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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."

42 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

    1. Re:Fingerprints by cperciva · · Score: 4, Funny

      However surely much of the same information could be found by people digging through your garbage, following you home from work etc... ... or by reading your blog. Sometimes I wonder if the ideal of blogging was initiated as a government attempt to get people used to giving details of their personal life to absolute strangers.

    2. Re:Fingerprints by rf0 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Yeah true. By looking at my blog and online photo album (which isn't hidden) then yeah you can get a lot about me. Of course if you have you own domain name then I might even be able to get your home address/phone number without even break a sweat

      Rus

    3. Re:Fingerprints by LordKronos · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Sure, much of that info can come out of your garbage, but there are a few differences. First, I can take steps to control what gets put in my garbage. If there is something I really don't want people to know, I can take steps to dispose of it more securely (ex: burn it).

      Another difference is that collecting info by going through a garbage can takes active steps on the government's part. They don't have the resources to go through everyone's garbage, so they focus on those they are really interested in. When they are actively focusing on a particular individual, they are more likely to get the data correct (if a mistake is made, someone is focusing on it and is more likely to notice it). On the other hand, with a passive data collection system like this, they just throw bulk data into the database. Nobody is paying any attention to 99% of the data that comes in. If it contains bad info, nobody really notices. Then when your name erroniously comes up in a search later (due to bad data), nobody knows anything about that data. Nobody knows the context in which it was entered (you only bought Catcher in the Rye as an English class reading assignment), or whether you actually did buy the Anarchist's Cookbook (that wasn't you). Next thing you know, before you even have a chance to sort things out, you're a "material witness" in solitary confinement in a federal lockup.

    4. Re:Fingerprints by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2
      or by reading your blog. Sometimes I wonder if the ideal of blogging was initiated as a government attempt to get people used to giving details of their personal life to absolute strangers
      You mean like this? Unusual hits from "homeland.fbi.gov" (which doesn't resolve) and "sseop101.eop.gov" (which does resolve, and belongs to the Executive Office of the President, under whose jurisdiction Homeland Security falls) have been showing up on blogs for the past few days. The initial speculation among bloggers was that it was an April Fool's prank, but it's several days past April 1st and the hits are still coming.

      This has even made LawMeme you may need to scroll down a bit, as it was yesterday's news there.
    5. Re:Fingerprints by harriet+nyborg · · Score: 2, Interesting

      or find nothing, and say that they did.

      no one knows what goes on in these black boxes, or who really controls how they are constructed and operated. the whole operation is a black box which spits out names.

      and accusations.

      if they don't find something, they'll make it up.

      they won't even have to say what is was that they made up because that would compromise security.

      secret police with a secret agenda.

      "we're with homeland secutity, ma'am"

      "we'd like you to come down to the station and answer a few questions"

      "what have i done"

      "we can't tell you, but it's bad. real bad."

      in a land that's known as freedom how can such a thing be fair?

      and 70% of my fellow americans are supporting the president who is doing it.

      what is happening to america? is the statute of liberty so shellshocked that she averts her eyes from the insults being thrust at our beloved constitution?

      what sort of liberty are we asking our brave young men and women to kill and die for?

      support our troops, demand the truth.

  2. If there is a Database... by yoshi_mon · · Score: 3, Interesting

    There will be people wanting to access it. And you can bet government will be one of them.

    It was just a matter of time as soon as all these databases were compiled that the government sought to legitimately get access to them. (I personally think that they already have/have access to all of this data, they simply wish to make it legal now.)

    What is the answer? I'm not sure, how can you stop people from collecting information about you? This is the Information Age we are living in right now. (Yes there are ways, but such as it is that type of behavior is going to be legislated away as "acting like a terrorist" soon I'm sure.) Maybe there is no current solution, maybe it's a phase that our society has to go though in order to realize that keeping track of everyone all the time is something that we really don't want in our lives...or maybe Orwell was right.

    --

    Really, I know what I'm doing...Ohhhh, look at the shiny buttons!
  3. 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.

  4. well... by Unominous+Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    If it's going to etched in stone, it better damn well be etched in granite. I'm not going to let those stingy operators short-change me again!

    --
    "Smoking helps you lose weight - one lung at a time" -- A. E. Neumann
  5. Data Protection by grahammm · · Score: 5, Informative

    Keeping the data forever would be against the law (Data Protection Act) in the UK and I suspect also in rest of Europe.

    1. Re:Data Protection by blibbleblobble · · Score: 2, Interesting

      "UK/European laws can not be applied to the USA, so what's your point?"

      Airlines who implement such a system will be banned from using European airports. Read the article.

      Data protection laws apply to the UK. If you don't abide by them, you can't do business in the UK, and that includes using our airports. European legislation applies to most of the rest of Europe, and unlike some areas of the world, Europe is trying to avoid becoming a police state. Something to do with the convention on human rights, I believe.

  6. why by sirius_bbr · · Score: 2

    ...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...

    What I don't get is why an airline company is even interested in all this data. I thought most companies log personal data only for commercial purposes (to offer personalized content/services). I can see some of the things listed could be (commercially) useful. What I don't get is what commercial use it is to an airline company to have information on who you travel with, or what bedsize you prefer.

    --
    this sig has intentionally been left blank
    1. Re:why by surprise_audit · · Score: 3, Informative
      It's not the airlines, necessarily, that are interested. It's the reservations systems that lump it all together.

      Here's how it works: you go to a travel agent, or get online, and book a vacation. The travel agent (person or web server) handling it queries you for: 1) where you want to go; 2) when you want to go; 3) what kind of hotel you want to stay in; 4) what kind of car you want to rent; 5) how many (and what age) people are travelling with you, etc.

      In the case of Sabre (and probably the others quoted in the article), the flights, hotels and cars are all available in the one res system. So, the agent queries Sabre for flight information, finds something appropriate, marks it in the PNR. Then (s)he checks out hotels, finds something appropriate, marks it in the PNR. Etc, etc, etc. The airline isn't recording the info, the travel agent is...

      What you can do to avoid such link-ups is to book everything separately - a big PITA, but possible.

      BTW, Sabre doesn't record the PNR forever - once your trip is over, the PNR space is recycled. Some information is forwarded to the billing systems and from there is aggregated into trending data that's held online for two years. The trending data allows the data users to determine on a daily basis what's happening in the travel industry - where planes are needed, where they're flying half-empty, etc.

  7. Need for anonymous E-cash by Lord+Prox · · Score: 5, Interesting


    Here is another stunning example of why we need true e-cash. Anonymous E-cash, just like good ol greenbacks but useable in the new (and still under constant development) E-conomy.

    Sure they say they will only use systems and tracking and cataloging and databases for limited uses and data types. Yeah right! Since when has the govt ever been handed a power and has handed it back after its orignal purpose has been fulfilled. I can't think of one sitting here writing this post. Once the system is built and limited powers have been granted, kiss off the rest 'cuz it is only a matter of time before the system/govt gets its fingers in the whole pie...



    Right, wrong, irrelevent. What is, is.

    1. Re:Need for anonymous E-cash by Fred+IV · · Score: 2, Interesting

      There's got to be a bank out there that would be willing to go this route. All they would need to do is issue a temporary Visa/MasterCard number with an organizational name that would be backed by an initial cash deposit. You could even replenish your account if you wanted to keep the same number for a while. Is there some legal reason why this couldn't be done?

    2. Re:Need for anonymous E-cash by blibbleblobble · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "There's got to be a bank out there that would be willing to go this route [anonymous visa]"

      Unfortunately, laws designed to prevent money-laundering make people very nervous indeed about the idea of anyone being able to spend money anonymously.

  8. Hrmm by acehole · · Score: 5, Funny

    All part of the wonderful services that the government provides for us.

    regards,

    Citizen #4534
    CODE: ||| || |||| ||| |

    --
    Be you Admins? nay, we are but lusers!
  9. get a grip by andih8u · · Score: 2, Funny

    Your driving habits are already tracked, as well as your financial and bill paying habits, as well as your web surfing habits. Its like you think that federal agents are going to storm through your bedroom windows because they found out you swiped a towel from a Holiday Inn.
    baka baka, mina baka

    --


    slashdot, news for crazed liberal socialist zealots
  10. etched in stone... or rather etched in clay by bj8rn · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This reminds me of the ancient city of Babylon, where the authorities also collected information (to govern better...). What happened was, that at some point they couldn't handle it anymore. The information they collected was out-dated already after the request was issued. In the end, their bureaucracy dealed mostly with collecting and storing information, not governing. Oh yeah, and they wrote it all on clay plates, which they kept in large storehouses. When the city fell and was burned down, the storehouses were burned, too - effectively preserving the clay plates for thousands of years (they were discovered in the 20th century - real datamining ;).

    --
    Hell is not other people; it is yourself. - Ludwig Wittgenstein
  11. Re:ok, lets get rid of the trolls first... by devilspgd · · Score: 2, Insightful

    #1: This only works if the information is accurate, and is understood in context. #2: Credit cards record WHERE money is spent, but not WHAT is purchased. If you see I spent $100 at a hotel, yeah, I spent a night at the hotel. Or had an expensive dinner there. Or played at the hotel Casino. Or my card was stolen and I didn't notice the charge. #3: They do? Does Google have a little punk reviewing all the sites they index?

    --
    Give a man a fish, he'll eat for a day, but teach a man to phish...
  12. Waste of our governments money by sam_handelman · · Score: 3, Funny

    Our taxdollars are going towards rocks, chisels, and paying convicts to actually carve our flight itinerarys into stone, when this could all be done automatically with computers.

    That's what I love about information technology - the tremendous cost savings it provides in keeping the french-loving commie peaceniks of the country in check. Now - I want a list of everyone on the island of manhattan who mail ordered anything french since the start of hostilities.

    --
    The good and new comes from no quarter where it is looked for, and is always something different from what is expected.
  13. information overload by thesilverbail · · Score: 5, Interesting

    With so much information passing through Government data banks, a major problem that's gonna crop up sooner or later is how to sift through the junk and get to the significant data. I mean hey, if they're just going to be anal retentives and spend all day keeping track of people's sexual preferences, they're going to miss out on the juicy stuff (like who's been buying nitroglycerine by the quart.) So, maybe the sheer volume of information they get is going to insure us our privacy in the short term. If this sort of thing continue's, look out for data mining becoming the next big thing 2 years from now.

    --
    I have found a truly wonderful proof of Fermat's Last Theorem, but unfortunately this sig is too small to contain it.
  14. Six Degrees of Seperation by AndroidCat · · Score: 4, Insightful
    You're linked to a terrorist. Sorry, it's true. Come with us.

    Of course, through six degrees of seperation, you're supposed to be linked with everyone on the planet. (I question that, but without a traceroute for people, who knows?) My own link with terrorists is shorter than six. I once had some copies made at copy shop downtown Toronto. It turned out they were forging documents for terrorists.

    Chilling coincidence. But what happens when programs start grinding a large amount of data and flagging any other coincidences? Perhaps I once slept in the same hotel on the same night as someone who is a friend of someone who might be a terrorist.. (You see how quickly you can march through those six degrees.) I have nothing to hide, but vaccum cleaner information gathering and processing bears watching -- Because we are all linked to a terrorist.

    --
    One line blog. I hear that they're called Twitters now.
    1. Re:Six Degrees of Seperation by SoSueMe · · Score: 2, Informative

      An example of what can happen when the government collects too much information can be seen in Terry Gilliam's movie Brazil.
      Back when I first saw this, I thought "yeah, right" but now it actually seem possible.

      Mistakes WILL be made.

    2. Re:Six Degrees of Seperation by Degrees · · Score: 3, Interesting
      Amtrak did this to me (kind of), but it was before 9/11.

      One of my (ex-) father-in-law(s) is running from the IRS and has been doing so for years. One day, several years ago, my wife tells me her mom and husband are going to be staying with us for a month. Then it is time for them to move on. They want to go visit another of their children, and the best way to get there is Amtrak (Federal US passenger rail service). So I make the ticket purchase, and the Amtrak website asks for the names of the passengers. I put my home address for where the tickets were to be mailed.

      Months later, the IRS (Federal Taxation Department) sends letters to my home address, in care of my ex-father-in-law.

      I was able to truthfully send the letters back, stating 'not at this address, whereabouts unknown'. But still, it opened my eyes about information sharing and the Feds.

      --
      "The most sensible request of government we make is not, "Do something!" But "Quit it!"
  15. Turn the tables!!! by The_Guv'na · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If We The People(tm) are gonna get off our lazy whining arses and actually combat this shit, then we need insiders.

    People who can dig up dirt on high-profile figures, and not even blackmail, just release it. no amount of money can equate to something like a destroyed reputation, or a more informed electorate.

    The purpose of all this crap is to crush dissent. Read Nineteen Eighty-Four [by George Orwell, if you live in a remote Hebridean cave]. It can be done imperceptiveley, like stopping you traveling, making credit/loans more expensive or not available, stopping you getting good jobs, etc.

    Conspiracy theory? Yes, I could look up proof but I'm too busy. Ford in the UK is one example though, had MI5(6?) filter out anyone who would like a worker's union.

    You have [ok, had] freedom. The government and $BIG_CORP stand to gain loads of you lose that freedom and more information about you is readily available.

    Do you really want to entrust your freedom and privacy to groups of people with a proven record of corruption, megalomania, disregard for human life, and brutal crushing of disent, who stand to gain plenty from you losing those rights altogether?

    - The Guv'na

    Hey, you yanks, whats that over there in the toilet bowl? Uh, I think it says, umm... "Con...", "Cons... tit... ut... something". Hmmm nevermind, you probably weren't using it anyway.

  16. Best Bit Of Advice by Mossfoot · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Glasser said civil liberties advocates should instead focus on pointing out proven problems in proposed surveillance systems. "You cannot go out and argue that privacy is important when everyone is afraid," he said. "But point out where the scams are, why these proposals will not make anything safer, and people will listen."

    This is probably the sanest bit of advice I have heard in a long time. Bottom line is neither side is going to agree wholely with the other. The Privacy Freedom folks will see any collection of such information as invasive, and the Security and Safety folks will always think that the Privacy people don't see the big picture and some sacrifices must be made. Looking at the situation from a realistic point of view, without the personal moralities and agendas is the only way anything will get done.

    --
    Fuzzy Knights: New RPG Strips Tuesday and Friday!:
    http://www.fuzzyknights.com
  17. Commerical data collection on PBS by MyNameIsFred · · Score: 5, Informative

    Several years ago, PBS had a show on various companies that collect data on consumers and the methods they use. A few points they discussed:
    1) There are companies that send employees to courthouses to collect data from public records, e.g., real estate sales, births and deaths, etc. (For anyone with a child, this is why you magically gets the first birthday photo coupons in the mail. For home buyers, this is why you get coupons from the local Home Depot.)
    2) Everyone is aware of data collected thru credit cards, but there are other sources. Everytime you use your frequent buyer card at the grocey store, they know who you are and what you buy. Similar things occur with similar cards at other stores.
    3) There are companies that specialize in correlating the above data with census records. Publically available census records provide average income and other information for each zip code in the U.S.
    Add this to airline databases, and credit card info, and you have your life history.

  18. Can you poison the data? by bryanp · · Score: 2, Insightful

    For example, in the article (yes, some people RTA)

    They can list special meal requests, which may indicate a traveler's religious affiliation.

    A lot of people order the kosher meal on a flight just because it tends to be better food. There's also an option for a "muslim meal." If lots of people start ordering the muslim meal then that makes that particular data point less useful.

    I'm sure the more creative among you could come up with variations for other data types. (watch DVD's on your laptop instead of renting an in-room movie for one).

    --
    "An unarmed man can only flee from evil, and evil is not overcome by fleeing from it." Col. Jeff Cooper
  19. No more jet set. by epcraig · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I don't see how this will encourage tourists to fly, nor even to travel at all. All the air passengers now are business class who must fly, or change their jobs. The airlines need not wonder about why they're going bankrupt.

    --
    Ed Craig "Who cares what you think?" George W. Bush, 4th of July 2001
  20. Re:ok, lets get rid of the trolls first... by matrix29 · · Score: 2

    1. if you are an honest person, you wouldn't care about them knowing public details about you.

    2. credit cards have already recorded all this information already, now you know they keep it (it was already being kept silly, just for when they COULD legally do it.)

    3. just remember, to monitor every one of you little punks, they have to have their own little punk at the computer going through it.

    this isn't a law yet, its still "proposed" so for all you chicken little people, read the damned article. its less than 3 pages. big print. small words.

    i'd watch out for that law in oregon about blocking the roads = terrorism = 25 yrs prison ;p


    Sure, I'll be comfortable when you post your credit card number, home address, phone number, the entire list of your sexual partners, any undocumented crimes, etc...

    I guess you have never heard of anonymous harassment and identity theft. Even a tiny bit of personal information can be exploited to horrible extremes by someone wishing to abuse that information.

    --
    "Face it, a nation that maintains a 72% approval rating on George W. Bush is a nation with a very loose grip on reality.
  21. Re:Irrational by Katravax · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You've missed the point, which is that we shouldn't have to fear the misunderstanding, the change of context, or the coincidences of our innocent actions. Your argument is akin to saying that someone can break into your house and steal your stuff no matter what, so you should just leave everything out on the front porch anyway.

  22. How long before retaliation? by Fritz+Benwalla · · Score: 4, Insightful

    My problem with this system is that there are some many variables that are under human control, changeable by casual users.

    So eventually this data is routinely collected and analyzed, and eventually people start having an image of what makes up their "threat score" or what really sends up red flags and gets your luggage torn apart every time you fly.

    How long will it be before I encounter a rude airline desk attendant or hotel employee, and make a perfectly valid complaint about them - and they retaliate by changing my check-in data in subtle ways to make sure I am harassed every time I travel? Hard to do in credit systems, much easier to do in ridiculously insecure hotel systems, and it might even be as simple as changing the codes of movies I ordered in my hotel room, or my meal preference on a flight.

    The government is making more and more information critical to their decisions on national security, with no understanding of the security of the data itself.

    -------

    --

    Believe me, I'm as surprised by my comment as you are.
  23. revolution? by fearincontrol · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I just don't get it. Call me dumb, but I don't understand these laws... or how they think they get away from them.

    Whatever the administration thinks, they have not killed individual rights / privacy advocates. Yes, the threat of being called 'terrorists' or branded as something near has silenced some of them, since 9/11 and the "War on Terror."

    However... think Marx's socialist revolution. Eventually, if the people get their ideals, hopes, and dreams pushed down too much, they will rebel. I believe that it is only a matter of time before people get fed up with having the government destroying their privacy. And we will have a semi-revolution. Eventually, people will decide this isn't good for them. And opposing it isn't unpatriotic, or terrorism, or whatever the brand happens to be at that time.

    Eventually, you take away enough, and people realize they have nothing left to lose.

  24. Re:Most hated country by blibbleblobble · · Score: 3, Funny

    "Another Sept 11th will be on its way if you continue."

    Almost every year, I imagine...

  25. 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
  26. You think that's bad.... by thumbtack · · Score: 4, Funny

    When you use that grocery store discount card at 1AM on a Saturday, to purchase a 6 pack of beer, 4 packages of Oreos, 1/2 gallon of chocolate ice cream, a frozen pizza, and 7 slim jims you really think the DEA isn't going to think you had the munchies?

  27. There's no way... by No.+24601 · · Score: 3, Funny

    I'm taking big brother on vacation with me... he'll hog everything and kick me around just like when we were young!

  28. Throw crap in the database by grishnav · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I don't remember where I heard this idea, weather here at the dot or in another forum, but it's one of the best I've ever heard. It was actually in reference to the data mining that national supermarket chains did with their "savings cards" and the like, rather than the U.S. Govt. The short of it was, throw crap in the database.

    Don't own a cat? Buy two bags of cat food, and give them to your neighbors who do. Same with a dog, or any other pet.

    Are you a jew? Buy all the pork you can get your hands on, and give it to the local charity, anonymously.

    Randomly buy (over-the-counter) drugs and donate them.

    Look suspicios from time to time. (Just make sure you aren't actually doing anything!) Let some of the cameras catch you. Make them waste their time.

    Rent two hotel rooms at once (if you can afford it). Especially good if you are purchasing an "upper-class" one anyway, and can afford a $6/night shithole. They won't know which one you stayed in...

    There are many other ways to do this. The idea is to pollute the database as best you can. Make the data in it so stupid and wholy inaccurate that the project needs to be dumped in 5 years anyway.

    "Sir, our intelligence shows you own a cat"

    "Nope, sorry, never. I'm allergic to them."

    "Then why did you purchase cat food?"

    "Because I can."

    1. Re:Throw crap in the database by Pettifogger · · Score: 2, Interesting
      This is the way to go, but I have some other recommendations, too.

      First, who says you have to give *accurate* information for your supermarket store discount cards, or to anyone else trolling for consumer data? Safeway has something similar to my real name and an address that isn't quite right.

      Take every opportunity to fill out consumer surveys completely wrong. This can be entertaining if you try to make the data as contradictory as possible.

      Third, and most importantly, when consumer goods are easily substitutable (think soda, soap, canned goods, shoes, and just about everything) do not EVER be brand loyal. After all, they're all about the same. Make your buying habits capricious and unpredictable; this completely negates all the marketing crap and destroys their predictions.

      If the data becomes unrelaible, inaccurate and, more than anything, a big waste of time and money, they'll stop doing it.

      --

      IAAL

  29. Or how about this: GPS systems record car audio by 0x00000dcc · · Score: 2, Informative

    If you opt for a car with a navigation system from a rental company, some use the GPS location to locate the car if stolen. Great. But here's what you DON'T know: Those same systems can record your conversations while inside the car. This is no lie - government employees have been told to watch what they say inside of rental cars while traveling on official business.

    --

    -- (Score:i, Imaginary)

  30. Etched in stone? by discHead · · Score: 2, Funny

    Dang, they must be using better digital media than I am...