Coming Soon: Ubiquitous Long-Term Surveillance From Big Brother
alphadogg writes "As the price of digital storage drops and the technology to tap electronic communication improves, authoritarian governments will soon be able to perform retroactive surveillance on anyone within their borders, according to a Brookings Institute report. These regimes will store every phone call, instant message, email, social media interaction, text message, movements of people and vehicles and public surveillance video and mine it at their leisure, according to 'Recording Everything: Digital Storage as an Enabler of Authoritarian Government,' written by John Villaseno, a senior fellow at Brookings and a professor of electrical engineering at UCLA."
The ubiquity of the technology may contribute to the ease of surveillance, but authoritarian governments were already doing bad things. Ubiquity of technology empowers protest movements just as much as it empowers government, creating a public accountability that wasn't there previously and enabling a transfer of information beyond government restrictions. I believe the tradeoff is worth it because ubiquitous technology in the hands of citizens can be more powerful than in the hands of government.
Funny that article writer wrote "authoritarian". This applies to almost any country - with USA being the prime example (CarrierIQ^3), or ubiquitous cameras in UK.
If people think their governments do not spy on them just as in "authoritarian" regimes, they are so wrong...
at this point i dont think we need the qualifier anymore.
'authoritarian governments will soon be able' -> 'governments will'
http://groups.google.com/group/openmanufacturing/msg/2846ca1b6bee64e1
"As I see it, there is a race going on. The race is between two trends. On the one hand, the internet can be used to profile and round up dissenters to the scarcity-based economic status quo (thus legitimate worries about privacy and something like TIA). On the other hand, the internet can be used to change the status quo in various ways (better designs, better science, stronger social networks advocating for things like a basic income, all supported by better structured arguments like with the Genoa II approach) to the point where there is abundance for all and rounding up dissenters to mainstream economics is a non-issue because material abundance is everywhere. So, as Bucky Fuller said, whether is will be Utopia or Oblivion will be a touch-and-go relay race to the very end. While I can't guarantee success at the second option of using the internet for abundance for all, I can guarantee that if we do nothing, the first option of using the internet to round up dissenters (or really, anybody who is different, like was done using IBM computers in WWII Germany) will probably prevail. So, I feel the global public really needs access to these sorts of sensemaking tools in an open source way, and the way to use them is not so much to "fight back" as to "transform and/or transcend the system". As Bucky Fuller said, you never change thing by fighting the old paradigm directly; you change things by inventing a new way that makes the old paradigm obsolete."
Other related thoughts:
http://pdfernhout.net/on-dealing-with-social-hurricanes.html
A 21st century issue: the irony of technologies of abundance in the hands of those still thinking in terms of scarcity.
As the price of digital storage drops
Someone hasn't checked prices recently, post flood.
Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
I was gonna comment, but then....
Everything and its opposite is true. Get used to it.
The burden of all these extra security measures is beginning to exert a force on the economy. It's like watching the birth of a quantum singularity...interest followed by naked terror, as you realize that you can't outrun it (but not for lack of trying). I liken it to a particular episode of Stargate SG-1 (A Matter Of Time): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oWpfr_0RmuM
The people of the US are like that team, running across the desert, knowing they are doomed.
On a separate note, the fact that the US people are so submissive to their rights being stolen from under them reminds me of Russians facing the Gulag; they don't try to escape, even though they could, they just go along with it because fighting against it does not occur to them.
I am John Hurt.
Already Here: Ubiquitous Long-Term Surveillance From Big Brother
There, fixed that for you.
Great warrior...hrmph! Wars not make one great.
If they decide to "mine" my data, movements and activities, they will be fast asleep within 15 minutes.
Governing implies authoritarianism.
That's all fine and good, as long as authoritarian regimes remember that Santa Claus is watching them .
air and light and time and space
At some point in the near future, all cars will be equipped with GPS transponders. These are already required for many trucks; personal vehicles are next. The People's Republic of Massachusetts and some other states are considering requiring it for autos, supposely to tax your mileage, ha. Next will be a requirement for all of us to carry a personal GPS device, like, ah, a cell phone.
I think that long term surveillance is a good thing for prosperity and for our great nation! The government is doing the right thing. Our leaders know what they're doing!
This is my true opinion... anyone who posted an opinion with this name otherwise has been stealing my accounts... probably a malicious evil hacker!
Why spend all that money? Why will taxpayers want to put their cash towards a grossly mismanaged and costly project that will erroneously fuck over tons of people with no benefit whatsoever? This is really a pie in the sky idea that will never fly.
Twinstiq, game news
I think it's time for us to get together to build an underground internet.
Unless something really bad happens to destroy the technological revolution that we are all a part of, it's here to stay. There needs to be stronger, iron clad privacy, individual, and economic legislation in place to provide due process in a time where decisions are made in an instant. The Occupy protests, although very visable, have little chance on making a serious impact on what they are protesting. Rather, you have to be in the game to change the game. I had a thought the other day, if they really wanted to make an impact, why didn't they put together a petition, circulate it, send it to D.C., make it a matter of historical public record, and see what happens? As it stands they are remarkably forgetable. To that end, citizens need to, from within the game, *demand* protections from this inevitable reality before it is too late.
Coming soon? Sorry it's already here.
Authoritarian Government? No, try every single one.
Controlling the people has become harder with information being spread so fast, but there are ways to single out people and beat them into submission with information.
Can we dispense with this false dichotomy between "authoritarian" and (I suppose) "democratic" governments. It is part of this great fantasy that this sort of thing will only happen in bad third-world countries whose leaders wear military uniforms and chomp on cigars. Our grand democratic leaders would never do such things, except they do all the time and want to do more of it.
Ceci n'est pas une sig.
The phrase 'authoritarian government' fits the US oh so very well now - those who would deny it are either ignorant or complicit.
Deluge them with pictures of yourself with your finger up your nose to protest this surveillance mentality. As a society, do we want our every move recorded? Hoodies became popular with young people because of ubiquitous surveillance so it is safe to say that overall, society does not want to have it's every move recorded.
It's called "Facebook," and twits are lining-up to dump their entire lives into it.
Regards;
The very first thing the Republicans will do if they get their hands on the White House and Senate again is destroy the Freedom of Information Act. To the Right, accountability and truth are as deadly as a wooden stake is to a slumbering vampire.
I saw a demo a month ago of a software product in development that only needs the sparsest of details about your friends, and a few time-lapsed satphotos or GPS data about/of your vehicle at specific times to be able to predict *exactly* where you would be on a given night (barring outlier events, like an earthquake - though there were examples of how to factor that in if you think it's a possibility). And the kicker, is that the mass-majority of the data this system needs (for North Americans and western Europeans) is already available for free.
They'll just pass more laws regarding the licensing of pigeons. Good luck proving you're not a terrorist when they catch you with an unlicensed pigeon sitting on your windowseal.
Understanding the scope of the problem is the first step on the path to true panic.
They will save the encrypted transmissions for a future when the encryption is no longer effective.
I read someplace that this is kind of how they curtailed the car/roadside bombings in Iraq that were so common there.
They put up enough drones to cover the city with video; when a bomb went off, they basically rewound time and followed the car that blew up back to where it came from, which often was a bomb factory or other insurgent facility.
Any cop or HR individual can always find something wrong. Always.
Check your premises.
Governments are incredibly inefficient. They're even more inefficient than Big Corporations. Bureaucracy hobbles them both. People who work for Government or for Big Corporations are the bottom of the barrel, because no one intelligent and creative would long survive an environment where their work and activity are constrained by a PHB with a room-temperature IQ but an incredible sociopathic ability to kiss ass.
So let's place any tech tool in the hands of those people versus in the hands of an intelligent, creative, and highly motivated person who is unconstrained by the illusion that governments and big corporations know best and can manage better. I'll put my money on the latter every time.
There are people who will think that's scary, but to me it's an ever bright beacon of freedom: the people will always prevail.
Do what you can, with what you have, where you are.
Try to make it through one day without breaking at least one law, I dare you.
... to "authoritarian" governments, citizen?
That is all.
After we're all dead then. I don't see what good that will do them.
John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
Wouldn't it be easier to just use the wayback machine
We can stop all of this right now. We can, so to speak, nip it in the bud.
If unopposed, it will come. It is inevitable.
The answer is not technology. The answer is legislation and constitutional ammendments. We, the people, can just say "No!" and it will not happen.
But are we doing it? Are we inspired by the future potentialities to take the appropriate action now?
We can only blame ourselves.
Reliance on the assumption that targets will use monitored systems can be exploited instead of turning into a pissing match.
to think Establish a flawless online profile which reinforces what you prefer spies to think of you, drop online connections which may be embarrassing, and lead a double life.
If you are a revolutionary, act alone without trail and or communicate directly. It's perfectly practical to research almost any subject in a "benign" way.
The bar is very basic. Either be willing to accept your situation or be delighted to kill and willing to die to change it. Anyone worth opposing is worth killing. Syria is learning this lesson as army deserters fight back. Libya learned it and killed Qaddafi. Either kill with gusto or accept your fate. Your country, your situation, your call.
"This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
How about building in a simple self-test. At a certain time, a hi-bright LED (red or whatever) should shine into the camera. On whatever is monitoring the camera, it should be able to tell that things work so long as it gets a "Red" every Tuesday at 02:00, etc.
It won't get over the issue of fuzzy pictures, etc, but should work OK as a basic test.
Its already been happening.
---- Booth was a patriot ----
The police could send a "kill camera" signal to every phone and appliance in the zone that has wifi or cell access, so that nothing will take a picture.
Apple already applied for the patent (has the patent) for killing cameras in a specified area with a kill code.
Think it through. There is nothing to stop them from developing a kill code, and they probably already have asked for one from manufacturers. It'll be here, sooner rather than later.
If the tech generation has a failing, it is that it believes that their tech is intrinsically on their side - it's why I have such a hard time getting people to care about computerized vote counting. The machine ain't your friend, not when you don't control it.
will blow up data centers!
And, folks, make sure to do your part by learning about this asymmetry.
Here's one idea worth knowing about: sousveillance.
... there ARE benefits to having these surveillance systems around.
Condolences on your Dad. :-P
I agree. Tech. can be useful and used for good. That's why we do it in the first place.
On the other hand, once the politicos pass laws mandating all CCTV feeds are patched into LEOs and LEOs store everything and troll it at leisure, hello Stasi! They've already abused to the max National Security Letters in collusion with AT&T et al, and Congress gave the latter retroactive immunity for it. You've still got TSA agents sexually assaulting innocent travellers. Your DoJ is still dragging its feet on putting the Banksters in jail, ...
IFF you !@#$heads can fix your gov't to the point that they once again must get a subpoena to get at this stuff and must delete it soon after if nothing's found, ubiquitous CCTV wouldn't threaten anyone but bad guys. However, with the PATRIOT Act still in force more than a decade after 9/11, that's not the trend I'm seeing. I fully expect SOPA/PIPA (The Great USA Firewall(tm), aka Internet censorship) to pass eventually in one form or another. I expect you'll wind up with mandatory GPS embedded in all vehicles. I expect present USA citizens to cheer on the coming surveillance society.
I'm also expecting a fairly messy revolution/civil war soon too. Condolences on that as well. I'm a little surprised it hasn't started yet.
"Tongue tied and twisted, just an Earth bound misfit
RFC1149 is the one you are looking for.
The new right fascists are bilingual. They speak English and Bullshit.