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Take Big Brother on Vacation with You

An anonymous reader writes "Book a flight or a rental car, and that trip and your companions' names, where you stay, what you eat, your bed size preference, in-room movie preference, and just about anything else you get a receipt for is etched in stone."

3 of 144 comments (clear)

  1. Fingerprints by rf0 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yes there is lots of detail that is stored about you, and yes it can be used to work out if you were a threat. However surely much of the same information could be found by people digging through your garbage, following you home from work etc...

    The point I'm trying to make is that there is more information around that people realise. My supermarket know what I bought. Does that mean if the goverment saw that I never bought pork it means I'm Jewish or does it mean that I just don't like it?

    As with everything its the analysis that can be worrying which can lead to the wrong conclusion

    Rus

  2. convinence by dhuv · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I heard a guy from accenture talk about things like this and how it is possible with .net. He said if you want the convinence of companies to do things for you then you will have to give out information. You arent forced to give out that information if you do not want. There are options with everything. If buying some product requires you to give out your info then dont buy it and loose the convinence that it gives or use a competitive product which doesnt require your info.

  3. Think you have nothing to hide? by TarPitt · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Personal information is very useful as an adjunct to any sort of hostile interrogation.


    This is well known in military circles, as discussed in a Slashdot story:


    Suppose the following scenario: you are kidnapped, taken to a small room and tortured, then someone asks you for classified information, or to betray your country, or to do something that every fiber in your being resists. Then that person proceeds to enumerate the names, ages, addresses, and medical conditions of your family members. Perhaps they include a bit of data on where they go out to eat, or where they work, of if there's an alarm system on their house. They don't have to say where they got the data, the very fact that they have it at all could lead you to believe that they have much, much more of it. Most military members have family somewhere that doesn't live on base (parents, siblings, etc.) Information is the most valuable tool an enemy can have.


    Don't think that only military prosoners are subject to this tactic. Police interrogations use this as well.


    And if you are sure you will NEVER be accused of a crime? Consider any civil legal action. The opposing attorney reveals they know all sorts of private facts about you. Will you continue to press your case, or will you settle on unfavorable terms?


    Someone with the personal details of your life has a certain power over you, regardless of how exemplary a life you think you have led.

    --
    If your children ever found out how lame you are, they'd murder you in your sleep