US To Get EU Private Citizen Data
An anonymous reader writes "In a case of 'all your data are belong to us,' the US government is close to coming to an agreement with the EU that allows it to get private citizen data on EU citizens to 'look for suspicious activity.' So, now we know what step three is: set up a security agency in the US to resell otherwise unavailable data."
So when is the EU finally going to request fingerprints and private data from US travelers?
fuck you America
signed, Europe
Just what I would have wanted my unelected EMPs to do on my behalf. Thanks guys. Keep up the good work.
Because you can - or because you should?
Forge a revolutionary workers party! For the Bolshevik program of Lenin and Trotsky!
The EU is so good at selling us out they even take paypal.
The right standard for decisions about handing private data over to the US should be; will the President and the members of congress submit to having the same data about them printed in European papers?
Beep beep.
We should go out of our way (from an EU perspective) to make the EU just as attractive to travelers from the US as the US is to travelers from the EU.
Seriously though, when are we the people going to say enough is enough. We do not need any more surveilance and invasions of our privacy. If we keep on this path then the so called war on terror will be lost not by the efforts of terrorists but by our own governments. Perhaps moving to Zimbabwe is not such a bad idea after all.
Is there a copy of TFA anywhere that does not require registration?
Is this an one way deal? If so, then fuck the US and our politicians in the EU even more for agreeing to that silly deal.
We don't want to put anything on their shoulders.
We do want to remove something though.
GTFO
Particles, stuff that matters.
I've been critical of the US on Internet forums; is this going to give me hassle getting in when I visit next month?
If we can put a man on the moon, why can't we shoot people for Apollo-related non-sequiturs?
WASHINGTON â" The United States and the European Union are nearing completion of an agreement allowing law enforcement and security agencies to obtain private information â" like credit card transactions, travel histories AND INTERNET BROWSING HABITS â" about people on the other side of the Atlantic Ocean.
oops I better stop reading the nytimes. It has been deemed a terrorist site by the DHS. I dont want to get on the person of interest list maintained by our police state.
I think it's time we start publishing data on our politicians and the heads of corporations that deal with the government and see how they like it.
When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
"So, now we know what step three is: setup a security agency in US to resell otherwise unavailable data."
Did the editors just allow the entire thread to be trolled?
This could be made into a great cartoon, no wait ...
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The Jewish Dilemma - Free Pork
"Suppose you were an idiot...and suppose you were a member of Congress...but I repeat myself." Mark Twain
I really don't have a problem with a country messing with its citizens and even its geographical neighbors -- I think that's well within every countries right even if I don't like the specifics of what they are up to (China for eg.). However, this apparent effort my the American government to rule increasingly larger parts of the words his really disheartening. How about they stick to spying on their own citizens, that's much more fair (since it is a democratic nation)
"Thanks for all the money you paid to us. We've used it to buy off ISO among other things" -Microsoft
A quote from the MEP that was responsible for the proposal:
I may have to flee to China to keep some of my individual rights. Lovely.
I RTFA. The Times does not say that the EU is going to hand over private information to US authorities. Rather the article informs readers that the two bodies of government are working towards a common set of privacy standards and safeguards that should be implemented if said bodies of government decided to one day share private information.
>> So, now we know what step three is: setup a security agency in US to resell otherwise unavailable data.
No, step three is that they setup a security agency in Europe so they kidnap these suspicious looking people and put them on flights to Syria (or wherever) for torture.
I would like to know which country isn't planning to go down that route so I can sell all my stuff and move out of the way.
Having worked as a contractor for other European Institutions, I know absolutely nothing gets in the way of the Commission once it decided something. After all, it's not like they have to be re-elected or anything.
Find some other country/organisation that has an interest in the outcome and let them do it for you.
Strictly speaking, the phrase for this is "having an axe to grind[1]", although the meaning of this phrase is frequently mutated into ranting on about something.
[1] Having an axe to grind: a task you want performed, but don't fancy doing yourself. Persuade, deceive or con some other person into doing it for you.
politicians are like babies' nappies: they should both be changed regularly and for the same reasons
Returning to the UK from holiday recently, the lady at Passport control laughed when she looked at my place of birth in my passport, saying "Oh, our American colleagues can never pronounce that place properly."
At which point, I said "What are you doing discussing my place of birth with Americans....?"
Then she got officious and moved me along.
The upside to this agreement is that basically doubling the people they are "monitoring" will mean said monitoring will be much less effective. Americans and Europeans will have potentially less privacy, but in reality there will be no change.
"The Times does not say that the EU is going to hand over private information to US authorities"
.. to obtain private information -- like credit card transactions, travel histories and Internet browsing habits -- about people on the other side of the Atlantic Ocean."
My understanding of it is: that the US is going to monitor all activity on it's residents and will hand such information over to the US, without warrant or evidence of criminal or 'terrorist' activity. And we can't even sue you guys if you lose the data. Given the lack of controls over governmental abuse in your country, shouldn't we be monitoring you. And just because you guys want to turn this place into the front line against 'terrorism' doesn't necessarily mean that we want to go along with it. The text of the article:
"The United States and the European Union are nearing completion of an agreement
"the two sides are still at odds on several other matters, including whether European citizens should be able to sue the United States government over its handling of their personal data, the report said"
'the two sides have agreed that information that reveals race, religion, political opinion, health or "sexual life" may not be used by a government "unless domestic law provides appropriate safeguards."'
davecb5620@gmail.com
As a European who keeps up with politics I am shocked to read about this, massive sell-out of my privacy, here first. As far as I know, there has not even been a debate about this! Since using soft-drugs and downloading music is legal here, I can only imagine what would happen to tourists who visit the USA lured by the favourable dollar only to end up jailed in no-man's land for breaking US laws retroactively from Europe.
I think I speak for all US-EU dual citizens when I say that this is awesome. Because now I probably only have to pay to be spied on by *one* of my governments. Hellooooo tax rebate!
European governments keep more detailed information about people who are in EU countries, so they need to get less information when you enter.
I ain't a EU citizen, I'm a resident of the United Kingdom and a loyal subject of her Mag, don't need anyone monitoring me for subversive activity. I can remember when they told us the EEC was about a Common economic Market and was never about some United States of Europe. But I guess that was another heap of baloney, like the promise that they'll protect out privacy. Remember these are the same people that bugged the UN, or are we supposed to not remember that.
davecb5620@gmail.com
This sort of thing has been going on for years, decades, and centuries. It's just that it's getting harder to flee to another location and start over fresh.
None of this will affect normal citizens, until they inconveniently find themselves on the wrong side of the law, or more accurately, the wrong side of some asshole's pet peeve. Then, all hell breaks loose. But, the rest of the masses will be assured through propaganda that this wasn't an average Joe, but a terrorist/criminal/whatnot. And all will feel "safe" again. Until they're on the wrong side of interested parties.
The short story is that those that aren't in the ruling class have never been really free, neither 1000 years ago, nor today. Governments change, the accepted political paradigm of the day changes, the "non-evil" social structure changes, but the rules stay the same. You have no rights. If things become inconvenient, rules change.
And I suspect it will stay that way, mainly because there are only 2 types of people. People that will complain but abide, which are the majority, and people that will fight to death even if the only reason for doing so is dignity, and these people are a minority, and that is exactly why rulers have always been able to get away with it.
Interesting enough, you can see this kind of behavior in other mammals that have a strong social structure.
I'm a fighter by nature, and will likely die doing so (my expected life span suggests that there will be many regime and governmental changes along with wars before my natural death occurs), but I have little hope that outrages on the /. and other internet forums will change anything. If anything, the internet is a great place for average citizens to blow off steam, get a sense that others also feel angry at the current situation of things, and then get on with their lives as if nothing ever happened. I'm positive that the internet has decreased the number of public demonstrations and violent uprisings.
in electronic mail (back at DEC in the 80's and early 90's). I regularly traveled to the UK and europe to teach my 1week course there. the same course was given in the US every 6 weeks or so.
one thing that I learned when I was attending the 'train the trainer' for this course was that euro privacy standards are (well, USED TO BE) very strict. in the course, we used to talk about PMF (personnel master files) and how LITTLE could be shared even in the same company (DEC) but between different countries. email for things like 'all-in-1 mail' (wow, anyone remember that?) used to depend on having access to personnel info (more or less) and yet we taught that very little could be shared between countries, mostly just the first and last name and country they were in and that's about it!
my my, how things have changed.
--
"It is now safe to switch off your computer."
"I've been critical of the US on Internet forums; is this going to give me hassle getting in when I visit next month?"
.. If he didn't say it, he thought it .. :)
Yes, and you'll be less likely to criticize the government the next time, which I suspect is the chief purpose of such legislation. You see, without the ever present specter of communism to protect up from, the US needed something else to scare us with. Step forward Al-Qaeda and the IslamoFascist bogyman.
"A watched population is a compliant one", Adam Suttler
davecb5620@gmail.com
Does this mean that everyone in the European Union is a potential opponent of the USA, moms apple pie and all things goodness and niceness. If so, whatever would turn them against the worlds greatest democracy. I mean it's the place everyone wants to go to, isn't it, apart from me that is .. :)
davecb5620@gmail.com
At least Ireland did
Don't you think the Euros were wishing for such an amendment right about now :-)
The only thing that keeps the US Gov't from falling over into complete tyranny is a violent armed populous. I think the founding fathers were on to something.
Here's a reply to your signature:
All Americans suck because all European politicians are just as bad as their American counterparts.
Fuck the EU politicians.
Signed, a citizen of Denmark.
Interesting anecdote: "Junibevægelsen mod EU" (the june movement against EU, a quite small political party) did arrange a weekend trip to Bruxelles a good year ago, where we got to meet with a politician's advisor gave a talk about the market price of corn and agricultural subsidies, and a journalist who spoke (among other things) about telephony and roaming charges (the politicians wanted to offload their phone bill on the citizens; self-serving bastards). And of course some time off to goof off and eat dutch fries (you know, with fish and mayonnaise).
Here's the punchline: what I learned from that trip is that although it is indeed possible to travel to Belgium, and if you prepare in advance you may be able to get the attention of a politician, citizens of pretty much anything other than Belgium have to spend a large amount of time doing so, plus they have to take off a sizable portion of their work week to meet the politicians when they're actually there. In short, regular citizens don't have any real access to a political body that governs non-trivial parts of their lives.
American leaders, EU leaders... all serving at the mandate of vast numbers of people utterly petrified at the thought of ethnic stereotypes lurking around every corner, waiting to launch unspeakable horrors.
The majority has spoken. Congratulations.
Your mind is clear / The things that you fear / Will fade with how much you / Believe what you hear
How is this different from echelon? Why does the US need this? Aren't we already doing this?
Is it as true in Europe as it is in America that it is not who votes that counts but who counts the votes?
you know, I think sticking an 8-INCH FAKE COCK up your pooper is, in fact, gay.
On days like this, I'm glad to be from Switzerland and not being part of the EU...
That's a lie, I read it in the paper. Ireland may have said no, but we can't know for sure that's what they REALLY meant. Obviously we need a new vote to see what people really think, and if it turns out to be a no again we should try again. For the sake of democracy. Until we get a yes. Then we can stop with the votes because then the people have decided! Long live our democracies!
> fuck you America
We're already screwed, man. Already screwed. :-(
As a Eurpoean (who used to believe in the "American Dream"), I'm thoroughly sick of the way the US behaves, and I'm disgusted that none of our leaders have the nerve to tell the regime to get lost. The EU should cease all co-operation with the USA until the USA starts behaving like a free country. Guantanamo alone is such a blot that the EU should have imposed trade sanctions over it (like we did to apartheid South-Africa).
What happens when the EU decides to collect photos, fingerprints, etc. on US citizens that travel to the EU? Then will the US create an agreement where they can get the info from the EU? I mean, it's not like the US is spying on its citizens that way -- and besides, they're just trying to find teh terrorists and child predators, free thinkers, etc.
Being a EU resident I place very big question marks behind this current development. Personally I don't understand why the EU allows itself to be dictated by a country which is on the edge of sheer bankruptcy (just take a look at what the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan cost per day, the amount which was calculated and more important: how its being paid for).
Still, having that out of the way I realize like no other that saying no to the US isn't always that easy and the consequences of such actions can be quite drastic, right to the levels of pure idiocy, childish behavior and plain out oppression.
Don't believe me? Say, whats that yellow stuff you're eating there? French fries? Oh no, silly me; those have been renamed freedom fries because France opposed the US' stupid war. Of course it turned out that France, like some other EU countries, was absolutely right to refuse but don't think that the US will admit to that. Quite the contrary, even now some countries like Belgium are being belittled because they refuse to be part of the occupation army in Afghanistan and Iraq. So forgive me when I say "talk is cheap" if you really think that all it takes is saying no.
It wouldn't surprise me one bit if this deal wasn't being enforced here and there. But if that is the case it would surprise me why the EU doesn't simply tell to US to go take a hike. Its not as if they can afford to wage war against the EU without a big fat loan from that same EU (and China).
Because I will not go to the U.S. never again, fucking U.S.and E.U. govt of shit. and then they ask, "why do they hate us so much?"
ps: fuck'emFrom the article:
"The pact would make clear that it is lawful for European governments and companies to transfer personal information to the United States, and vice versa."
So it's an information sharing agreement. I guess the summary is true, but misleading.
And no, I don't want you Euro crazies getting a hold of my personal information either. Especially anyone around here with their blind hatred of Americans stoked up by bullshit like this.
Politicians == terrorists.
I don't fear my Islamic neighbour, but I do fear what the government is doing to me.
home
Way to go my beloved EU. Keep taking it up your bum from the US.
Us Europeans just kick mothaf*ing butt.
America, fuck yeah!!1
It seems that we declared independance from England for the very purpose of escaping the grasp of a controlling government. A government that demanded to know everything about trade information and restrcited free trade. The irony is now that were buddy buddy with england, there old paranoid antics are slowly turning us into another version of them. Soon it will be the amerian citizens who run into space and declare independance for the sake of Free Information. Look at what we americans have become, fat, greedy (and cheap), wasteful, consumpution oriented, self-ish, ignorant sheep. In the furture we won't be able to tell our heads from our ass, but our government will. Excuse me for ranting, but seriously fuck the US government. I hate my government, I no longer want to be a US citizen, our country looks ugly as hell becuase we have shitty suburbs with telephone poles everywhere, we have psuedo democracy, a congress with drunks and sex offenders and an incompotent president who practicies disinformation and has a history of cocaine abuse which has lead to a lack of intellectual curiosity and an iq of a drunken sloth.
Trying to install linux on my microwave, but keep getting a kernel panic...
Billions of people must read their messages about enlarging medicines, casinos online, etc. It takes working time, destroys work flow, and causes trillions of loses to the global economy.
Why they want information on us? Stop your well known criminals first and then we will see if you have the integrity to own information on us.
I think this qualifies as suspicious activity on the part of the government. How do I start an investigation of it?
Put your anti-terrorist attitude up in yours dear U.S. gov. We had enough of it in Germany, England and Denmark, thank you.
The problem with the EU Constitution was that it was several hundred pages. Even with all the amendments the Constitution of the USA fits on only a few pages. I can go down to Barnes and Noble and buy a pocket edition I can carry in my pocket, Ron Paul carries one. If someone legal can't be read and understood, within reason, in a few minutes by the average person there's something wrong with it.
The matter is way too complex to really understand
That's because it was soooo long.
I don't think it should have had a referendum in the first place.
Democracy is soo inefficient, what's needed instead is a dictatorship.
Falcon
Should there be a Law?
That should obviously be: ...since there's more of eu.
According to Wikipedia
Eastern Europe, Asia, Western Europe, Africa, would ALL be better off had the USSA (as you so lovingly put it) had left all your affairs alone 1900 to 1970, right?
While some places may of been worse if the US didn't do anything in other places people have suffered gravely because of the US. For instance President Ford and Henry Kissinger gave the green light to Indonesia's Suharto to invade East Timer, and supported the invasion with firearms despite a congressional ban. About 200,000 East Timorese were massacred after the invasion, that's 1/3 of the population of East Timor. Or take Iran, in the 1950s the US supported an overthrow of a democratically elected government and replaced it with the Shah. At the same tyme Ford supported Suharto he also supported General Pinochet's overthrow of Chile's elected president after which tens of thousands of people disappeared.
Should there be a Law?
right? Any so called terrorists on the other side of the world were created by the US with their damn oppression!
The US also helped terrorists with finance and firearms. The US helped the Mujadeen fighting in Afghanistan against the Soviets, and that includes the Taliban. When he came to office the current president, Bush, gave the Taliban $43 million of taxpayer money.
Falcon
Should there be a Law?
I'd drop it on Washington DC from orbit. It's the only way to be sure.
What if Tetris was invented by Nazis?
In paranoid America, the government watches EU!
Fuck you. Leave these people's data alone. Then crawl under a rock and die.
Love,
An American Taxpayer whose had enough of you basterds.
Part of the Second American Revolution!
Don't you understand that this has nothing to do with terrorists? The government is simply doing what it wanted to do all along. The terrorists didn't win - the government did, and a long time ago.
Actually, all this is already taking place. If as a european, you sign up with an EU-based bank, you will often find in the small print a warning that all international transactions are being processed by the SWIFT network with two data centers, one of them in the EU and the other one in the US... and that US agencies are routinely monitoring all international inter-bank transactions for anti-terrorism purposes.
Well, since the US already knows all international money flows into and out of the EU (not just for individuals, but for all companies as well), they may as well know how many times a day each EU citizens goes to the restroom. There ain't no data privacy anymore. Anyone (esp. in Europe) living under the illusion of their data being "protected", wake up: it's "1984" in all its glory. This latest piece of news is nothing really innovative or new.
cpghost at Cordula's Web.
This one seems a little odd to me. How do they have the Internet history of a random EU citizen who chooses to travel to the US? Surely EU governments aren't actively monitoring and filing away their population's web activity en masse? I assume this is for 'persons of interest' who have been monitored, which is bad enough; but I'm so disturbed and outraged by the possibility of mass surveillance, I have to ask, even though it seems silly (and I'm Australian, so I may have missed something that happened over there).
From the article:
For example, the two sides have agreed that information that reveals race, religion, political opinion, health or âoesexual lifeâ may not be used by a government âoeunless domestic law provides appropriate safeguards.â
So, they want data about your race, religion, political opinion, health and sex life. They just have to agree to provide safeguards about its user. Hmmm. Why do they want that information? I thought this was about terrorism.
Well, there have been quite a few, there was the invasion of Checkoslovakia, then there's Bosnia, and all that trouble in Ireland.
Myself I often muse why so many mention this spurious EU propaganda point when it is so obviously wrong.
threadeds blog
Our governments get private data on US nationals, I'm sick of the US's do as we say not as we do policies.
If we had records and proof of all the countries the 9/11 hijackers visited and were able to discern who they traveled with before the events on 9/11, it would have lead a clear trail to other conspirators and perhaps information pertaining to future planned events.....Something as basic as knowing who is entering and leaving a country is a right of sovereignty which might actually surpass any or most rights to privacy.
That is a valid argument for people carrying passports , which is a security measure that everyone accepts already without draconian and invasive attempts to track every person on the face of the planet.
The fact is that 9/11 hijackers were suicide bombers. They travelled under their own names so their fingerprints are useless. People who helped are more likely to have already been in the country beforehand (even if they travelled together, they would simply travel separately for future attacks if fingerprinting became mandatory) so border control information is of limited use.
All talk of "surpassing rights" should be in the context of how demonstratively effective/ineffective the security measure would be.
Would fingerprinting have caught the 9/11 hijackers? ... The information on their identities was available within hours without taking the fingerprints of the millions of other people traveling at the same time.
If the argument for introducing fingerprinting is that it will stop terrorism then let's hear how it would have stopped it in the first place. How about impounding laptops, monitoring emails and US citizens phone conversations? It's all done in the name of preventing another 9/11 but would it really have stopped the original attack?
How many laptops or coded emails were involved in 9/11? I suspect the answer is a big fat zero...
Would you prefer "life, & liberty, & the pursuit of happiness" or Orwell's "1984"?
Well, none of us are going to like the "New World Order" the CFR, Trilateral Commission and Bilderbergers are planning for us. Just like the Nazis, Communists, etc. It is a sad day for humanity in general, and we must get involved politically to cut this crap off now! It is already 2355, and they pretty much have a stranglehold on governments worldwide. Those that they don't control get payoffs, or are so small they can be ignored for now.
Step three, selling the data, comes after step two.point.five, leaving the data on an open server at a credit card company, to ensure the free-est possible distribution.
Probably a Chinese credit card company, in deference to the Romanians behind me.
Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"
So, why is it that USA is doing it and seems very insistent on gettin all EU private citizens' data as well, including credit card history and web browsing histories?
I kinda find it humiliating to have to explain my private web-browsing habits to anybody, much less an underpaid US border guard who is instructed to behave abusive and offensive to anyone whom he considers might be a terrorist, not to mention that americans force us foreigners to sign away our rights at their border, enabling all sorts of abusive treatments and humiliations.
Fascist is as fascist does, and USA is pretty fascist these days.
I am told that if you criticize USA in any way in Europarliament, nobody will talk to you or work with you anymore.
Looking at their actions in this matter, it is quite apparent that Europarliament is under siege. It has begun working against the best interests of EU citizens and for the benefit of a foreign hostile power keen on spying EU citizens.
It is no wonder EU citizens are losing their confidence and respect for EU institutions if USA has bypassed them and is manipulating them to this extent.
n/t