully built a democratic system. Nevertheless my primary critics are that ~ 60% of the US citizens never make use of the democracy and secondary that many people are either not well informed or misled by politicians.
      Moreover I wonder why they never managed it to true secularization.

  10. Hah! by arvindn · · Score: 4, Funny
    Seems to show a nation fighting itself.

    You are either with us or against us.

  11. Problem solved by pubjames · · Score: 5, Funny

    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".

  12. Data Mining accuracy by rf0 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    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

    1. Re:Data Mining accuracy by Cyberdyne · · Score: 5, Insightful
      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.

      I don't really see that as "scary" - think about it: the people you buy stuff from know what stuff they sell to you. This has been true of shopkeepers for as long as they have existed! It's only a recent anomaly that shops became so large and impersonal that you dealt with a different person each time; 50 years ago, you would buy your meat from a butcher, who would simply remember what meat you bought last time. Granted, the database has a better memory for detail, but it isn't doing anything new: it's doing the same old thing, slightly better than before.

      I'm a little more concerned about the idea of the government harvesting and combining all this kind of data, of course. Might that pack of CDRs I bought last month one day be a purchase that would flag me "potential pirate"?

      Having said that, I'm reminded of the law requiring London taxi drivers to carry a bale of hay with them at all times. The law was passed back when taxis were horse-drawn, to ensure the horse was always properly fed; when taxis became horseless, the law stopped being enforced. These days, it's increasingly easy to enforce laws thoroughly - look at speed cameras, anti-theft tags in stores, CCTV. Previously, law enforcement had some built-in "slack": the police wouldn't bother chasing and stopping a driver doing 31 in a 30 limit - but with an automated camera, what's to stop them setting the trigger speed at 31 and sending out automated fines?

      Really, we'll need some "housekeeping" done on laws. (The "hay in taxis" one was repealed a few years ago, by the way.) Instead of the law setting strict limits on behavior - in the knowledge they cannot be enforced strictly -as written - laws will have to define and justify the prohibitions much more precisely and thoroughly.

      Ideally, we'd see a constitutional amendment (or equivalent) of "no crime without victim" - out go all the silly laws, from the "hay in taxis" law to restrictions on consenting sexual acts (Texas!). How on earth can you justify making something a crime, when you cannot show that it harms anybody?

  13. You are an American patriot... by koi88 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ... as Evian is actually owned by Coca-Cola...

    --

    I don't need a signature.
  14. Representative Representative Republic by SHEENmaster · · Score: 4, Insightful

    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.
  15. Guess what? This is the... by Wubby · · Score: 5, Insightful

    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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  16. Privacy is a condition, not a right by Farang · · Score: 5, Insightful

    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

  17. Private Military Too? by alphaFlight · · Score: 5, Informative
    Wired had a great article back in november about Computer Sciences Corporation purchase of DynCorp, a company involved in many seemingly military roles. From the article... "DynCorp planes and pilots fly the defoliation missions that are the centerpiece of Plan Colombia. Armed DynCorp employees constitute the core of the police force in Bosnia. DynCorp troops protect Afghan president Hamid Karzai. DynCorp manages the border posts between the US and Mexico, many of the Pentagon's weapons-testing ranges, and the entire Air Force One fleet of presidential planes and helicopters."

    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 =-
  18. Miranda? Had to lay her off. by paiute · · Score: 4, Insightful

    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!

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