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US Shuts Down Controversial Anti-Terror Database

coondoggie writes "The massive anti-terror database established by the US government has been criticized for keeping track of regular everyday citizens. Computerworld reports that as of September 17th, the database will be shut down. 'The Threat and Local Observation Notices or TALON, was established in 2002 by then-Deputy Defense Secretary Paul D. Wolfowitz as a way to collect and evaluate information about possible threats to U.S. service members and defense civilians all over the world. Congress and others protested its apparent use as an unauthorized citizen tracking database. The TALON system came under fire in 2005 for improperly storing information about some civilian individuals and non-government-affiliated groups on its database. The Air Force developed TALON... in response to the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks as a way to gather data on possible terrorist threats. Anti-war groups and other organizations, protested after it was revealed last year that the military had monitored anti-war activities, organizations and individuals who attended peace rallies.'"

163 of 238 comments (clear)

  1. And they are waiting for another month because??? by Alpha830RulZ · · Score: 1, Interesting

    (eom)

    --
    I was taught to respect my elders. The trouble is, it's getting harder and harder to find some.
  2. Wink Wink Nod Nod... by plasmacutter · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Didn't they claim they shut it down before?

    I could swear this program has been "killed" twice, and by "killed" i mean the government's definition: proclaiming a project discontinued while continuing it under a new name. (note: definition also adopted by microsoft regarding the trusted computing project)

    --
    VLC FOR MAC IS DYING! IF YOU DEVELOP, PLEASE SAVE IT!!
    1. Re:Wink Wink Nod Nod... by Trailrunner7 · · Score: 1

      Yeah they did. And, just for the record, the story is on Network World, not Computerworld.

    2. Re:Wink Wink Nod Nod... by zentigger · · Score: 4, Funny

      yeah killed, as in kill -1

      --

      the above is my personal opinion and does not necessarily reflect that of the little voices in my head

    3. Re:Wink Wink Nod Nod... by purpledinoz · · Score: 1

      Think of this database as a cat. It has nine lives, and loves to hide.

    4. Re:Wink Wink Nod Nod... by meatspray · · Score: 1

      Nah, it's most likely dead. (-9) That's what you do to old technology when you replace it with another classified system.

    5. Re:Wink Wink Nod Nod... by jc42 · · Score: 2, Informative

      I could swear this program has been "killed" twice, and by "killed" i mean the government's definition: proclaiming a project discontinued while continuing it under a new name.

      This sort of thing has been reported for US government agencies for decades. Back when all the data was all in paper archives, there were lots of reports of agencies that "obeyed" orders to destroy them by first running them through copiers, transporting the copies to some other site, and then destroying the originals. I recall during the Vietnam War, when the DoD was ordered to destroy their records of spying on anti-war groups, and the DoD announced that it had done so. But some time later, reporters published reports that at least five backup copies had been located at five different sites.

      No matter how dumb you think government (or corporate) employees are, fact is that most of them are smart enough to figure out this ruse.

      There's also the reverse version that's been making the news: We're now reading reports of managers (government and corporate) finding the contents of their email used against them in court, when they thought that the email messages had been deleted. The messages had been deleted from disk, of course, but the backups could still be read. Oops!

      When you read stories like this, you should always ask yourself "How many copies were made?" That will put you into the proper cynical perspective, which you'll later remember when it turns out you were right to ask.

      --
      Those who do study history are doomed to stand helplessly by while everyone else repeats it.
    6. Re:Wink Wink Nod Nod... by Agripa · · Score: 1

      Didn't they claim they shut it down before?

      That is the beauty of it. Just wait until they shut it down again.

  3. Shut down by Scrameustache · · Score: 4, Insightful

    And replaced by..?

    --

    You can't take the sky from me...

    1. Re:Shut down by jet_silver · · Score: 1

      Replaced by the "Think of the children, kittens and butterflies" database, duh.

    2. Re:Shut down by fm6 · · Score: 1

      Nothing, I hope. Even if you ignore the threats to personal liberty such a database entails, it makes no sense at all for DoD to be managing it. It's just another brainless project from Paul Wolfowitz, the most reality-impaired of the Bushies.

    3. Re:Shut down by The+Angry+Mick · · Score: 3, Funny

      And merged into..?

      Fixed that for you.

      --

      I'm not tense. I'm just terribly, terribly, alert.

    4. Re:Shut down by h4ck7h3p14n37 · · Score: 1

      From the article, "the department is working to develop a new reporting system to replace TALON, but in the interim, all information concerning force protection threats will go to the FBI's Guardian reporting system".

    5. Re:Shut down by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      And merged into..?

      Fixed that for you.

      Good call.
      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

  4. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  5. Shut down by Billosaur · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The data will be archived, then a year or two down the road will resurface as some new system. Now that they've collected all this data, don't think for a second they will let it go quietly into the night.

    --
    GetOuttaMySpace - The Anti-Social Network
  6. To be shutdown... by jellomizer · · Score: 4, Funny

    Then turned on back again only when it is needed... It is not about privacy it is about running green. Using less power by turning off the database when you don't need it.

    --
    If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    1. Re:To be shutdown... by griffjon · · Score: 1, Insightful

      You people are such cynics! I for one believe that the government has learned its lesson and this project will never return. I'm sure however that there was some public/private partnerships to pull the data together, and that the govt will soon be able to contract out for the same data it used to just have internally. I wonder how attending a peace rally affects your credit rating?

      --
      Returned Peace Corps IT Volunteer
    2. Re:To be shutdown... by b0s0z0ku · · Score: 1
      I wonder how attending a peace rally affects your credit rating?

      AFAIK, credit reports are itemized; they're not a number that's pulled out of someone's bumhole. And items that are patently false are contestable (not to mention probably likely to be actionable in court as slander if they're deliberately put there).

      -b.

    3. Re:To be shutdown... by rainmayun · · Score: 1

      Credit reports and credit scores are two distinct things. Credit reports are indeed itemized lists of various items. "Credit score" usually refers to the Fair-Isaac Company (FICO) score, which is used as a proxy for the content of your credit report in a variety of transactions, the most important of which is borrowing money.

      What this all has to do with peace rallies, I don't have the foggiest.

    4. Re:To be shutdown... by jcgf · · Score: 1

      I for one believe that the government has learned its lesson and this project will never return.

      There's one of you born every minute.

    5. Re:To be shutdown... by jellomizer · · Score: 1

      It wasn't about privacy it is more about effectiveness of the project... To many False positive. The database isn't going away it is being transfered to the FBI used in some sort of pre-investigation, where say they are investigating someone just to see if their are possibly affiliated to a possible terrorist organization. According to NPR.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    6. Re:To be shutdown... by griffjon · · Score: 4, Insightful

      OK folks, read up on the public/private datamining partnerships post 9-11. I recommend:

      Jerry Berman, "Security, Privacy and Government Access to Commercial Data," and

      Zoe Baird and James Barkdale, "Building a Trusted Information-Sharing Environment,"

      which both are published in _Protecting What Matters: Technology, Security, and Liberty Since 9/11_ by Clayton Northouse

      And you can probably preview some of their text in Amazon or Google.

      The basic point is that the government has been data mining private company data to try and predict criminal/terrorist activity, but has been operating without any good privacy or civil liberty guidelines or oversight. Worse, the public/private nature of the activity leads to very murky distinctions in who (govt or private contractors and data clearinghouses) "owns" what, and where said data lives and gets backed up.

      Another major issue here is the total lack of mechanisms for redress if your information is incorrect, compounded by differing goals of the various organizations collecting said data. A company errs on the side of more data with which to sell you stuff; it's no sweat off their back if they lose the cost of a poorly directed bulk-mail garden supply catalog because you let a friend use your loyalty card to buy their fertilizer every week for a discount (bad example, sure, but you get the point?). If said fertilizer gets implicated in a bomb making plot, the fact that you have weekly purchases of it tied to your name becomes very important to the government, at a high potential cost to your freedom.

      --
      Returned Peace Corps IT Volunteer
  7. Open and Honest is the only way to go by downix · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The problem with these closed systems, any closed system really, is the inability to find and locate not only the errors, but the correct data either. The more erroneous data there is, the less likely one will find and retrieve the needed data. If anything, you get a "security through obfuscation" situation, but you're giving the security for the folk you need to target!

    Keep your lists pruned and accurate. And the best method for this is with open and honest auditing in the public light. Not necessarily by the public themselves, but with public employees such as in the judicial system. Trained, skilled and non-biased eyes are always the best tools to not only perform oversight, but to keep this country or any country safe and secure.

    --
    Karma Whoring for Fun and Profit.
    1. Re:Open and Honest is the only way to go by NMerriam · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The problem with these closed systems, any closed system really, is the inability to find and locate not only the errors, but the correct data either. The more erroneous data there is, the less likely one will find and retrieve the needed data.


      That's only a problem if you actually expect to get highly accurate useful intelligence out of the system.

      The beauty of the real world is that even though everyone with expertise knows the system is buried in useless data, the 19-year old with the M4 who just found your name in the database considers it gospel that you're a terrorist, the 40-year old cop with his knee on your windpipe thinks he just stopped the next 9/11, and everybody involved gets a medal and a budget increase for protecting us from the bad guys.

      Nobody ever has to know that the only reason you were in the database in the first place is because you walked down the wrong street on your way to lunch 9 months ago and stopped to gawk at a WTO protest.
      --
      Recursive: Adj. See Recursive.
    2. Re:Open and Honest is the only way to go by hachete · · Score: 1

      Actually, you've hit the nail on the head. It is not so much collecting the data and keeping it - as other posters have said, you can't stop it in this day and age. I think the real problem comes when people regard these databases as a substitute for actually going out there and finding out what is actually going on. It's like those people who mistake building massive and intricate UML diagrams for actual code. In addition, these databases become a drain on resources (the many-elves problem of trying to sort massive amounts of data), a target for criminals and politicians, and friction as people try to sort false positives. All this as a substitute for better management and gum-shoeing. After all, 9/11 wasn't a failure of databases, it was a failure of people. Right now, I don't think those people problems have been solved because US agencies would rather stick their heads in a few databases.

      --
      Patriotism is a virtue of the vicious
  8. Sure they will by Weaselmancer · · Score: 1

    Computerworld reports that as of September 17th, the database will be shut down.

    You can trust me - I'm from the government. Would I lie to you?

    On a more serious note, how in the world could anyone actually verify this?

    --
    Weaselmancer
    rediculous.
  9. Where will the data go. by Irvu · · Score: 2, Insightful

    By "shutting it down" do they mean that they will simply stop adding new data to it? Or stop using it? Or will they locate every copy of every bit related to them and erase them? This would include all bits stored in backup tapes, offsite, etc.

    In any case what happens to the data? Will this be magically "forgotten" Will all records that came from the database and got copied to other departments (e.g. FBI files) be deleted as well?

    That's the trouble with data collection. Once it is collected it may never disappear.

  10. What does TALON stand for? by InvisblePinkUnicorn · · Score: 4, Funny

    I'm sorry, but the summary only explains the acronym twice, when I require a minimum of 3 times before I can be certain of its meaning.

    1. Re:What does TALON stand for? by ChefInnocent · · Score: 1

      The acronym TALON means Threat and Local Observation Notice. So when you read about the TALON database , you will know it is the Threat and Local Observation Notice database. Now just in case you missed it, Threat and Local Observation Notice can be shortened to TALON.

  11. slashdotliberalwhining? by saforrest · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Can whomever applied the "slashdotliberalwhining" tag to this article, presumably a self-described conservative or libertarian, please explain how a government that engages in surveillance of provably nonviolent political activism is exactly "small"?

    The cognitive dissonance here is just staggering.

    1. Re:slashdotliberalwhining? by rootofevil · · Score: 1, Informative

      libertarians would not complain about the closure of a government anything.

      --
      turn up the jukebox and tell me a lie
    2. Re:slashdotliberalwhining? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Yes, freedom is worth the sacrifice.

      "We are land of the free because we are home of the brave."

      Its time for someone to grow a backbone and stick to traditional American values like bravery instead of blatant cowardice.

    3. Re:slashdotliberalwhining? by mcmonkey · · Score: 3, Funny

      libertarians would not complain about the closure of a government anything.

      Yeah, but lose one book, and you'll never hear the end of it!

    4. Re:slashdotliberalwhining? by morgan_greywolf · · Score: 1

      You must be joking. Seriously. The CIA, and probably the FBI as well, knew that Al Qaeda terrorists were planning to fly planes into buildings on 9/11. But, according to various folks, they never took the threat seriously. What in the gods' names would they need with this database, when there were intelligence reports stating clearly that Al Qaeda terrorists were going to fly planes into building on September 11, 2001?

      Look, the implications of this are either A) those reading the intelligence reports were too stupid to take them seriously or B) something far more sinister. Given the government's ability (or lack thereof) to deliver the mail, probably A), but B) is possible if anyone could offer any real proof (I have yet to see anything but speculation). Either way you look at it, the database would have made no difference on September 10, 2001.

    5. Re:slashdotliberalwhining? by moogle001 · · Score: 1

      Can whomever applied the "slashdotliberalwhining" tag to this article, presumably a self-described conservative or libertarian, please explain how a government that engages in surveillance of provably nonviolent political activism is exactly "small"? It's not. Being liberal has apparently come to mean resisting Big Brother's efforts to protect us from the uberterrorists. Who knew?
    6. Re:slashdotliberalwhining? by 42Penguins · · Score: 1

      It's almost as if they're trying to cover up the fact that nearly every front page politics story is against something in the Bush administration. It's a vast left-wing conspiracy!

    7. Re:slashdotliberalwhining? by Nimey · · Score: 1

      I suspect the taggers are trolling.

      --
      Hail Eris, full of mischief...

      E pluribus sanguinem
    8. Re:slashdotliberalwhining? by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      Yes, freedom is worth the sacrifice.

      "We are land of the free because we are home of the brave."

      Its time for someone to grow a backbone and stick to traditional American values like bravery instead of blatant cowardice.


      OK. If 3000 dead is not enough for the Department of Homeland Security to have a file on you, is 30,000? How about 300,000? 3,000,000? How about all of us, that's 300 million? Do you doubt for a second that the guys that pulled of 9-11 wouldn't kill us all if they had the chance?

      Now, don't get me wrong, I'll gladly die for my freedoms as well as yours. These freedoms include a freedom of the press, free speech, religion and so on. Some database that will not stop me from leaving my house, or saying what I will, or going where I want, or stop me from doing any of the things provided to me by the Constitution, is worth dying for. It's not worth seeing my daughter die. It's not worth seeing my mother, wife, father, brother, sister, you or any of yours die. Because here is the kicker

      It does not affect my life at all!!!


      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    9. Re:slashdotliberalwhining? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      You mistake their purpose. They seek to make us bow and huddle in terror, not to kill us. Think about why we call them terrorists instead of murders.

      If I have done nothing wrong, then they should have no right to have a file on me what so ever, at least not on things which should be private. They just simply need to do more with what information they already had. After all, they had the pieces of the puzzle. I don't see how adding innocent men, women, and children's data can make this work better. To be honest, its just something that makes it easier for them to abuse in unlawful ways. Really they probably need to get back to the basics of investigation and communication.

    10. Re:slashdotliberalwhining? by bloodstar · · Score: 1
      13,000+ people died from drunk people getting into their car and hitting other cars or other objects last year. 13,000+ people died the year before for the same reason. If 3000 people is enough to justify ubiquitous information gathering you espouse, what would 13K dead each year justify? Fear is motivating you, but it's an irrational fear, as evidenced by the example above. Looking at it from a anecdotal justification like 'oh my god, it could be my sister, or my mother, or father", becomes a recipe to justify any excess. After all, 2 deaths are a tragedy, 2 million deaths are a statistic.

      Also, you're reversing the idea behind the Constitution, Try looking at it as maximal powers granted to the government instead of the maximum allowed to the individual. The idea of holding dossiers on American Citizens strikes me as anathema to very core of what America and the Constitution represents and stands for. After all, if 3000 people can justify the erosion of Constitutional protections, what would you propose to do about the death of 13K people each year?

      --
      "The bass, the rock, the mic, the treble. I like my coffee black, just like my metal" - Mindless Self Indulgence
    11. Re:slashdotliberalwhining? by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      13,000+ people died from drunk people getting into their car and hitting other cars or other objects last year. 13,000+ people died the year before for the same reason. If 3000 people is enough to justify ubiquitous information gathering you espouse, what would 13K dead each year justify?

      I fully support tough anti-drunk driving legislation. So what's you point? I especially support more common sense laws like allowing liquor to be sold 24 hours a day at liquor stores and limiting the amount of time bars can remain open. With bars, the patron still has to get home. At least with a liquor store, they are probably going to take it home where they won't have to drive anywhere. But what does that have to do with terrorism?

      Fear is motivating you, but it's an irrational fear, as evidenced by the example above. Looking at it from a anecdotal justification like 'oh my god, it could be my sister, or my mother, or father", becomes a recipe to justify any excess.

      I think you've misjudged me. It's not fear, it's anger. It pisses me off when lowlife cowardly thugs target and kill innocent civilians and then celebrate it. I want to do whatever it takes to stop these pieces of shit from being able to do that. Sorry, but fear is not my motivator.

      Also, you're reversing the idea behind the Constitution, Try looking at it as maximal powers granted to the government instead of the maximum allowed to the individual.

      I don't see how this database prevented me from doing anything at all. I'm sorry, but a bunch of ones and zeros on a bank of government hard drives is not going to keep me from speaking freely. It does not prevent me from being secure in my home, papers or effects. It does not limit the freedom of the press or keep me from going to church of my choice (or NOT go!). A remote database has no affect on me.

      The idea of holding dossiers on American Citizens strikes me as anathema to very core of what America and the Constitution represents and stands for. After all, if 3000 people can justify the erosion of Constitutional protections, what would you propose to do about the death of 13K people each year?

      I can not find anything in the Constitution that prevents the gov't from keeping an eye on me. However, I do see where the prohibition against alcohol was repealed. So, strictly interpreting Constitution, I have more a Constitutional right to drive drunk that I do to drive free from surveillance. However, I assume you agree with drunk driving regulation. How is that different than anti-terror legislation?

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    12. Re:slashdotliberalwhining? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      I have heard this invalid argument countless times. The problem is that giving up freedom for security is only worth it if there is a net benefit. If I give up my privacy rights, then that government program better damn work! The efficacy of all these programs is questionable at best. If you are not aware of how misconceived these programs are, then I suggest you read up on them.

      The problem is that many people feel a sense of safety each time their government passes a new law. On the political spectrum, the people who have these feelings can be considered authoritarians. The funny thing is that this submissive mentality has always been part of politics. It is probably embedded into our DNA at this point from all the authoritarian-type governments and social hierarchies that humans have lived through. The real struggle in the United States right now is not Liberal vs. Conservative; it is about people who embrace freedom, and those that do not.

      I hope that in the near future, more people will understand and embrace their freedom, instead of throwing it away whenever they hear a few keywords uttered on the television.

      ~ A concerned American Coward.

    13. Re:slashdotliberalwhining? by swalker42 · · Score: 1

      The cognitive dissonance here is just staggering.

      What I find staggering is the difference a '!' can make.
      Unless someone changed the tag, this has been tagged NOT slashdotliberalwhining.

      Typical kneejerk, attack at all costs, even when you dont know what you are talking about reaction
      if you don't know what '!' means, get the hell out of slashdot

      --
      You keep using that word, I do not think it means what you think it means
    14. Re:slashdotliberalwhining? by NMerriam · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but lose one book, and you'll never hear the end of it!
      :D I laughed
      --
      Recursive: Adj. See Recursive.
    15. Re:slashdotliberalwhining? by NMerriam · · Score: 1

      I would like someone, anyone, to explain to me how an extremely large passenger jet (757) can leave only a 16 foot diameter hole in the side a building, no damage from wings and very little (if any) debris at the site.


      The same way some gun rounds can pass through a human body and leave no exterior evidence aside from a clean hole a few mms across while others with the same energy but different designs can literally tear a person in half. There's a lot of strange stuff that happens when you get to different parts of velocity/mass/resistance curves.

      Guns and ammunition have to both be designed for their desired consequences against desired material -- an anti-personnel round is different from an anti-materiel round even if they're fired from the same weapon.

      Since nobody requires planes to be good at crashing into buildings, I doubt Boeing engineers spent much time to make sure the 757 framework would spread out in an acceptably dramatic way rather than compress when meeting 1940s era building materials at high speed.
      --
      Recursive: Adj. See Recursive.
    16. Re:slashdotliberalwhining? by NMerriam · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure what photos or videos you saw of the Pentagon on September 11th, but there was a mark.

      --
      Recursive: Adj. See Recursive.
    17. Re:slashdotliberalwhining? by swalker42 · · Score: 1

      which is why I put the disclaimer in there.
      why are the most pompous and arrogant ones always anonymous? Coward.

      --
      You keep using that word, I do not think it means what you think it means
    18. Re:slashdotliberalwhining? by swalker42 · · Score: 1

      again - that's why I put the disclaimer in there.
      Can't always be here to see the new stories. I have to be productive so I can support my family.
      Too bad there isn't anything to indicate that the tag was changed

      and again, why are the biggest tools always anonymous? Coward.

      --
      You keep using that word, I do not think it means what you think it means
    19. Re:slashdotliberalwhining? by Nimey · · Score: 1

      OK. Have you seen any pictures of what hurricanes and other high-wind phenomena do? They can throw a piece of wood (like a 2x4) most or all of the way through a tree or some other hard object. The wind throws the object so hard that it goes right through and leaves a hole the size of the thrown object's cross section or maybe a little larger.

      Like the other poster said, things get non-intuitive when you're talking about high velocity. Energy = mass times the square of the velocity. So, say a mass of 2 units and a velocity of ten units. That's 200 energy units. Now double the mass to 4. That's 400 energy units. Double the velocity to 20 but leave the mass at 2. That's 800 energy units. See the difference? It's linear versus exponential.

      FTM, did you see any pictures of the Pentagon afterwards? That was a big fucking mark the airliner left.

      --
      Hail Eris, full of mischief...

      E pluribus sanguinem
    20. Re:slashdotliberalwhining? by iminplaya · · Score: 1

      Some database that will not stop me from leaving my house, or saying what I will, or going where I want...

      How do you know that? To restrict your movements as they see fit is precisely the idea behind these things. It can put you on a "no fly list". They could take away your passport, or stamp your RealID and you'll never see Yellowstone again.

      It does not affect my life at all!!!

      Your lack of concern of how affects others notwithstanding. Do you stand with the enemies of freedom so they don't target you?

      --
      What?
    21. Re:slashdotliberalwhining? by swalker42 · · Score: 1

      and yet the posts I was replying to were being jerks outright.
      hmmm, wonder what the difference is.
      you are right though, in the grand scheme of things none of this matters, so I'm done with this thread.

      --
      You keep using that word, I do not think it means what you think it means
    22. Re:slashdotliberalwhining? by geminidomino · · Score: 1

      As a conservative, I find it unlikely that I can vote Republican ever again.
      Then you're really not a conservative are you? Who will you vote for, Hillary? Obama? Edwards? Please! More accurately, Republicans aren't conservative anymore.
    23. Re:slashdotliberalwhining? by saforrest · · Score: 1

      Do you truly believe, in your heart of hearts, that this surveillance is merely politically motivated?

      No, but I believe that politics are part of the motivation. (Though determining what the boundaries of "politics" are in this context is a tricky question.)

      That a cynical government engages in it for a purpose different from the stated one?

      Yes. At the risk of being insulting, I would say that believing otherwise at this point is evidence of a staggering degree of political naïvité.

      That it is unreasonable for the government to suspect that watching the movements and actions of people actively and vocally opposed to the "War on Terror" policies could gather useful information on the stated targets of those policies?

      Cast a large net, and you might catch some sharks, sure.

      But there are two problems with this:

      First, do you agree there are limits, of any kind, to what the government is permitted to do in the name of terror prevention? If North-America-wide martial law aided in the capture of terror suspects, should we attempt that?

      I believe there are limits, and that they lie well below what is currently practised.

      Second, as you mentioned before, there is a fair bit of evidence that the motives that the administration has for their data-collection schemes are selfish partisan ones, rather than in the interests of terror prevention.

      I personally believe this; while you may not, you can at least understand that my conclusions stem from my belief.

      Libertarians, as opposed to anarchists, still believe in "providing for the common defense."

      If the "common defense" requires the near-complete abdication of privacy and various individual rights for an indefinite period, in what way can a "libertarian" supporter of this position be regarded as libertarian?

    24. Re:slashdotliberalwhining? by morgan_greywolf · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I've seen the pictures. And I get the AC's point. What he's saying is that the 'big fucking mark' seems to not be nearly big enough for the size of a plane that the Boeing 757 is (which is just a bit smaller than a 747, which I can tell you from personal experience flying on one).

      However, knowing what I know about forensics and bullets at high velocity and applying that knowledge to a plane at high velocity slamming into the Pentagon, one thing still strikes me as odd. The lawn surrounding that portion of the Pentagon was untouched. As in, it's green not black. That just seems a bit odd to me. Plus, all of the surveillance video from surrounding private surveillance cameras that caught the footage of the plane were seized ... and what appears on that video, no matter what anyone says, does not look like a Boeing 757, but instead a much smaller aircraft.

      Still, it's difficult to identify from the videos that were released later exactly what kind of aircraft it was. The footage is grainy and blurred. It's like watching the Zapruder film, only worse. Hence, in my mind, there still exists a lack of solid physical evidence to suggest that the conspiracy theories are true. But that same lack of physical evidence doesn't help to show that truth is being told, either.

      IOW, everyone needs to be able to look at what happened, look at what's out there and think for themselves rather than necessarily believing what they are told by anyone.

    25. Re:slashdotliberalwhining? by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      More accurately, Republicans aren't conservative anymore.

      Well, you got me there! I guess I'm going to have to go vote against people rather than for others!

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    26. Re:slashdotliberalwhining? by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      You mistake their purpose. They seek to make us bow and huddle in terror, not to kill us. Think about why we call them terrorists instead of murders.
      No, I'm pretty sure they want us all dead. If they could kill all of us, I'm sure they would gladly oblige. The purpose of genocide is not submission.

      If I have done nothing wrong, then they should have no right to have a file on me what so ever, at least not on things which should be private.
      Like what, exactly? Do you know what is in your file? Do you know what was in anyone's file? How do you know it's not just an accumulation of all the other crap other agencies have one you, like income, credit history, bank records, previous addresses and so on. What makes you think your favorite sexual position is listed somewhere in a NSA database?

      To be honest, its just something that makes it easier for them to abuse in unlawful ways.
      Name for me a tool that is used for crime fighting or investigation that does NOT make it easier for them to abuse in unlawful ways. Just one. Should we take phones out of all government offices? After all, they could be used to make abusing your rights easier. Are any tools really abused in unlawful ways to take away your rights? Are your Constitutional rights squelched? Have you ever been asked for you papers? Have you ever been denied or even had to request travel within the US? NO! Why do you think a bunch of ones and zeros on a government bank of hard drives is going to change any of that at all. How can data kept anywhere have any effect on you. Data can't keep you from going to work. Data can't keep your from speaking out. Data can not keep you from going to church. A database can not touch you in any way shape or form. I'll grant you that people can, but if that was their goal, they would already be doing it with or without this database.

      If your rights are being violated, there are many major media outlets that would love to be the first to break your story! You'd be the number ONE on Keith Uberman tonight and the see through flat-screen on Bill Mahr! There would be protests all over the country with people screaming "One Two Three Four! Kick Bush's out right out the Door!" How does this database make the government immune from the press and the public?

      Maybe you should be going after your imaginary boogie-men before you take away tools for honest men and women who really just want to make a career out of protect you and me. Now I understand you probably think that view is a bit optimistic, and maybe it is, but it's certainly more likely than your scenario of men with black suits want to watch all Americans, all the time so that they can lock all Americans in their homes and say "Boo!" in your window late at night.

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
  12. Press release, not real action by achbed · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'll believe it when (a) an indpendent agency - not a government one, but someone like the ACLU - verifies that they watched the procedure of wiping the drives per DoD standards of data erasure, and (b) pigs fly. Even if they invite an independent auditor in to watch the erasing and decommissioning of the database, you know for a fact there's a second (or third, or fourth) copy out there, simply for redundancy and disaster recovery. And I really doubt that the Bush administration will allow anyone into their secret data lairs. This is more PR to get the monkey to shift shoulders for a while.

    1. Re:Press release, not real action by achbed · · Score: 1

      Oh, and they specifically stated in the article that the data gathered would be moved to the FBI database tracking the same info. So yeah, they're shutting it down, but keeping the data. Yay us.

    2. Re:Press release, not real action by syousef · · Score: 1

      I'll believe it when (a) an indpendent agency - not a government one, but someone like the ACLU - verifies that they watched the procedure of wiping the drives per DoD standards of data erasure

      Yes because if an agency agreed to that the data could not possibly have been copied before it was so publicly wiped?

      Almost anything passes for "insightful" here lately.

      --
      These posts express my own personal views, not those of my employer
  13. Plain old Dishonest. New Laws Needed. by twitter · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The problem with these closed systems, any closed system really, is the inability to find and locate not only the errors, but the correct data either.

    The real problem is that people are collecting the data in the first place. People have no idea how much information is being stored about them by companies like ChoicePoint and how that data is just a request away from anyone. This is collected without their knowledge, permission or benefit. It is always used against them. At the very least, vendors and service providers should have to disclose what they are collecting and who they sell it to. At the best, most of it would be against the law to collect. Technology has created new threats and new laws need to be made to counter these threats that economic advantage alone won't eliminate.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

  14. Quo't they might be giants... by plasmacutter · · Score: 1

    "where your eyes don't go a part of you is hovering. It's a nightmare that you'll never be discovering"

    --
    VLC FOR MAC IS DYING! IF YOU DEVELOP, PLEASE SAVE IT!!
  15. Re:I bet they save the backups by MightyMartian · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Why Sep 17th? Why not shut it down now?
    They have to have the protocols in place to keep gathering data so that when the database is moved around and renamed, they can quickly bring it up to date and carry on.
    --
    The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
  16. Re:And TALON will be replaced by? by Starcom8826 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    How on earth does something like this get "Insightful" ? If it will get replaced, then you can just say "see, I told you so" despite apparently not being more secretive. If it doesn't, then you can say "well, they're more secretive." There's absolutely no way you can disprove such a statement.

  17. Remember talon news? by damn_registrars · · Score: 1

    Anybody else remember the hoo-hah that came up regarding the bogus reporter that gained white house press access under "Talon News"?

    Their chief correspondent, "Jeff Gannon", turned out later to be a complete fake (and a male prostitute at that). I find it interesting that the bogus news agency has a similar name to the overbearing government database.

    I'll take off my tinfoil hat now and shut up.

    --
    Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
  18. Obligatory new spam from this "data" by plasmacutter · · Score: 3, Funny

    "Cialis, because you never know when the time you test your bomb at university will become the right time"

    --
    VLC FOR MAC IS DYING! IF YOU DEVELOP, PLEASE SAVE IT!!
  19. When again are elections? by Opportunist · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I am a cynic, but could it be that we are supposed to forget 'til then that something like this existed and continue to be good citizens and vote 'em in again?

    But most likely it's just going to be replaced by a less public version, so we don't question our leader's intentions.

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  20. Re:And TALON will be replaced by? by Dr+Caleb · · Score: 1

    "And TALON will be replaced by?"

    The Moya Database.

    --
    "History doesn't repeat itself, but it does rhyme." Mark Twain
  21. Re:And TALON will be replaced by? by Hatta · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There's absolutely no way you can disprove such a statement.

    That doesn't mean it's not true. Experience suggests it is.

    --
    Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
  22. liberal whining? by dR.fuZZo · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is tagged as slashdotliberalwhining? I thought limited government used to be a conservative ideal. Everything the current administation does isn't automatically "conservative" just because the President is a Republican.

    --
    -- dR.fuZZo
    1. Re:liberal whining? by plasmacutter · · Score: 1

      This is tagged as slashdotliberalwhining? I thought limited government used to be a conservative ideal. Everything the current administation does isn't automatically "conservative" just because the President is a Republican.


      please do get with the times, the words "conservative" and "liberal" are now newspeak terms with the respective definitions of "patriot" and "slithering traitor".

      on that note I believe in socialized medicine, but i would settle for republican if they actually WERE conservative.. as in "get the government out of my face".

      no welfare, but also:
      no dmca
      no drug laws
      no government sponsored religion.
      --
      VLC FOR MAC IS DYING! IF YOU DEVELOP, PLEASE SAVE IT!!
  23. Re:And TALON will be replaced by? by WindowlessView · · Score: 1

    Allow us to simplify it for you. Regardless of what "news" you read or what the various levels of government tell you, if you don't assume you are being watched and tracked to one degree or another all the time, then you are an idiot.

    --
    Leave the gun, take the cannolis.
  24. Re:Maybe I can fly now. by aplusjimages · · Score: 5, Funny

    I don't know, with a name like Anonymous you're bound to be flagged.

    --
    Can I bum a sig?
  25. Re:Plain old Dishonest. New Laws Needed. by Chyeld · · Score: 1, Insightful

    While avocate strongly for the right to privacy, to complain that there are groups out there collecting information on people is the height of trying to put the genie back in the bottle.

    We are in the INFORMATION AGE. Your information is going to be collected whether you like it or not. What you should be agitating for is more responsible use of that information by the collectors and consumers and more education on what information being collected and how for the 'targets'.

    What you should be agitating for is for companies and governments to stop basing their security/identification on now publicly avaliable information (Dates of Birth, SSN, "mother's madien name").

    Don't waste your time on trying to 'control' what is being collected, the bad guys won't pay any heed and the good guys already have enough problems on their plate. Instead, spend your time on pushing for this information to be handled responsibly and INTELLIGENTLY, and not just as an afterthough.

  26. STALLION by EmbeddedJanitor · · Score: 5, Funny

    Secret Threat and Local Liberal Interferer Observation Notice

    --
    Engineering is the art of compromise.
  27. Re:5 years by funwithBSD · · Score: 1

    So all those people who put "TIA" at the end of their emails are warning me the CIA is watching?!

    ZOMG!

    --
    Never answer an anonymous letter. - Yogi Berra
  28. Why Sept 17th? by Sierpinski · · Score: 1

    So that gives them what... 27 days to copy all of that data to another database? If they're going to shut down a database, why do they need to wait all that time? Just shut it down now. It's not like it needs a cooldown period or something. Delete it before some last-minute tool can get in there and mess with it.

  29. Using Monster.com instead by athloi · · Score: 1

    It's more secure.

    I, for one, welcome our new corporate-governmental Orwellian database overlords.

  30. With things like this.... by 8127972 · · Score: 1

    .... Soviet Russia seems better all the time. At least they're honest about stuff like this.

    --
    This is my opinion. To make sure you don't steal it, it's covered by the DMCA.
    1. Re:With things like this.... by Nimey · · Score: 1

      If you think the Soviets were honest about that, you haven't looked at any Soviet-era propaganda, the stuff that the proles were meant to see.

      --
      Hail Eris, full of mischief...

      E pluribus sanguinem
  31. The citizen protection database! by Rasputin · · Score: 1

    Or some such non-sequitur.

    --
    "I once preached peaceful coexistence with Windows. You may laugh at my expense - I deserve it." Be's Jean-Louis Gass
  32. Commercialize it! by WPIDalamar · · Score: 1

    So... who did they sell the database to? :(

  33. And they report data stolen or lost in 3 - 2 - 1 by geekwithsoul · · Score: 2, Interesting

    So any guesses on how long it will take for some report to surface that the hard disks or printouts from this were stolen or lost after the close it down?

  34. Re:And TALON will be replaced by? by Starcom8826 · · Score: 1

    Oh I know I'm going to be watched to some degree whether it be by government or private institutions. However, allow me to simply for you. Regardless of what "spin" you try to put on it, the comment was essentially meaningless, and as such, how can it be insightful? Its interesting how you add all that drivel about news I read and slip in that about the government besides me not having said anything about whether or not I actually believe that it will be replaced or not. But if you indeed really can't cope with someone saying something against a comment that you sympathize with, then you are an idiot.

  35. Re:And TALON will be replaced by? by Starcom8826 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Not exactly, I'd say experience suggests that it may be replaced by something that is supposed to be secretive but we find out about it anyways.

  36. Re:Maybe I can fly now. by b0s0z0ku · · Score: 1
    Wow, maybe I can fly again now! I wonder if I'll still have to bring ID...

    AFAIK, courts have ruled that you DON'T need ID for domestic flights. However, airlines and the TSA can make the security screening pretty darn unpleasant for those without ID.

  37. Re:Plain old Dishonest. New Laws Needed. by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

    While avocate strongly for the right to privacy, to complain that there are groups out there collecting information on people is the height of trying to put the genie back in the bottle.

    Oh please. This is, at best, a non-sequitor, at worst a strawman argument. This isn't about "putting the genie back in the bottle". This is about setting regulations and guidelines for how this data can be used. Canada has already passed laws to this effect, which seem to be working fairly well. The only reason the US doesn't do the same is a lack of political will ('course, things like corporate lobbyists don't help).

  38. Run that argument by me again by benhocking · · Score: 1

    Are you suggesting that because some people are put on the list legitimately (ignoring whether or not she was legitimately put on the list), no one is put on the list illegitimately? If not, I've got to tell you, that's sure what it sounds like you're saying.

    --
    Ben Hocking
    Need a professional organizer?
  39. No by Mr+44 · · Score: 4, Informative

    No, you are thinking of the Total Information Awareness program, which was very different. That (and its associated programs) were/are datamining everybody's credit reports, public records, etc to find "terrorist patterns".

    This program is unrelated. It's not datamining anything. All this is is a centralized database of threats to DoD installations and personnel. Sure, it has its potential for abuse, but its a very different animal from TIA, and confusing the two does't help anyone.

    1. Re:No by jafac · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The non-sensationalist version of this story?

      TALON is really just used to schedule when bases need to ramp up security to accommodate peace protester groups. It's actually there to benefit the protesters. Not some scary conspiracy to track them. If a protest is staged at a base, and there isn't enough security, there can be traffic issues, counter-protest issues, saboteurs can use genuine peaceful protests as cover for distraction, there are a lot of legitimate reasons for the operators of a secure facility to have a way to coordinate and even cooperate with protest groups. The army has to do their job; protect the country - but protesters are often "the country" they're trying to protect.

      The mainstream media doesn't report this angle of the story. I don't know why - maybe it's bias, or maybe it's just not controversial (profitable) when told this way.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    2. Re:No by bobcat7677 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I find your story explaining their side of it very thin. Downright anorexic even. What you speak of is called a "shared calendar". You don't need a database detailing individuals to keep track of events.

    3. Re:No by Original+Replica · · Score: 4, Insightful

      there are a lot of legitimate reasons for the operators of a secure facility to have a way to coordinate and even cooperate with protest groups.

      Unfortunately one of the reasons is to render the protest invisible. When protesters are relocated into "first amendment zones" they are most often out of sight of the political figures they are trying to make aware of their outrage, and the protesters are out of sight of the press covering the political event being protested. The entire point of a protest is to disrupt an event or the regular flow of life. If UN delegates cannot get into the UN because of the thousands of protesters around it, that sends a message to the world. If those same thousands of protesters are herded into a park half a mile away, there is no message(other than a big "go fuck yourself" to the protesters) With things like first amendment zones and hate crime (punishing the intent not the actions) and seperating suspected terrorists from the Geneva Convention rights (again punishing intent) and databasing protest groups right along with with terrorist groups, we are rapidly criminalizing certain thoughts and ideals. We are well along the path towards outlawing any passionate dissent in our country. What is freedom if not the right to passionately and vocally disagree with the established powers?

      I am not actually against the War in Iraq, I don't want the spread of Shira law and I think it is right for free nations to fight it. But I do think the way this war has been run is criminal, and many of the actions taken in the name of "The War on Terror" are treason. If I want to express this patriotism and thus end up on a database/watchlist created to protect the government from "threats". What does this say about the legitimacy of any protester tracking program?

      --
      We are all just people.
    4. Re:No by Original+Replica · · Score: 1

      "Too complicted a situation for you to grasp, perhaps??? "

      I grasp the situation just fine. But then I'm not the one with 19 question marks in an 11 sentence paragraph. Let me break it down for you. Shira Law spreads on it's own accord. Obviously it spreads more easily to weak fractured nations, but that does not mean that the weakening or fracturing of a nation is the cause of the spread of Shira Law. When I said that the way the war was being run was criminal, it was the pitiful condition of Iraq that was foremost in my mind. Bush fails more miserably as a Commander in Chief than he did as an Oil Industry CEO, he is not the right man for the job and his incompetence has been catastrophic. But that does not mean that he was wrong when he saw that a Democracy based on Rule of Law and Separation of Church and State, could no longer peacefully coexist in a world with Shira Law, with it's special police and judges spanning nations and controlled by the edicts of radical religious leaders. The name he put to this was "terrorism" because that was how the Shira World attempted to punish our infidel ways. While that may have been politically expedient in late 2001, it has had us fighting the symptoms of the problem instead of fighting the problem itself.

      "Huh???? What war??? You can't even articulate what you are not actually against??? It is an illegal occupation.

      Every war in history has been at very least the attempt at "illegal occupation" according to one side or the other.

      --
      We are all just people.
    5. Re:No by StikyPad · · Score: 2, Interesting

      That's not actually true. There are lots of bases that get protested, and the military is trained to take it, but to be ready for threats. (Lots of people getting riled up can cause a few people to go too far). There are no "first amendment zones" around military bases; the protests typically take place at the main gate. The guards have to A) ensure that traffic in and out of the base isn't impeded, and B) be ready for threats ranging from thrown items to a full scale assault.

      What you describe is a civilian issue (yes, politicians are civilians, and the military is run by a civilian, in the US at least), and civilian authorities (state and local police) are responsible for what happens at, say, the UN building. That said, the right to free speech and freedom of assembly, in my opinion, does not equate to the right to physically interfere in the affairs of others. What's the difference between blocking access to the UN building and blocking access to an abortion clinic, except that you may happen to agree with one and disagree with the other? I vehemently disagree with "free speech" zones, but I'm also against blocking access to a facility, if for no other reason than safety -- if someone needed to leave in a hurry because of fire, or a medical emergency, or whatever, they'd be screwed. We could argue morality all day, but the legal and public safety issues are clear: blocking access is unacceptable. Again, the right to free speech is the right to say what you want, not the right to do what you want, or to force people to listen to you.

      All of that said, I'm also against superfluous and/or potentially abusive Federal programs, and I won't lose any sleep over the shutdown of this database. Almost every jurisdiction requires a group to file permits in advance of a large protest or gathering, and most events (G8 summit) are guaranteed to attract protesters. It's not like anybody's caught off guard by these things.

    6. Re:No by Cassius+Corodes · · Score: 1

      Don't feed the trolls, chief.

      --
      Control is an illusion, order our comforting lie. From chaos, through chaos, into chaos we fly
    7. Re:No by Kjella · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I am not actually against the War in Iraq, I don't want the spread of Shira law and I think it is right for free nations to fight it.

      1) It's Sharia law
      2) Saddam wasn't ruling by anything remotely close to Sharia law
      3) There's now a good chance Iraq will be ruled by Sharia law

      In short, your position makes no sense.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    8. Re:No by Cathbard · · Score: 1
      Several points:

      1. Is the US actually part of the free world? (Patriot Act, Guantanamo Bay, "Ist amendment areas", unauthorised surveliance, etc). The US isn't even really a democracy because their poor are forced into crime (due to the effective absence of a welfare system or a public health system) and are then made ineligible to vote. It's government by the rich of the rich for the rich. That's not democracy.

      2. If a sovereign nation wants to adopt ANY law, what business is it of the US? What gives the US the right to force their twisted ideology upon others. Did it ever occur to you that the rest of the world isn't jealous of the US at all and actually don't want to go down the US path?

      The rest of your post I agree with but you have revealed a philosophy that detracts from it.

      --
      "A cynic is what an idealist calls a realist" - Sir Humphrey Appleby
    9. Re:No by e-scetic · · Score: 1

      What utter nonsense. This program was tracking people's political affiliations, political viewpoints, the dates and times of meetings with their groups, who was present at the meetings, etc. These were legitimate groups too, such as Anti-war groups. You're full of shit, TALON wasn't for improving safety at protests, it was about keeping track of war dissenters, treating them as potential threats.

    10. Re:No by russotto · · Score: 1

      2. If a sovereign nation wants to adopt ANY law, what business is it of the US?
      I think perhaps you haven't considered the various absolutely horrid laws sovereign nations have passed. Ranging from, oh, say, apartheid all the way to laws requiring that certain persons turn themselves in for extermination. Somewhere in the middle being human slavery. Are all other nations supposed to respect the rights of those nations to go down those paths?
    11. Re:No by discogravy · · Score: 1

      1. Is the US actually part of the free world? (Patriot Act, Guantanamo Bay, "Ist amendment areas", unauthorised surveliance, etc). The US isn't even really a democracy because their poor are forced into crime (due to the effective absence of a welfare system or a public health system) and are then made ineligible to vote. It's government by the rich of the rich for the rich. That's not democracy.

      Yes, it is part of the free world. It's current administration is making a concerted effort to ruin the things that make the United States of America great -- legally, as a nation, as an idea -- but it's still a part of the free world. There's a welfare system and a public health system. That they are ...not very good, let's say...doesn't mean that they don't exist. Anyone who goes into crime makes a choice to do so. It's a rare person that commits a felony first off and right away gets caught and loses their right to vote. Also: No, it's not a democracy, it's a democratic republic. Anyone who tells you it's a democracy doesn't know what the word means.

    12. Re:No by jafac · · Score: 1

      I don't personally agree with "free speech zones" - I think they are a clear violation of civil rights.

      But on the other hand, when you're talking about a military base, there has to be a limit as to where protesters can do their business. (for example; I'd say the runway is off-limits, the safety of landing air traffic trumps protesters' right to speech, especially when they can freely exercise their speech 100 yards away, on the other side of a chain-link fence; or an even better example, at a missile range, like Cape Kennedy or Vandenberg AFB, within the safety limits of 2 miles of a launch operation. - you have a right to speak. You do not have a right to interfere with an operation that is costing taxpayers tens or even hundreds of millions of dollars. - and in one specific case I'm aware of; animal rights activists infiltrated a beach by VAFB to protect an endangered bird nesting area; but really, all they wanted to do was be a pain in the ass during a launch - they ended up *destroying* two nests, and getting fined. The air force maintains a group of specialists at this site specifically to monitor and protect the sensitive environmental concerns, including the Snowy Plovers, the base, itself, is actually a huge nature preserve, and the wildlife is far better protected by the air force than in many national forests. While the air force is far from perfect - they've got their share of toxic spills, and other issues from the past, the great benefit of keeping people the hell out of this area does far more to protect the environment than the well-meaning, but angry, young, activists.)

      In instances where a public speaking event by an official, like the President, at a public place, like a hotel or a stadium, where protesters were shunted off to an empty field a mile distant - that's clearly wrong. There's no justification, or safety rationalization for that.

      And on your second point - as I understand it, TALON tracks groups, and groups may have contact information for Points of Contact, and leaders. But they do not maintain membership lists, or track associations. (and as a disclaimer: I have no official connection with anyone involved with the program - this is all publicly available, uncontrolled information; if there are un-public uses, or abuses, and I'm not saying there aren't, I have no knowledge of that. - )

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    13. Re:No by jafac · · Score: 1

      After my first reply, I more carefully re-read your post, and I found something to disagree with.

      I agree with a protester's right to speak freely, and dissent.
      I *do* wish that voices of dissent in this country could be more widely heard.

      I do not agree with a protester's right to "send a message" or to "interfere" or to "punish". Your right to swing your fist ends at my face.

      I can see why someone feels it's necessary to do so. In today's world - where the voice of the people is so overwhelmed by big-money interests. Where the system is rigged like a big, crooked casino. There's really a loss of hope, and a feeling of helplessness. A loss of faith in the democratic system. (see my .sig).

      It may, indeed, be necessary for a protester to "interfere" or to "punish" or to "send a message".
      But there is no inherent "right" to civil disobedience.

      A protester who takes those matters into his or her own hands, takes the responsibility of facing the consequences of those actions. And in this increasingly fascistic system, with databases, wiretapping, teargas, tasers, rendition, torture, - those consequences are becoming more and more severe.

      But I still don't want anyone to have the "right" to inflict civil disobedience without consequences. Because I don't agree with everyone who decides to take up a sign and march. This society needs change, and desperately. But there's plenty of people out there who are just as happy to march with a sign, throw bricks, light crosses on fire, and change things in ways you wouldn't want to see.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    14. Re:No by sgt_doom · · Score: 1

      The government in Iraq - a puppet government installed by this criminal organization which runs America - is an Islamic Theocracy which has legalized pedophila. Do you know of anything you speak of? Evidently not. Have you - or that clown below you - ever actually read a book from front to end in the last several years? You sound like a mindless Bill Krystal clone - always and forever wrong on everything and far too ignorant to begin to appreciate the extent of your ignorance.....Iraq had been a secular nation, moron.

    15. Re:No by sgt_doom · · Score: 1

      Cassius Corodes, howdy there chief and please answer this one question - have you ever read a book - within the last several years? Do you, or that clown you've posted to, have any idea what you are talking about? He doesn't even know it's supposed to be SHARIA law, for god's sakes.

  40. They must have something better. by k1e0x · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The only reason they would come out and say, "Ohh you all were right and we are going to end this project." Is because they must have something better. Otherwise they would defend it, and tell us we needed it.. also why wait 2 months? Because the new system must be in testing..

    May I ask who is being held accountable for implementing this citizen tracking system? Wait, let me guess.. nobody as usual, right?

    --
    Bringing liberty to the masses. - http://freetalklive.com/
  41. Re:Plain old Dishonest. New Laws Needed. by rainmayun · · Score: 1

    Which brings up an interesting philosophical question: Should data about you necessarily belong to you? What if the data is about more than one party? The useful example here is a transaction between a consumer and a company. Would you require consent of both parties before this data could be transferred or sold? What about third party observations of events? There are some clear lines, and some very fuzzy ones here.

  42. Re:SSDD by k1e0x · · Score: 1

    Too true.

    They already have a replaement however.

    --
    Bringing liberty to the masses. - http://freetalklive.com/
  43. Re:And they are waiting for another month because? by ushering05401 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ... to maximize the publicity.

    We are going into an election cycle and everyone is going to need to trot out their sound-bytes on this subject. I have no doubt this move will be spun as a blow for freedom, a blow against the war on terror, an example of liberal spinelessness in the pursuit of justice, an example of the American people calling the govt out and winning, and on and on and on and on...

    On another note, how likely is it that the military is simply giving up an effective tool? My bet is that this particular system has either been surpassed by another, was shown to be completely ineffective in the first place, or has been thrown to the wolves in exchange for concessions of another type.

    Regards.

  44. Re:And they are waiting for another month because? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    To make sure all the data is backed up and they have a new name for the program, duh.

  45. Re:And they are waiting for another month because? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Donald Rumsfeld uses a USB 1.0 pendrive.

  46. Nothing up their sleeves... by PopeRatzo · · Score: 4, Interesting

    plasmacutter, I think it goes something like this:

    "We're "shutting down" the database (fingers crossed behind our backs) but that doesn't mean we're going to delete all that data. See, we're just turning off the Microsoft Access front end that the administrative assistant in D-ring made back in June. We don't have anybody available who can actually "delete" any data, so we'll just leave it alone, but we promise (both hands behind their backs now) that we won't really use it."

    I'm really pretty shocked that with all that's gone on, that no media outlet has reported on the fact that the latest wire-tapping law that was passed the last day before congress went on vacation was signed by Bush, but...he actually added a signing statement that says, uh, he really doesn't have to follow the law because hey, he's the president and terrorists are trying to kill us after all..

    So, even though the law that was passed was EXACTLY the law the President wanted, because it was actually written by Al Gonzales and his assistants, he STILL doesn't have to obey it because... HEY LOOK OVER THERE! A TERRORIST!! BEHIND THAT TREE!1!!

    The most disturbing part of this whole mess is that the media, the Democrats, nobody will say shit about this unprecedented power grab because at heart they are all authoritarians who want to forget all about this "Constitution" nonsense so MONEY CAN BE MADE.

    People can say that this is nothing new, that when the Civil War was on Abe Lincoln suspended habeas corpus, and Roosevelt limited rights during WWII, but that's just a crock. In both those cases, Lincoln included, the presidents went to congress and got their permission to limit freedoms and for a limited amount of time. Bush is going solo on this one and since the Global War on Islamonaziliberalism is The Forever War, we'll never again have to bother with civil liberties, rights or privacy. Freedom has become obsolete in just the term of one president.

    Amazing.

    Fortunately, I've got faith in the belief in liberty held by many of the bright folks here at Slashdot, and I'm expecting a civil uprising against the surveillance culture to come in the form of hackers and other whitehat miscreants who will fight to put fat monkey wrenches into the efforts of the guys over at NSA. Hell, I'm not surprised if there are still a few patriots over in the NSA who might be building some backdoors into this machinery. Well, one can hope.

    The fight isn't over, but it's important for us to start recognizing the enemy. And guess what: he's not wearing a towel on his head.

    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.
    1. Re:Nothing up their sleeves... by Arancaytar · · Score: 1

      was signed by Bush, but...he actually added a signing statement that says, uh, he really doesn't have to follow the law because hey, he's the president and terrorists are trying to kill us after all..


      Well, he does that for pretty much all laws. It's a real stroke of fortune he never signed the Constitution.
    2. Re:Nothing up their sleeves... by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

      Wow arn't you a nutball
      That's "Mr. Nutball" to you.
      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
  47. Did anyone authorize Proctor & Gamble? by WheelDweller · · Score: 1, Insightful

    ..or the thousands of private databases across this world tracking everything from purchases made with Visa to issuance of a visa? In effect, we did...we all 'clicked through' something long ago, but for some reason, the government, on a mission to find the terrorists among us, are not permitted?

    To think this is the only one...to think the government is the only agent-of-study...it's all kinda naive, isn't it?

    --
    --- For a good time mail uce@ftc.gov
    1. Re:Did anyone authorize Proctor & Gamble? by some+old+guy · · Score: 1

      Qutie right. The whole privacy debate, as it pertains to databases and other elint, is moot except to the tin-foil hat crowd. Yours and my personal lives, right down to our preferred brand of beer, is on someone's easily-accessable database somewhere. If the US gov't (or worse, a UN NGO) wanted to know if I drank Newcastle Ale in large amounts they'd certainly be able to parse this with no trouble. Databases are not the front line of the privacy war anymore...it has devolved back on to who our leaders are and their intentions. The technical tools available to them are irrelevant in an age of public records and semi-public records.

      --
      Scruting the inscrutable for over 50 years.
  48. Re:You Mean An Activist Like This One? by ktappe · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I don't care if you're non-violent or not, if you're communicating with the enemy, we (the American public as represented by our government) want to know why. And we have every right to that knowledge.
    Wow, where to start replying to this straw-man, loaded, trolling, "you're either with us or against us" post...

    First, you are assuming that there is an "enemy". Just because Bush & Co. say we are at war and deploy our armies does not really mean we are. We are not being attacked (or at least I'm sure not) and all I see happening over there is people defending their country against foreign invaders much like white blood cells vs. a virus. You seem to be buying into the whole "war for war's sake" argument that they want you to.

    Next, you are assuming that Al Qaida is a big ol' enemy like Germany was in WWII when in fact it's a close equivalent to the KKK--a small ragtag association of uber-radicals who vastly overachieved on 9/11. Going to "war" with such a group is the epitome of going after a gnat with a sledgehammer--you are giving them too much credit and are very unlikely to hit them 'cos you are using far too large a tool. The U.S. military is simply not designed to fight a guerilla war just as the Redcoats were not trained to fight George Washington's guerillas. As such, the outcome of the conflict was determined long ago; the current George is simply unwilling to admit it just as George III was at first.

    Back to your "communicating with the enemy" claim. Just how many Americans do you think are really Al Qaida sympathizers? My best estimate would be under 100. You want our huge, bloated, red tape-ensconsed government to perform all this tracking to try (in vain) to come up with 100 numbnuts who barely have the $$ to pay their rent let alone do damage to anything? Again with the sledgehammer.

    All of the above aside, what if I'm *not* communicating with the enemy? The Feds still have my information, who I associate with, where I've been, etc. Treating the innocent as if they were guilty is absolutely NOT how this country was designed to work. If it's how you want it to work, I suggest you go to China or some other totalitarian society and live there.

    --
    "We can categorically state we have not released man-eating badgers into the area." - UK military spokesman, July 2007
  49. Re:Being on a list is scary. by nmos · · Score: 2, Insightful

    So the DoD wants to keep track of who is at what rally? In what way does that infringe on civil rights anymore than video monitoring of street corners in Baltimore, for instance?

    Keeping lists of citizens excercising their constitutional rights to speech and association is bad because the information can be used to intimidate citizens in subtle and hard to prove ways. While I personally don't know how being in the "Threat and Local Observation Notices" database could possibly do any harm, some people might worry that it would cause them to fail background screenings often required for employment, audits by the IRS, being singled out for "special treatment" at the airport etc. The more paranoid among us might even worry that if things were to really get bad then the first people they would come for would be those on these lists.

  50. Re:And TALON will be replaced by? by Jeppe+Salvesen · · Score: 1

    Yeah. When (if) you're old and retired and the information is declassified.

    Are absolutely all documents regarding WW2 declassified yet?

    --

    Stop the brainwash

  51. Re:And they are waiting for another month because? by felipekk · · Score: 1

    I wish I had mod points.

  52. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  53. Napoleon Dynamite asks: by daemonc · · Score: 1

    Do the chicken-hawks have large TALONs?

    --
    All that we see or seem is but a dream within a dream.
  54. In related news.... by djblair · · Score: 1

    ...a ton of used SAN equipment is about to hit eBay. Sweeeet.

  55. Re:Plain old Dishonest. New Laws Needed. by h2_plus_O · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The real problem is that people are collecting the data in the first place.
    That's not a problem. The problem is that some will abuse that information somehow. Really, the problem is that we use crappy public secrets like our mother's maiden name, our address, or our SSNs to secure our identities.

    There's no way in hell to stop people from gathering public information. For SURE new laws won't. After all, it's alredy illegal to abuse the data in the first place. Another new law would be just about as effective as gun crime laws, drug laws, etc.- they just make what was already illegal illegal again, woohoo!

    Data will go into databases because data is available and valuable. The only way forward that makes sense is not to try to stop it, but instead to make it less valuable. If you can't use someone's SSN and address to steal their identity, watch as that information becomes much less interesting to would-be thieves. Technology has reduced the cost of holding and searching and storing data, which reveals that mostly our personal security in the past has been protected by the fact that it was expensive to parse and mostly unavailable to thieves that didn't have access to your mailbox.
    We need to invent better security, not try to throw out everything that's valuable about technology.

    --
    If there's one thing I won't stand for, it's intolerance.
  56. Re:And TALON will be replaced by? by PitaBred · · Score: 1

    God? Is that you?

  57. Re:Plain old Dishonest. New Laws Needed. by Chyeld · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Yes and what that means is that the programs which collect the information either base themselves outside of Canada or they aren't publizied in Canada. If you honestly think that those laws actually mean that NO ONE has the indicated information collected, you are fooling yourself.

    The US had laws about spying on its own citizens. How well did that turn out?

    The US made promises that the SSN would ONLY be used in relation to Social Security matters, that it wouldn't be used as a universal "ID" tag. How well did that turn out?

    You _are_ trying to put the genie back in the bottle when you attempt to paint 'passing another law' as the solution.

    What used to be publicly available but extremely tedious to collect has become child's play to obtain. People slept too long under the impression that "security through obscurity" was a horrible way to lock down a computer system but perfectly ok to use to lock down their private life. It's too late to complain about it being out there. Maybe there should have been stronger safeguards. Maybe it shouldn't have been public. It DOES NOT MATTER, it's already out there.

    The information brokers today are people who operate above the board, but do you honestly think that if you made their business illegal there wouldn't be groups out there ready to play the part of the Mob in our little play of modern Prohibition? People are already out there selling pre-made kits for identity theft, CC#s, and other such black market 'information.

    What sort of fun could be had if we all just pretended the information wasn't out there and we were 'safe' to continue to use the old methods of doing things because it was 'illegal' to use the information that way.

    No, you won't have to worry about your supermarket knowing what you buy and sending you coupons. No, you won't have to worry about web sites saying "Looking for pills? Try BRANDX!" Instead you'll be wondering why your credit rating is in the shitter and find out that it's because you've been the target of 10 different identity theft scams. You'll find out that your credit card has been canceled because the bank has had enough of dealing with fradulent charges and simply cuts you off the first time you report one. Instead you'll come home to badly worded email threating to forward your boss every posting you've ever made online unless you start paying a 'fee' every month to keep the info buried. Or come home to a squad of SWAT police ready to knock down your door because someone put their face on an ID with your information on it before strolling into a bank and shooting up the place.

    What should be done is to minimize the amount of damage that can be done with that information. You aren't going to stem the flow, so stop trying to put up dams and instead work on routing the water around the places you care about. Start teaching people how to keep their public life and their private life seperate. Start teaching banks that no, it's not ok to just accept every CC application you receive and dump the costs of fraud on the consumer and the merchant. Start teaching companies, that they shouldn't be using SSN as a replacement employee identification.

    You aren't going to remove the ability to get this information, I'm sorry. Canada and the UK had a far easier time of it because they aren't the size of the US. What flies there doesn't always fly here, and it's not always about lobbies or will.

  58. Re:Maybe I can fly now. by Monsterdog · · Score: 1

    Just wait. Next year Rea;ID is supposed to kick in, and then you either show up with a Federally approved ID under that program, or with a passport -- or you don't fly. States are fighting this, but DHS and their cohort are giving them a big wet "fuck you" response.

  59. Re:And TALON will be replaced by? by WindowlessView · · Score: 1

    Feel better now?

    I wish you did say something against a comment I sympathize with but you didn't. You were just trying to appear clever and ended up looking petty, like the kid who learns something about proofs in math class and tries to apply it in the next period English class. The observation may be technically true but it doesn't make it appropriate, insightful, or any less a waste of anyone's time given the context and the fact that it ignores the larger point under discussion.

    --
    Leave the gun, take the cannolis.
  60. Re:And TALON will be replaced by? by Hatta · · Score: 1

    Uh there's a difference here. Speculating whether a political program will continue is not science, theorizing on the nature of the universe is. Further, we have previous experience to back up our hunches in this case, but we have no other universes from which to draw conclusions from.

    But you're right. The fact that you can't disprove the existence of god doesn't mean he doesn't exist. Doesn't mean he does either.

    --
    Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
  61. Re:And they are waiting for another month because? by soupforare · · Score: 2, Interesting

    They've got an "event" planned between then and now and they need for it to happen so that all of us forget about ever even hearing about any database.

    --
    --- Do you believe in the day?
  62. Re:Being on a list is scary. by compro01 · · Score: 1

    did you shave with Hanlon's razor?

    though seriously, it doesn't matter if it is malice or incompetence. the end result is more or less identical.

    --
    upon the advice of my lawyer, i have no sig at this time
  63. erasure by celle · · Score: 1

    Until they nuke the eastern and western seaboards I'll never believe its gone. EMP is a true friend of privacy. Oh, and while were at it, nuke Omaha and St. Paul. That way we can all be debt free again too.

    1. Re:erasure by docwatson223 · · Score: 1

      Actually nuke Parkersburg, WV because that's where the Bureau of Public Debt is.

  64. Re:Plain old Dishonest. New Laws Needed. by twitter · · Score: 1

    Don't waste your time on trying to 'control' what is being collected, the bad guys won't pay any heed and the good guys already have enough problems on their plate. Instead, spend your time on pushing for this information to be handled responsibly and INTELLIGENTLY, and not just as an afterthough.

    The only way to stop misuse is to stop collection. A grocer, for example, will not collect or store identifying information if that's against the law. They then won't be able to sell your alcohol, birth control and over the counter medical purchases to the insurance company. Trying to regulate that kind of thing after it's collected is the afterthought that's doomed to fail. Other institutions, like libraries should delete records when they are no longer needed to account for books and no other organizations should have access to the temporary records.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

  65. Re:Slamming down the wrong door by mi · · Score: 2, Interesting

    If they weren't planning on using it for anything, why do they need the information?

    They were using — for their own purposes. If you audit a government agency — any government agency — you'll find countless databases and spreadsheets. All used for something. This list may have been discontinued, but countless others remain, and there is nothing automatically wrong about it.

    As long as it is not a law, that being on a list automatically means something non-trivial, the protesting is of little sense.

    A much scarier example is (or, rather, should be) the "security clearance" — it can be revoked by the government without much recourse, depriving someone of the livelyhood and ruining a career... It is just that people , who are (potentially) affected by that, are reasonable and decent, and don't generate the inflammatory headlines, so this and other real outrages are continuously drowned out by the non-issues like the list in subject.

    --
    In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
  66. The lines are clear. by twitter · · Score: 1

    There are some clear lines, and some very fuzzy ones here.

    Most communities have very clear ideas about what kind of data collecting and sharing are abusive. A grocer who told people about so and so's booze buying was once called a gossip. Now credit cards and vendors alike collect and sell that kind of information, in defiance of community standards. If the extent of collection and selling becomes known, people are going to be offended and make laws against the practices.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

    1. Re:The lines are clear. by general_re · · Score: 1

      What makes you think they don't already know?

      --
      ABSURDITY, n.: A statement or belief manifestly inconsistent with one's own opinion.
  67. Less than it appears to be by Whuffo · · Score: 3, Insightful
    While the original article does say that the TALON database will be shut down - and acknowledges that there's uncorrected errors in the data - there's some things that aren't made clear.

    For example, the database isn't going to be deleted - it's just getting moved to a different agency. They'll give it a different name, but that database will live on. And those errors in the data? Nobody said anything about correcting them.

    So it's really a "Tom shuts it down then gives it to Bob who turns it right back on" kind of deal. Politics as usual...

  68. Yes, we're taking it down by billcopc · · Score: 1

    Nothing to see here folks, move along.

    (plugs the server back in)

    That's right, this new Anti-Terror database has nothing to do with the one I unplugged ten seconds ago. War is Peace. Ignorance is Strength, and all that hum-dum.

    -Dubya

    --
    -Billco, Fnarg.com
  69. shuts down? by SQLz · · Score: 1

    "US Shuts Down Controversial Anti-Terror Database" basically means that the database has been elevated to top secret status.

  70. Re:Being on a list is scary. by alienmole · · Score: 3, Insightful

    So the DoD wants to keep track of who is at what rally? In what way does that infringe on civil rights anymore than video monitoring of street corners in Baltimore, for instance? Or red light cameras? Attending a rally is by definition not an act of someone desiring privacy.
    Good lord, you would have loved it back in apartheid South Africa, or cold war East Germany or the Soviet Union, all places which just loved to keep track of their citizens' "subversive" behaviors like that. If you can't see the difference between a red light camera (which monitors illegal and dangerous behavior for law enforcement purposes) and keeping track of the names of people who exercise their constitutional right to freedom of speech and assembly, then you can safely be declared liberty-blind, and should leave the assessment of such things to those more discerning than you.
  71. Re:And they are waiting for another month because? by Lesrahpem · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is more than likely a stunt exactly like was pulled with Echelon. They're "officially" deactivating it and will continue to fund it and operate it secretly using alternate funding.

  72. Re:Maybe I can fly now. by megaditto · · Score: 1

    You got it backwards about the court rulings I think.

    --
    Obama likes poor people so much, he wants to make more of them.
  73. They shut down nothing by iminplaya · · Score: 1

    They simply renamed it.

    --
    What?
  74. Not a wonder. by LinuxWhore · · Score: 1

    "Congress and others protested its apparent use as an unauthorized citizen tracking database."

    Meanwhile, Congressional approval ratings drop to 18%.

    --

    I am MuchTall
  75. Re:And they are waiting for another month because? by MrNaz · · Score: 1

    I don't even know why anyone takes government seriously when they say they'll shut down something like this. That they'll just push it out of public view is, to me, not even doubtful.

    --
    I hate printers.
  76. Ron Paul wouldn't spy on the citizens by SonicSpike · · Score: 2, Informative

    Ron Paul has voted against this sort of thing over and over again. This is all the more reason to get him into the Presidency.

    --
    Libertas in infinitum
  77. Re:And they are waiting for another month because? by The+One+and+Only · · Score: 2, Insightful

    My favorite example of this came early on after 9/11, when word broke that the Pentagon had developed a new program to disseminate lies and misinformation among the public in order to throw the terrorists off or something. There was a large uproar, so the Pentagon quickly came forth to say the program was canceled. Now that's smooth.

    --
    In Repressive Burma, it's not just your connection that dies. slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=314547&cid=20819199
  78. Re:Maybe I can fly now. by sortius_nod · · Score: 3, Insightful

    *sigh* I really hate these bullshit "they can't do anything with it anyway" responses from you Americans. The whole point of civil liberties and such is so that you can live without persecution. It's easy to persecute people without convicting them... in fact, it's the only way. True convictions aren't persecution if they are the result of a fair trial.

    The issue here is that they might be "monitoring" you due to some things you've said, done, or believe. Let's say you decide to go for a high paying, high priority job in a large company. I wonder what these military fascists will do then? Let you get the job? Or maybe anonymously tip off the HR department that you're a dangerous person, etc.

    Gee, that's no violation of your freedoms.

    Anyway, I hope your goverment hangs itself at the next election, either that or your smartest people start an uprising to get rid of these nutcases in control of your country.

    I hope that my country never ends up like yours... ever.

  79. Re:Plain old Dishonest. New Laws Needed. by MindspanConsultants · · Score: 1

    Private citizens and corporations in Canada have a very hard time getting data that is easily obtained by anyone in the United States because of the privacy safeguards we have in place. This isn't to say that the data is not available... just not generally so. We are top in the world as far as these safeguards go... the US is near the bottom of the barrel. See this map for more info.

  80. Re:Maybe I can fly now. by hoover · · Score: 1

    Let's say you decide to go for a high paying, high priority job in a large company. I wonder what these military fascists will do then? Let you get the job? Or maybe anonymously tip off the HR department that you're a dangerous person, etc.

    I wonder what your "job satisfaction" would be like should you work at a company that relies on "anonymous outsider tips" on their prospective employees. Sounds like they really trust each other there, right?

    Good luck to you, Sir. ;-)

    --
    Ever wondered whats wrong with the world? http://www.ishmael.org/
  81. Re:And TALON will be replaced by? by geminidomino · · Score: 1

    No no, that was Talyn.

    Dammit... ANOTHER week...

  82. Re:Plain old Dishonest. New Laws Needed. by freedom_india · · Score: 1

    Gibbon said during 18th century: The principles of a free constitution are irrevocably lost, when the legislative power is nominated by the executive.

    Somebody should quote this to Cheney and Bush.

    --
    "Doing what i can, with what i have." ~ Burt Gummer
  83. The beards are a clue by giafly · · Score: 1

    You mistake their purpose. They seek to make us bow and huddle in terror, not to kill us. Think about why we call them terrorists instead of murders.
    You mean farders
    --
    Reduce, reuse, cycle
  84. Re:And they are waiting for another month because? by Phreakiture · · Score: 1

    And they are waiting for another month because?

    Because it will take them that long to export the schema and tables, create a new database and import the schema and tables to that.

    --
    www.wavefront-av.com
  85. Not bloody likely... by docwatson223 · · Score: 1

    I think the project and the DB were copied and then made 'black' and out of public scrutiny.

  86. Re:Maybe I can fly now. by dscruggs · · Score: 1

    I wonder what your "job satisfaction" would be like should you work at a company that relies on "anonymous outsider tips" on their prospective employees. Sounds like they really trust each other there, right?

    Well, if you want to work on, say, the Space Shuttle program or stealth technology at Boeing, Raytheon etc, you think maybe "anonymous" tips from the DOD might work against you? Sometimes the work itself is the satisfaction, not your relationship with HR.

    Steven Hatfill probably loved his job until t became a nightmare.

  87. Re:And they are waiting for another month because? by Alpha830RulZ · · Score: 1

    Damn, they need to get Linux.

    --
    I was taught to respect my elders. The trouble is, it's getting harder and harder to find some.
  88. political protest != military protest by Furp · · Score: 1
    To quote you:

    The entire point of a protest is to disrupt an event or the regular flow of life. If UN delegates cannot get into the UN because of the thousands of protesters around it, that sends a message to the world.

    To quote the first amendment:

    Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.

    If you're disrupting an event or interrupting the normal flow of life, you're no longer peaceably assembling. You're now no longer under the protection of the first amendment, and are breaking the law.

    I understand the entire brouhaha surrounding "First amendment zones", and about the only time I've ever heard them mentioned was in the course of political protests that occurred at rallies in the USA. If you'd RTFA, you would have seen this:

    The Threat and Local Observation Notices or TALON, was established in 2002 by then-Deputy Defense Secretary Paul D. Wolfowitz as a way to collect and evaluate information about possible threats to U.S. servicemembers and defense civilians all over the world.

    Last time I checked protestors at the DNC and RNC weren't considered threats to U.S. servicemembers. This TALON system is mainly oriented at protestors and perceived threats of US military bases around the world, not some political convention in the USA that doesn't have any strong ties to the DoD.

  89. What is the issue here? by PPH · · Score: 1
    Was the data on the tracked individuals collected illegally?

    If the DoD simply collected names of people publicly known to be protesters, what's the big deal? So, they want to keep someone from taking a public tour of their facilities and then chaining themselves to a radiator or something. Big deal. It doesn't sound like they are denying anyone any significant rights or freedoms.

    --
    Have gnu, will travel.
  90. Peace Out, man... by happy_place · · Score: 1

    If I were a terrorist, I'd support peace activists...

    --
    http://www.beanleafpress.com
  91. To demonise a tyrant by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

    I am not actually against the War in Iraq, I don't want the spread of Shira law and I think it is right for free nations to fight it. I don't know what Shira law is, but if you meant Sharia, then why do you support a war that brought Sharia back into a country?

    Saddam created a Western-style legal system, making Iraq the only country in the Persian Gulf region not ruled according to traditional Islamic law (Sharia). Saddam abolished the Sharia law courts, except for personal injury.

    If you feel that the war against Iraq was a free nation fighting religious fanaticism, there is a slight possibility that you have been lied to about the motives for this war.
    --

    You can't take the sky from me...

  92. To the "flamebait" moderator... by sethawoolley · · Score: 1

    Flamebait is not how you label serious replies.

  93. Re:Being on a list is scary. by alienmole · · Score: 1

    But what makes those examples of infringement of liberty is not that information was collected but what was done with that information.
    It's not as simple as that. When you have government officials collecting information about the legal behavior of individual private citizens, information that they don't need in order to fulfill any legitimate purpose, you have a problem already - you have individuals who've decided to overstep their authority for reasons of their own, even if they believe they're acting in the interests of the government. The attitude that leads to the collecting of such data is the same attitude that leads to worse violations. The U.S. had a taste of this in the '50s, during the McCarthy era. Situations like that are possible because people let them happen, little by little, until you have a severe problem.

    The purpose of having checks and balances in government is to prevent these sorts of abuses from going unchecked. If the government has a need to collect information on the legal behavior of individual private citizens, then that should be subject to oversight, which means that there would be regulations governing what should be collected and how, and verification that those regulations are being followed. The fact that this was being done without specific oversight is again indicative of a problem.

    Apartheid South Africa was not quite as bad for its voting citizens (i.e. white people) as the communist countries, but nevertheless, "suspicious" functions were monitored, including via espionage, and this has an enormous chilling effect on free speech. The U.S. constitutional protections on freedom of speech and assembly are far more important than many Americans can imagine, because they've never experienced life without them. When the government begins to take actions that could inhibit the exercise of those rights, you should watch out.