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Feds Operated Yet Another Secret Metadata Database Until 2013

A story at Ars Technica describes yet another Federal database of logged call details maintained by the Federal government which has now come to light, this one maintained by the Department of Justice rather than the NSA, and explains how it came to be discovered: [A] three-page partially-redacted affidavit from a top Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) official, which was filed Thursday, explained that the database was authorized under a particular federal drug trafficking statute. The law allows the government to use "administrative subpoenas" to obtain business records and other "tangible things." The affidavit does not specify which countries records were included, but specifically does mention Iran. ... This database program appears to be wholly separate from the National Security Agency’s metadata program revealed by Edward Snowden, but it targets similar materials and is collected by a different agency. The Wall Street Journal, citing anonymous sources, reported Friday that this newly-revealed program began in the 1990s and was shut down in August 2013. From elsewhere in the article: "It’s now clear that multiple government agencies have tracked the calls that Americans make to their parents and relatives, friends, and business associates overseas, all without any suspicion of wrongdoing," [said ACLU lawyer Patrick Toomey]. "The DEA program shows yet again how strained and untenable legal theories have been used to secretly justify the surveillance of millions of innocent Americans using laws that were never written for that purpose."

102 comments

  1. I predict far less outrage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    It's the Department of Racial Justice, after all.

    1. Re:I predict far less outrage by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 1

      Did I miss something? The Drug Enforcement Administration has been accused of a great many things(frequently with ample justification); but a warm and fuzzy relationship with minorities is not one of them. They don't even have an emotionally compelling and questionably true anecdote, like the 'welfare queen' to work with. If anything, the DEA is probably among the least liked TLAs in active practice(maybe the BATF is slightly lower ranked?)

      What allusion is your comment making that I'm supposed to be picking up on?

    2. Re:I predict far less outrage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Obama is black, and outgoing AG Holder is black. Neither of them want, as former senator Santorum put it, "uppity government nig *choke*erm I mean blacks", to know their place and stay in it.

      A lot of Republicans are absolutely petrified of the idea that whites might not be the majority controlling everything in the US. Why? Are minorities treated like second-class citizens in the US or something?

    3. Re:I predict far less outrage by Fwipp · · Score: 1

      Are minorities treated like second-class citizens in the US or something?

      Nah, when a citizen gets murdered, there's supposed to be a trial.

    4. Re:I predict far less outrage by Required+Snark · · Score: 0

      Are minorities treated like second-class citizens in the US or something?

      Family Outraged After North Miami Beach Police Use Mug Shots as Shooting Targets

      A South Florida family is outraged at North Miami Beach Police after mug shots of African American men were used at a shooting range for police training.

      It was an ordinary Saturday morning last month when Sgt. Valerie Deant arrived at the shooting range in Medley, or so she thought.

      Deant, who plays clarinet with the Florida Army National Guard’s 13th Army Band, and her fellow soldiers were at the shooting range for their annual weapons qualifications training.

      What the soldiers discovered when they entered the range made them angry: mug shots of African American men apparently used as targets by North Miami Beach Police snipers, who had used the range before the guardsmen.

      Even more startling for Deant, one of the images was her brother. It was Woody Deant’s mug shot that taken 15 years ago, after he was arrested in connection to a drag race in 2000 that left two people dead. His mug shot was among the pictures of five minorities used as targets by North Miami Beach police, all of them riddled by bullets.

      “I was like 'why is my brother being used for target practice?'" Deant asked.

      She immediately called her brother, Woody Deant, who was 18 years old when the picture was taken.

      “The picture actually has like bullet holes,” Woody Deant said. “One in my forehead and one in my eye. I was speechless," he added.

      The City of Medley owns the Medley Firearms Training Center and it leases the facilities to law enforcement agencies in the area. The shooting range staff doesn’t select the targets used by law enforcement and the military.

      North Miami Beach Police Chief J. Scott Dennis admitted that his officers could have used better judgment, but denies any racial profiling.

      He noted that the sniper team includes minority officers. Dennis defended the department’s use of actual photographs and says the technique is widely used and the pictures are vital for facial recognition drills. But the Deant family questions why officers were firing targets with images of real people, in this case African-Americans, especially at a time when relations between minority communities and law enforcement are so tense.

      “Our policies were not violated,” Dennis said. “There is no discipline forthcoming from the individuals who were involved with this.”

      NBC 6 Investigators spoke with sources at federal and state law enforcement agencies and five local police departments that have SWAT and sniper teams in an attempt to find out if this is a common practice. All law enforcement agencies said they only use commercially produced targets, not photos of human beings for target practice.

      Yes, the short answer is that in the USA minorities are second class citizens. They are often are denied the rights to "life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness".

      Now consider what would happen if a minority gun club had targets made of white people. They would be slapped with the label "terrorist" and end up in a Federal maximum security lockup for life.

      You don't think so? No matter who you are if you did the same thing with pictures of cops it would happen to you. But if you have a gun and badge and you do the equivalent, then it's just bad judgement.

      --
      Why is Snark Required?
    5. Re:I predict far less outrage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      of course.. anyone who doesn't support big government is a racist, sexist, terrorist enemy of the state.

    6. Re:I predict far less outrage by FooAtWFU · · Score: 2

      Nah, when a citizen gets murdered, there's supposed to be a trial.

      Okay. You're alleging racist treatments of minorities based on prosecutors failing to indict cops who kill black people.

      There's supposed to get a trial when a prosecutor thinks that he can convict the guy of some crime. "Police officer shoots random innocent in what appears to be a tragic accident possibly involving negligence" is apparently not one of those cases, for some reason or another -- probably the cozy relationship between prosecutors and the police, which is dubious enough.

      But I want to contend that it's not really racist: they really wouldn't hold a trial in a similar case if the guy shot was white, and if you keep playing at it for racial reasons you will fail to effect meaningful policy changes that will address the issue, which would be more unfortunate for minorities than it would for me or most Slashdot readers (because we're demographically less likely to come into contact with law enforcement, in part because we're fancy computer programmer types who make a lot of money and can afford to live in neighborhoods which aren't riddled with crime).

      --
      The World Wide Web is dying. Soon, we shall have only the Internet.
    7. Re:I predict far less outrage by Aighearach · · Score: 1

      It's the Department of Racial Justice, after all.

      Gee, and here I thought it was the department that manages the government lawyers.

      So, where do the lawyers get managed in your universe?

  2. USA is a police state by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Between this, the stupidity and apathy of the general public, and ridiculous taxes on the self employed, I'm looking to get out of here ASAP. Are there any good places left in the world?

    1. Re:USA is a police state by Kasar · · Score: 0

      I don't know if European countries are any better for the self employed, but they do have far better privacy laws and don't seem quite as susceptible to lobbyist "donations" for proposing new laws.

      --
      vi? Who's that?
    2. Re:USA is a police state by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      Between this, the stupidity and apathy of the general public, and ridiculous taxes on the self employed, I'm looking to get out of here ASAP. Are there any good places left in the world?

      Is that Mars mission still looking for people?

    3. Re: USA is a police state by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You must be under 30. I used to think the same thing. Unless you have enough money to live like a king, stay here.

    4. Re: USA is a police state by MichaelMacDonald · · Score: 2

      Most places are better to live than the USA. Self employed people seem to do well a lot of places. Even with higher taxes. It seems, it matters more what you can buy with the money you take home. In the end, places with better laws tend to have more opportunity, you can actually have the 'American Dream' much easier outside of America today.

    5. Re:USA is a police state by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 3, Informative

      You might actually want to be careful about characterizing European privacy law: while some of the traditional tax shelters may still be almost as quiet about banking details as Nevada is about incorporation, but broader protections of privacy can be rather patchy(It's generally not a good sign if a given country has people appealing to ECHR Article 8 for lack of more robust national laws).

      The trouble with the US is not so much that our privacy laws are lousy (with respect to the government, with respect to private third parties Europe is merely toothless, while we practically take it as a point of national pride to ensure that the data brokers can do business unhindered by stifling regulation); but that we are really, really good at violating them; and have built up an impressive infrastructure for doing so.

      Given the amount of cooperation from our various overseas friends revealed by the NSA leaks, I'd be a trifle nervous about assuming that a given European jurisdiction is necessarily more likely to be obeying its own laws, let alone providing a higher level of protection. (And I'm guessing that the past week or two are...unlikely...to be particularly helpful in encouraging privacy improvements.)

    6. Re:USA is a police state by Zontar+The+Mindless · · Score: 2

      As a resident of the EU, I'd like to recommend Australia.

      --
      Il n'y a pas de Planet B.
    7. Re:USA is a police state by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Is that Mars mission still looking for people?

      Not a person. Missing beagle, and it's been found.

    8. Re:USA is a police state by dbIII · · Score: 2

      In Australia we're busy trying to adopt the worst ideas of the USA as quickly as we can. Luckily the people doing it are children that got in politics at University and never managed to grow up since so it's taking a while, but the people fully in their power are in deep shit (eg. Manus Island).

    9. Re: USA is a police state by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yo dickhead, it's just a dream. Nothing American about it, every one in every country has them. Yours is just a lie now.

    10. Re:USA is a police state by towermac · · Score: 1

      "Luckily the people doing it are children that got in politics at University and never managed to grow up"

      Well that's just what happened here. Where did we get it from?

  3. Illegal activity by the government by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Line the officials up and shoot them.

    1. Re:Illegal activity by the government by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      +1

    2. Re:Illegal activity by the government by dinfinity · · Score: 1

      Metaphorically speaking: yes. People should be prosecuted.
      But let's not become barbarians ourselves.

    3. Re:Illegal activity by the government by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was already a barbarian, you insensitive clod.

  4. Welcome to the Surveillance States of America by msobkow · · Score: 1

    Anything you say can and will be used against you, regardless of to whom, when, or why you said it.

    --
    I do not fail; I succeed at finding out what does not work.
    1. Re: Welcome to the Surveillance States of America by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Including this comment. Don't be surprised if the swat team comes busting down your door in a few hours.

      You scared, pussy ass bitch boy?

    2. Re: Welcome to the Surveillance States of America by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ABC

    3. Re:Welcome to the Surveillance States of America by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      CSI has already shown that juries believe the government has amazing investigative powers (like being able to enhance reflections in reflections around the corner of a colorized black and white security cam shot). It's in the government's best interest to leak all of their spying on Americans, so when they want to round someone up they can just say "well, we heard him talk about nuking the president but we can't play that audio or tell you how" and the jury will go "oh of course, of course" wink wink nudge nudge and all that.

      Anything you don't say can and will be used against you, as well.

    4. Re: Welcome to the Surveillance States of America by msobkow · · Score: 1

      Absolutely terrified. Obummer is going to call for a drone strike on a mouthy Canuck when he's got his hands full with *actual* terrorists, drug dealers, and wars. :P

      The key to survival in the surveillance world is simple: Never do anything that actually *matters* or is *worthy* of their attention. :D

      --
      I do not fail; I succeed at finding out what does not work.
    5. Re: Welcome to the Surveillance States of America by msobkow · · Score: 1

      But be careful what you post to Crackbook. I *have* been investigated and questioned for "flaming out" on the Harpercrite in the past.

      Yes, they really *do* watch what you say and look for "threats", even if it turns out to be a pissed off Canuck venting about the goobernmint and not an actual gun-wielding bomb-planting terrorist.

      --
      I do not fail; I succeed at finding out what does not work.
    6. Re: Welcome to the Surveillance States of America by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      The key to survival in the surveillance world is simple: Never do anything that actually *matters* or is *worthy* of their attention. :D

      The problem is that you never know what actually *matters* or is *worthy* of their attention. We've all seen the warnings that the government thinks you are a terrorist if you participate in politics like going to a local political rally, abstain from politics like refusing to register to vote, hell if you do not sell your soil to social media you are considered a potential terrorist now.

      http://www.washingtonsblog.com...

      Good luck doing absolutely nothing in your life.

  5. Fuck all of these motherfuckers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They've proven time and again that they can't be trusted. They break the law and who can hold them accountable? No one. There is no oversight anymore, because they spy on the overseers. We need to dismantle half of these agencies and try again.

  6. picture in article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What's that phone he's holding?

  7. New Target by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I wish the Feds to investigate Brian Rogers, University of Alaska Fairbanks Chancellor.

  8. They probably could have kept this database secret by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    for a much longer period of time if they had more women and minorities working at the DEA.

  9. Now you know what a boiled frog feels like. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The temperature in the pot goes up gradually, so the frog
    doesn't notice the water is too hot until it is too late.

    And now all those in the UK, the US, Australia, and various other
    countries are boiled frogs.

    And the water is very hot indeed.

    It's all about control, you stupid senseless gullible sheep. You will be controlled or you will be
    dealt with so harshly by your superiors that you will wish you had submitted. Talk all the shit
    you like on you web forums, but at the end of the day you have all been subjugated,
    and you are no more free than an animal in a zoo. In fact you are less free because
    you have to PAY those who hold you prisoner for the privilege of being a captive.

    Right about now, many Americans are probably beginning to understand why alcohol
    consumption in Russia is so high.

    =>

    1. Re: Now you know what a boiled frog feels like. by MichaelMacDonald · · Score: 1

      Comments like these are annoying. You state something obvious, then attribute it to a cause indirectly. The Right Wing controls as much or nore than the left. Many of the things complained about as 'government control' are obvious right wing incentives. Not saying that both sides aren't bad, but both sides are bad. Libertarian party included, since it's bought and paid for...

    2. Re: Now you know what a boiled frog feels like. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Party party party poop. We don't have a group you can't point and say "bought and paid" for right now. What do we do? Stay home and suffer? Or work to change the bullshit crap going on in our party?

      I don't see anything positive going on in this country right now *except* for the Tea Party group that is trying to muscle out the old bought-and-paid-for guard such as Boehner and McConnell. You all call them anti-gay, anti-minority, anti-women, anti-science, whatever, What they really are is anti-establishment, and that means that everyone, especially Boehner/McConnell, are going to do everything in their power to get them labeled, characterized, and kept out of office.

      What fights are going on in the Democratic party to fight their establishment? Not much eh? That's why I think that the Democrat party *is* the party of establishment.

      At the individual voter level, what do you suppose we do, just shut up and continue voting with the pack mentality? Or should we push for more involvement, especially at the local level, to try and get rid of the corruption and the establishment, like the Tea Party is trying to do? For those that have allowed their views to be painted by the bought-and-paid-for-media and completely hate the Tea Party with every ounce of their flesh, just what are you doing to turn the establishment over?

    3. Re: Now you know what a boiled frog feels like. by MrBigInThePants · · Score: 1

      Dude. EVERY one of the major political forces in the US is a right wing force by WORLD standards. (i.e. not your RIDICULOUS and extremely myopic US standards)

      Half the problem is how your people view politics, economics, justice and democracy in general. Which is why the endless comments like yours always annoy me so damned much. The ignorance of fundamentals is staggering.

      It is not either or time. It is wipe the slate clean and start again time!

      Any other option just will not work at this point - the US citizenry have let it go on too long and become too entrenched.

      Anything else is now losing the battle...as this most recent of many articles shows quite clearly!

    4. Re:Now you know what a boiled frog feels like. by Gravis+Zero · · Score: 1

      The temperature in the pot goes up gradually, so the frog
      doesn't notice the water is too hot until it is too late.

      And now all those in the UK, the US, Australia, and various other
      countries are boiled frogs.

      And the water is very hot indeed.

      It's all about control, you stupid senseless gullible sheep. You will be controlled or you will be
      dealt with so harshly by your superiors that you will wish you had submitted. Talk all the shit
      you like on you web forums, but at the end of the day you have all been subjugated,
      and you are no more free than an animal in a zoo. In fact you are less free because
      you have to PAY those who hold you prisoner for the privilege of being a captive.

      Right about now, many Americans are probably beginning to understand why alcohol
      consumption in Russia is so high.

      are you blaming the frogs or trying to excuse alcoholism?

      --
      Anons need not reply. Questions end with a question mark.
    5. Re: Now you know what a boiled frog feels like. by towermac · · Score: 2

      That's a good point. You can't hate the tea party and not love the status quo.

      The establishment's only option is to cast them as even worse, and since 'child molesters' is over the top and might not stick; they cast them as racists. As racism is the only real problem this country has ever had, the danger is too great to even listen to them. That is how 'cut spending, stop overprinting money' equates to racism.

      Another indicator are the primaries. The candidate for the establishment party will run unopposed; the candidates for the opposition party will be many, all over the place politically, and unlikely that a good one will emerge. (If he/she was good, they can't be by the time that shit is over).

      If we had open primaries in all 50 states, then, well; then we would have a decent political system...

    6. Re: Now you know what a boiled frog feels like. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is a bullshit statement that comes up every so often, and only displays your ignorance. Right wing-ism supports more freedom for the individual. Left wing-ism supports more power for the government.

      How is an overreaching privacy-invading faction of the government *not* left wing?

      The media spins their own application of "left" and "right" labels to keep you dumbasses frothing at the mouth. You, sir, are a victim of propaganda.

    7. Re:Now you know what a boiled frog feels like. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've been called a tin foil hat all my life. Guess who's laughing now!

      No, wait, I'm stuck in the same shit as everybody else. At least I can say "I told you so"...

    8. Re: Now you know what a boiled frog feels like. by MrBigInThePants · · Score: 2

      You are wrong Mr. Coward. And very obviously so. You also have not provided any evidence for your rather outlandish claims. And another disclaimer: I HATE the right/left spectrum demarcation and only use it out of necessity of communication. I believe it is totally outdated and a inaccurate in modern politics.

      Firstly I form my own opinions by observing ACTUAL BEHAVIOUR, not just parrot whatever libertarian propaganda I have been reading last such as you have been doing.

      World wide right wing and center right governments have been ADVANCING the same - hence why you have Obama agreeing with Cameron - a right wing Tory FFS.
      Here in my country the VERY right wing part in power is bending over forwards to allow the US to have new spying powers - even to the point of suffering greatly themselves politically. The same in Australia. This is repeated around the world.

      To argue otherwise is just ignorant.

      Worldwide it is the most LEFT parties that are the most vociferously opposed to the spying the RIGHT parties are introducing.

      And just because you are so ignorant as to call the democrats "left wing" or to totally and completely ignorant of what your typical left wing party stands for does not make it any different.

      And if you think the "libertarian" party (which are so obviously referring to) will be a breath of fresh air you are a bigger joke than I am implying above.

      The Modern Libertarian == freedom for the wealthy and their total abnegation of any social responsibility towards everyone else(i.e the people they used to make said money).

      And all the above is so obvious and transparent it should not even require explaining. But then this is main problem with world today - too much wilful ignorance.

    9. Re: Now you know what a boiled frog feels like. by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      All you get with open primaries is strategic traversals of voters loyal to other parties crossing and voting for the least likely person win on a competitive party's platform. It's nothing but legal sabotauge of the political system. If you want to vote for a party's primary candidates, declare for that party. If not, then don't.

    10. Re: Now you know what a boiled frog feels like. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can't hate the tea party and not love the status quo.

      Yes you can.

    11. Re:Now you know what a boiled frog feels like. by Aighearach · · Score: 1

      So, you're saying that Americans didn't know that calls to Iran would be monitored, and so having those calls monitored without them knowing somehow creates a creaping sheep-state? That is really daft in 100 ways. You can be for or against the surveillance in the story, and either way that idea is equally stupid; Americans always knew that communications that are really in fact to an overseas person, especially a person in Iran, would be monitored. That is not actually even controversial. So even if you're against it, you're against it knowing that it is popular, not a secret.

      I'm assuming the Russians drink a lot because they have no power. It is a lot different to be oppressed by forces you can't control than what we do in America, which is to knowingly and intentionally elect politicians that will institute an information/surveillance state. If the Russians didn't want what they have, they'd still have it. If Americans decide we want something different, it will change in just a few years. Whoever is telling you Americans are just sheep really has you by the credulity-bone.

    12. Re: Now you know what a boiled frog feels like. by sjames · · Score: 1

      Actually, no. There are thLeft Libertarians, for example.

      In the U.S., the right tends to be even more authoritarian than the left.

    13. Re: Now you know what a boiled frog feels like. by towermac · · Score: 1

      If you burnt your vote for the opposition, then you didn't get to vote for your candidate. It's a risky strategy.

      But people should get to vote for a viable candidate. It would stop the primaries from becoming a contest of who can be the farthest right or left candidate, wouldn't it?

  10. Another one? by pushing-robot · · Score: 3, Funny

    At this rate we'll need a metadata database metadatabase.

    --
    How can I believe you when you tell me what I don't want to hear?
    1. Re:Another one? by DigitAl56K · · Score: 2

      I wonder if it was "only" metadata due to actual intended restraint or mainly technology limitations at the time.

    2. Re:Another one? by dbIII · · Score: 1

      In the Database Database
      I'm struggling in the Database Wow Wow
      It doesn't even matter if there is no hope
      As the madness of the system grows

      http://www.animelyrics.com/ani...

    3. Re:Another one? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The yasmd .deb and .rpm packages are surely in the works already.

    4. Re:Another one? by currently_awake · · Score: 1

      It's "only" meta-data because that's all they have admitted to. Given the resources (and secret rooms at telco switches) it's likely they record the call itself.

    5. Re:Another one? by Aighearach · · Score: 1

      At this rate we'll need a metadata database metadatabase.

      We have that, it is called an "information sharing system."

  11. BRB! by DigitAl56K · · Score: 2

    Hang on while we all switch to encryption you can have a back door to. Once again you've proven yourself trustworthy!

    Is big gov most eager to turn into our worst enemy or their own? It's hard to tell.

    1. Re:BRB! by currently_awake · · Score: 1

      Unless you live next door to Issis, your own government IS your greatest threat.

  12. suppose we wanted to do something about it. Goal? by raymorris · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I think most of us would agree this has gotten out of hand. This federal government is completly ignoring the Constitution, and getting more brazen about it each day. As the Court ruled in Marbury vs Madison, "any law repugnant to the Constitution is null and void". Null and void, empty of any validity - because these actions are not within the powers delegated to the government by people, they are without force of law, but are rather unlawful acts by the people commuting them.

    Suppose 100 of us or so wanted to start taking action and enlisting others to take action, in an organized way. We would need to start by defining our objective precisely. We'd need a measurable goal, worded such that we could know when that goal had been achieved. It would need to be specific enough that we could all agree to pursue that goal and we'd know we were acting with unity. Unlike the Occupy movement and others, we could stand together with a clear message and a clear goal, knowing where exactly we wished to go would guide our path. Can anyone state in clear, concise and precise language exactly what we'd seek to achieve?

  13. Re:suppose we wanted to do something about it. Goa by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My goal is to keep my constitutional, inalienable rights.

    Oh, and to actually hold corrupt politicians to the law, too.

    That's a good start.

  14. Re:suppose we wanted to do something about it. Goa by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Get about 160,000,000 people to give a shit.

  15. Re:suppose we wanted to do something about it. Goa by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    An Article 5 Constitutional Convention, wherein we would propose a new Bill of Rights updated for the information age: http://foavc.org/

  16. Sad State of Affairs by JimSadler · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Who has answers? Obviously we do need better ways to catch and confine criminals and we also need better ways to tune these people up and make them normal members of society. Punishment simply does not work. On the other hand we have a government with a very long history of wrong doing when we give them any legal powers at all. The FBI has a perverse history. The CIA has gone nuts at times and the NSA seems to have no bounderies. And on top of that local cops are often operating outside the law with the backing of local governments. And it is not that local cops are just after people of minority races. There is some poorly defined Ozzie and Harriet factor that causes cops to want to control anyone that is unlike Ozzie and Harriet in their life style. As a matter of fact a cop's entire world is controlling other peoples' behaviours. It gets to the point where cops can't turn it off. they go off duty and still think they exist to set the behaviour of everyone around them. It is the order part of law and order that is the issue. The cops look for usual and common behaviours whereas different cultures have entirely different modes of behaviour. There was a ghetto near where I worked and it was quite common to see black kids out on their tiny bicycles at three or four AM. I live in a hot climate and the kids simply could not play outdoors during the day. Many of their homes also had no air conditioning or had problems with enough money to pay electric bills. The effect was that almost year round the kids were on their bikes and doing whatever they could to not be bored silly. Some were very dangerous while others were simply poor kids playing. Obviously it is illegal to have kids roaming about in the wee hours when they are as young as eight years and very much at risk in ghetto areas. How can cops deal with this sort of thing?

    1. Re:Sad State of Affairs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Build more abortion clinics?

      What... Too edgy?

    2. Re:Sad State of Affairs by Gravis+Zero · · Score: 1

      There is some poorly defined Ozzie and Harriet factor that causes cops to want to control anyone that is unlike Ozzie and Harriet in their life style. As a matter of fact a cop's entire world is controlling other peoples' behaviours. It gets to the point where cops can't turn it off. [...] How can cops deal with this sort of thing?

      the solution is for them to quit. if you are unable to be rational then you should not be a cop.

      --
      Anons need not reply. Questions end with a question mark.
    3. Re:Sad State of Affairs by bug1 · · Score: 1

      Obviously we do need better ways to catch and confine criminals and we also need better ways to tune these people up and make them normal members of society

      And a strong social welfare system so people dont get so desperate they see crime as a way to "fit in" with our capitalist society.

    4. Re:Sad State of Affairs by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 1

      How are eight year old boys going to go to school when they're awake at 4am? What are the parents doing, and why aren't they in trouble for child abuse?

      --
      Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
    5. Re:Sad State of Affairs by currently_awake · · Score: 1

      Stop passing laws the people don't support. It makes otherwise law abiding citizens lose respect for the law.

    6. Re:Sad State of Affairs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Obviously we do need better ways to catch

      It is not obvious at all. The justification is "terrorism," but terrorism isn't particularly deadly, just really dramatic. Even the biggest Reichstag Fire so far: more people died of old age on 9/11 than died in the towers. I think our own government transcending the will of the people is a bigger and more realistic fear than terrorist plots.

      Of course the people tasked with blocking terrorist plots will be frustrated, but this is WAI, and the default answer to them needs to change to "no" rather than "of course."

  17. Re:suppose we wanted to do something about it. Goa by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Most government employees have no liability for actions taken on the job. Eliminate this. Then force fund organizations whose job it is to go after those who are overreaching and violating the constitution. Then we need to curtail all tracking systems. Outlaw government instituted or contracted video surveillance and the likes. Then eliminate social security, license plates, and drivers licenses. We can't afford these things if we want to live in a free society. We must accept that some people will drive recklessly, kill, etc. Some people will commit terrorist acts and the like. This is the cost of liberty. This is a reasonable price to pay compared to what happens when the politicians are given the power to enact laws that can be abused by law enforcement agencies and the like. Then we should really eliminate democracy. The people are too dumb to give power to. Unfortunately I do not know what the solution is if we eliminate democratic process.

  18. Say hellow to the old boss same as the new boss by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As one shadow organization is exposed, another crops up. Welcome to a gov that isn't interested in the will of the people.

  19. Haystack Creation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    So while you were calling Australia to your mom, the DEA was putting you in the 'drug dealer' database, because calling abroad is something that a drug dealer might do.

    Because at some point they stopped investigating drug crimes, and instead switched to spying on random people for random reasons and asking the question 'is this random person I picked a drug criminal? [yes/maybe]"

    And the answer is [yes/maybe] and never 'no', they keep the data always. Without suspicion of any crime, they keep it anyway. So they never say 'no, this person is not someone I am investigating for a crime and thus not someone I can legally spy on', instead, they get put in the 'maybe' pile.

    Drug dealers travel abroad, spy on everyone who travels abroad.
    Drug dealers have lots of money, spy on everyone who has money.
    Drug dealers want privacy, spy on people who buy home CCTV cameras.

    If select {travels_abroad, lots_of_money, cctv, calls_mom .... 50 other random choices} then drug dealer.

    This is not investigating drug crimes, this is defining arbitrarily chosen traits are equivalent to crime in order to justify mass surveillance.

    1. Re:Haystack Creation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is not investigating drug crimes, this is defining arbitrarily chosen traits are equivalent to crime in order to justify mass surveillance.

      So if they are not using to investigate crimes, what is the end game of this mass surveillance? To sell us targeted Google Ads?

    2. Re:Haystack Creation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No its crime solving, its just that the definition of crime is easier to tweak than to investigate.

      So its easier to profile what drug dealers might do, then spy on everyone, and run that profile, then tweak the definition of the crime to fit the people your profile chooses.

      e.g. Drug dealers import drugs, hence people who import drugs are drug dealers, hence bringing your arthritis meds from Canada is made a crime akin to drug smuggling, when it should be free trade (already happened).

      Drug dealers take lots of cash, hence carrying $10000 across a border without the correct permissions is made a federal offense (already happened).

      Drug dealers might use encryption, hence using encryption could become a federal offense (see Cameron and Obama undermining encryption currently, could well happen).

      Drug dealers might use Bitcoin, bitcoin is under attack...

      Again and again, its removing freedoms and criminalizing ordinary behavior because it could be used for criminal purposes and profiling isn't selective enough to distinguish.

    3. Re:Haystack Creation by Zontar+The+Mindless · · Score: 1

      Having made many, many calls from Australia (and other places) to my mom in the US, she's probably in there, too.

      --
      Il n'y a pas de Planet B.
    4. Re:Haystack Creation by AHuxley · · Score: 1

      Best just to log it all and then sort for any reason later.
      The other aspect to massive domestic log creation is to help track undercover staff, staff, informants, whistleblowers, the press and wider legal system.
      That haystack can work in both directions. Fully understanding the US telco network and all US social media can ensure a good background story for undercover work and help track all interest in that created persona or court case.
      Is a law firm or member of the press too interested in methods that where hidden from a court? Who are they communicating with? What private sector social media databases have they searched? What did they find?
      Did facial recognition find a photo on old or new social media that any private investigator or member of the press could find given the vast private sector collections of social media?

      --
      Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
    5. Re:Haystack Creation by bmo · · Score: 1

      >So if they are not using to investigate crimes, what is the end game of this mass surveillance?

      To pillage. To find who's got the money, boats, cars, etc., and are morally questionable/socially insignificant enough that the general public doesn't get up-in-arms about it when the DEA takes their stuff.

      --
      BMO

  20. Re:suppose we wanted to do something about it. Goa by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Stop calling the Tea party idiots and racists. That would be your first effective step, since you seem to be wanting what they want.

  21. Rot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think with all of these revelations, it is starting to become clear that the corruption in the US is endemic to a point where even voting the bastards out will not solve much of anything. As it is it takes decades to even mildly curtail some atrocious aspect of government, meanwhile thousands more take place.

    While I'm not one to advocate for revolution, it's obvious one is fomenting, and all you can say for the US is stick a fork in it. It's done.

  22. If you are innocent --- by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You have an obligation to make numerous calls that sound incriminating.
    Noise is our only defense.

  23. Never written for that purpose, eh??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    BALONEY. The writers know exactly what they're pushing and weasling down congress throats. And congress knows exactly what they're writing and weasling down each others throats and signing.
    Do you know what this is MON? It is the US government becoming self aware, just like in the TERMINATOR!!! EVERY government in HISTORY has reached this point, they go on defensive self indulging power grabs over the people and the rest of the world and its downhill to REVOLUTION and WARS after that.
    so STOP KIDDING YOURSELVES... the entire US government apparatus is clearly FFUUCCKKEEDD and you need to take it back.
    RIGHT FUCKING NOW.
    or the very bloody and real battles you read about in the history books will be what your next mode of life will be.

  24. Re:suppose we wanted to do something about it. Goa by Zontar+The+Mindless · · Score: 1

    Considering that you guys seem to spend about 75% of your time in internecine sparring with the Birchers and the Eagle Forum... Nah, thanks but no thanks.

    --
    Il n'y a pas de Planet B.
  25. Re:suppose we wanted to do something about it. Goa by Zontar+The+Mindless · · Score: 0

    Stop calling the Tea party idiots and racists.

    And this will make them cease being idiots and racists... how, exactly?

    --
    Il n'y a pas de Planet B.
  26. Re:Tell me by Zontar+The+Mindless · · Score: 1

    I dunno, mon... Why do idiots mod down Interesting/Insightful comments?

    --
    Il n'y a pas de Planet B.
  27. So where is the oversight? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    On the one hand, this is what a completely out-of-control government apparatus looks like: Many agencies doing many indefensible things, and nobody tells them otherwise. On the other hand, it's supposedly the American "Better Educated Voter" that's supposed to keep this sort of thing in check. What that means for the American Citizen reading this I'm leaving as an exercise for the reader.

    1. Re:So where is the oversight? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So the voter that was never allowed to know it was happening behind their back should develop some sort of magical sense to know it was happening and prevent it? Is that what you're suggesting?

      Oh, and lets not even pretend that both parties don't want exactly the same thing here.

  28. Meeting Annnouncement Posted: Check Bulletin Board by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Committee for Public Safety has room for members.

    See time and location information on the notice.

  29. Re:suppose we wanted to do something about it. Goa by Guy+From+V · · Score: 1

    Jesus, I actually know what both of those organizations are...

  30. Re:suppose we wanted to do something about it. Goa by towermac · · Score: 1

    I see a problem. The Constitution does not forbid snooping the communications of the country's enemies.

    When they steamed open letters from Americans to the Nazis containing troop movement info, we were glad they did that.

    When they caught a Soviet spy using his American girlfriend, we were glad they did that.

    When they foil a terrorist plot before they get a chance to kill people, we are glad of that too.

    We overreacted to 9/11 is all, predictable maybe; but it's never too late to fix things:

    1) I need the NSA to be secret again. I want them to know every single thing that ever happens, and we don't have a clue what they do and don't know. None of it matters, because it all stays in that basement. They don't share with other agencies, just like it used to be. Whatever they know is untouchable by politicians, courts, anyone; except in the most dire need.

    2) I need to trust the court that decides when that dire need has arisen.

  31. Re:suppose we wanted to do something about it. Goa by currently_awake · · Score: 1

    We need to split the NSA into offensive and defensive sections, and hand off the offensive block to the CIA. It won't stop the spying but at least we won't get cracked by North Korea hackers. Baby steps, take this a bit at a time.

  32. Re:suppose we wanted to do something about it. Goa by chihowa · · Score: 1

    Then we should really eliminate democracy. The people are too dumb to give power to. Unfortunately I do not know what the solution is if we eliminate democratic process.

    A lottery for representatives would be the ideal. Even a hereditary monarchy (with a constitution and veto, perhaps in the form of a guillotine) would beat what we have now.

    The problem isn't so much that people are too dumb as that our system selects for corrupt, greedy, and power hungry sociopaths. The only way to become a "representative" is to want to be one. But anyone who wants that job should be denied it on that basis alone. The people may vote sub-optimally, but every single choice available to them is a bad choice. Our system is designed to distill out anyone who is remotely suitable for public office.

    Replacing the system that self-selects the most horrible people with one that operates on complete chance would be an improvement.

    --
    If you want a vision of the future, imagine a youtube comments section scrolling - forever.
  33. Re:suppose we wanted to do something about it. Goa by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1) I need the NSA to be secret again. I want them to know every single thing that ever happens, and we don't have a clue what they do and don't know.

    How about you just move to one of the many authoritarian countries in this world instead of subverting the American way and dragging us all, unwillingly, with you?

  34. blatant innefeciencies by jakesyl · · Score: 1

    How much money could the government save if they just worked together through all the bureaucratic bullshit.

  35. Re: suppose we wanted to do something about it. Go by jakesyl · · Score: 1

    +1

  36. Sometimes I curse technology by p51d007 · · Score: 0

    We had way more privacy, before the advent of computers. Hey, I started with electronics as a hobby in the very early 70's as a kid, worked on televisions as a teenager, graduated from college with a degree in electronics, spent some time at TI in Houston, built all of my own computers, ham radio operator, so I LOVE technology & gadgets, but, with the advancement of said technology, we've seen a more than proportional drop in our privacy. With governments (at least in the USA, I have no idea about other countries), it is so much easier to ILLEGALLY collect data, but just scooping up EVERYTHING, and running it through server farms (like the huge one out west that takes so much water to keep cool, something the west doesn't have a lot of anyway), and then something pops out, and they will use THAT as a basic to get a warrant to "legally" spy on someone. In the USA, it's to the point that you are guilty, until proven innocent, and you have to exhaust all of your money & time to prove otherwise. Considering the unlimited resources the government has, that is a very hard task. And in some cases, WE are partially to blame. Fire up pretty much any app on a mobile device, because you want to find something, an address, an item, and we willfully "allow app to know your location". This is saved in a database, "for your convenience", so they can push things of interest to you. Oh how nice! All the while, you know good and well, the government is somewhere saving all of this, and using it for whatever means "they" find necessary. I know it would wreck civilization, but sometimes I wonder if the human race would be partially better off if an EMP due to the sun popped over us.

    1. Re:Sometimes I curse technology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Unabomber realized all this some 20-30 years ahead of you...

      And we have seen nothing yet. It is going to get even worse.

      We will have the "Internet of Things" pushed over us. Small gadgets gathering information about everything, and sending it to someone. All technology will have that, and some willl be goverment mandated (real-time electricity consumption data is gathered by govts in some countries already -- for environmental reasons of course)

  37. You know that this was inevitable, don't you? :) by roman_mir · · Score: 1

    Yo, dawg, I heard you like your metadata, so we put metadata into your metadata, so you can metadatabase while you metadatabase.

    We are considering another layer of it now.

  38. Re:suppose we wanted to do something about it. Goa by sumdumass · · Score: 2

    It will make the cease about as much as you calling them names will. However, calling them names will also have the effect of you splitting momentum between more than one group because of fallacies you hold largely only in your mind. This ensures your defeat at any change if effecting change you agree with. But go ahead and demonize the people on your side. It's works so well so far hasn't it. I mean you have gotten everything you wanted and government listens to the people right?

  39. Re:suppose we wanted to do something about it. Goa by Aighearach · · Score: 1

    If you let them have access in the case of "dire" need, you'll find lots of dire needs just coincidentally popping up. That would be almost exactly the same as now. I agree with your general premise, if it was possible. I just don't see it being so.

    Better would be to have it all locked in that basement, and have all the people allowed in the basement closely watched by other agencies without access, and all their non-basement activities to be published and transparent; and the activities of the watcher-watchers, too.

  40. yes, there was a REASON data sharing was prohibite by raymorris · · Score: 1

    >. They don't share with other agencies, just like it used to be. Whatever they know is untouchable by politicians, courts, anyone;

    Definitely this is a good start. That's how it was before 9/11 and that was good. The NSA was only concerned about national security issues, and since they weren't allowed to send information to the FBI the data was only* used for national security. Yes, that made it harder to protect against something like 9/11, but it _helped_ protect privacy and freedom, so it was worth it.

    * I'm sure they illegally shared information once or twice, but that's better than the FBI having wholesale access to citizens' data as we have now.

  41. Re:suppose we wanted to do something about it. Goa by TechnoJoe · · Score: 0

    Can anyone state in clear, concise and precise language exactly what we'd seek to achieve?

    You would need to de-elect the Republicans & Democrats in the House of Representatives who worked together to keep the surveillance funded (a yes vote would have barred funding)

    That's a pretty clear and measurable goal. The beauty is that you don't need to get rid of all of them (but it would be a great bonus). You just need to get rid of enough of them that if it is brought up again it would pass. How you go about accomplishing this goal is another matter entirely.

  42. that's a method by raymorris · · Score: 1

    That's a method you're suggesting to get to some goal, a means to some end. You'd like to replace Democrats and Republicans with Communists and Green party candidates in order to __________. Fill in the blank.