[bestbits] Reform surveillance

Mishi Choudhary mishi at softwarefreedom.org
Tue Dec 10 15:31:27 EST 2013


I can't help but point to this third part of the lecture series which
talks exactly about this:

http://snowdenandthefuture.info/snowdenandthefuture-unionpreserved.pdf


On 12/10/2013 02:57 PM, Kevin Bankston wrote:
> Since 2005 when news about the NSA programs first broke, through to today, I've yet to see anything reported anywhere about any of the data being sought being data that would not have been collected but for targeted advertising needs.  Have I missed something?
>
> On Dec 10, 2013, at 11:02 AM, "genekimmelman at gmail.com" <genekimmelman at gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> If the supply side insists on personal information for targeted advertising,  isn't that entangled with the data governments seek? 
>>
>>
>> -------- Original message --------
>> From: Mishi Choudhary <mishi at softwarefreedom.org> 
>> Date: 12/10/2013 10:52 AM (GMT-05:00) 
>> To: "Mike Godwin (mgodwin at INTERNEWS.ORG)" <mgodwin at INTERNEWS.ORG>,bestbits at lists.bestbits.net 
>> Subject: Re: [bestbits] Reform surveillance 
>>
>>
>> I agree with Mike that its crucial to reduce the "demand-side" by
>> regulating government access but I think the suppliers of data are not
>> as informed as they should and could be and the companies have more to
>> do at their end.
>>
>>
>> On 12/09/2013 07:10 PM, Mike Godwin (mgodwin at INTERNEWS.ORG) wrote:
>>> Mishi quotes the Times:
>>>
>>>
>>>> "While the Internet companies fight to maintain authority over their
>>>> customers¹ data, their business models depend on collecting the same
>>>> information that the spy agencies want, and they have long cooperated
>>>> with the government to some extent by handing over data in response to
>>>> legal requests.
>>> This statement strikes me as disingenuously oversimplistic on the Times¹s
>>> part ‹ specifically, in saying that the Internet companies are collecting
>>> ³the same information that the spy agencies want.²  Yes, the agencies want
>>> the data the companies have, but the companies are gathering data about
>>> consumption and viewing patterns, primarily. What the agencies want is
>>> traffic and association analysis, and they know they can draw inferences
>>> if they have large datasets.
>>>
>>> This may seem like a subtle distinction, but really it¹s not. It¹s like
>>> saying ³I listen to changes in the tone of your voice when you speak to
>>> me, and so does the snooping spy who wiretaps your phone, and therefore,
>>> implicitly, the spy and I are both culpable somehow.²
>>>
>>> What I perceive in all this is an attempt to muddy the issue and
>>> delegitimize the internet companies¹ sincere efforts to build and/or
>>> restore consumer trust. I¹m critical of the companies from time to time
>>> (and there are times when I¹m mostly critical of what all the companies
>>> are doing), but to me the real analysis here is that governments have
>>> opportunistically taken advantage of what the companies have been
>>> gathering, most of the time in good faith, from users.
>>>
>>>> The new principles outlined by the companies contain little information
>>>> and few promises about their own practices, which privacy advocates say
>>>> contribute to the government¹s desire to tap into the companies¹ data
>>>> systems.
>>>>
>>>> ³The companies are placing their users at risk by collecting and
>>>> retaining so much information,² said Marc Rotenberg, president and
>>>> executive director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center, a
>>>> nonprofit research and advocacy organization. ³As long as this much
>>>> personal data is collected and kept by these companies, they are always
>>>> going to be the target of government collection efforts.²
>>> I take Marc at his word, as always, but the fact is that if the companies
>>> cut their data gathering in half ‹ or even by a factor of 10 or 100 ‹
>>> governments will want to engage in bulk collection and interception. The
>>> key approach, in my view, is to try to reduce the demand-side (by
>>> regulating what governments can do) rather conflate it with the supply
>>> side (the fact that commercial enterprises gather data from actual and
>>> potential customers (or for them).
>>>
>>>
>>> ‹Mike, speaking only for myself
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>
>> -- 
>> Warm Regards
>> Mishi Choudhary, Esq.
>> Legal Director
>> Software Freedom Law Center
>> 1995 Broadway Floor 17
>> New York, NY-10023
>> (tel) 212-461-1912
>> (fax) 212-580-0898
>> www.softwarefreedom.org
>>
>>
>> Executive Director 
>> SFLC.IN
>> K-9, Second Floor
>> Jangpura Extn.
>> New Delhi-110014
>> (tel) +91-11-43587126 
>> (fax) +91-11-24323530
>> www.sflc.in
>>
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-- 
Warm Regards
Mishi Choudhary, Esq.
Legal Director
Software Freedom Law Center
1995 Broadway Floor 17
New York, NY-10023
(tel) 212-461-1912
(fax) 212-580-0898
www.softwarefreedom.org


Executive Director 
SFLC.IN
K-9, Second Floor
Jangpura Extn.
New Delhi-110014
(tel) +91-11-43587126 
(fax) +91-11-24323530
www.sflc.in



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