[governance] ACLU - US - The Return of Total Information Awareness
David Goldstein
goldstein_david at yahoo.com.au
Thu Mar 13 05:35:07 EDT 2008
>From the feedback I've had over the years, this is nothing new. The Americans have been able to monitor telephone, email and whatever else they want, if they have had the desire to, for years. I suspect spy agencies around the world have been able to as well.
There is a mountain in the United States whose name escapes me now,which buried deep within has the most amazing facility for monitoringanything and everything we do electronically.
It may only be a drama, but I suspect there is also more than a hint of truth in the BBC programme Spooks.
What's probably becoming more widely available is more than just spy agencies have access to this data now, and that they are getting better and better at monitoring us.
I agree Eliot Spitzer's escapades are not earth shattering, but it is something new.
Cheers
David
----- Original Message ----
From: Riaz K Tayob <riazt at iafrica.com>
To: governance at lists.cpsr.org
Sent: Thursday, 13 March, 2008 8:24:28 PM
Subject: [governance] ACLU - US - The Return of Total Information Awareness
Snip:
Mass data from a wide variety of sources – including the private sector – is being collected
and scanned by a secretive military spy agency. This represents nothing
less than a major change in American life – and unless stopped the
consequences of this system for everybody will grow in magnitude along
with the rivers of data that are collected about each of us – and that’s
more and more every day.
Some of the concerns include - Snip:
* The erosion of privacy through the judicial creation of a distinction
between content and "transactional" or "addressing" information (such as
the recipients of e-mails or phone calls and the times and dates of each
communication) through the Patriot Act and prior developments.
* Partnerships between government agencies and private sector entities
to collect and monitor customers’ data and transactions.
The Return of Total Information Awareness
by ACLU
Tue Mar 11, 2008 at 12:36:22 PM PDT
By Barry Steinhardt, director the ACLU Technology and Liberty Project.
Yesterday’s report in The Wall Street Journal about the NSA’s domestic
spy dragnets should be major, major news. It is nothing less than the
return of TIA: "Total Information Awareness." Yet there has been barely
any followup coverage of the story in the mainstream media. I know the
media thinks the sexual behavior of the governor of New York is
earth-shatteringly important for American life – but this NSA report
actually is.
I mean, when we warn about a "surveillance society," this is what we’re
talking about. This is it, this is the ballgame. Mass data from a wide
variety of sources – including the private sector – is being collected
and scanned by a secretive military spy agency. This represents nothing
less than a major change in American life – and unless stopped the
consequences of this system for everybody will grow in magnitude along
with the rivers of data that are collected about each of us – and that’s
more and more every day.
The TIA program, you may recall, was a massive Pentagon plan (run by
Admiral John Poindexter of Iran-Contra fame) to tap into as many
databases containing personal information about Americans as possible
(program materials listed "Financial, Education, Travel, Medical,
Veterinary, Country Entry, Place/Event Entry, Transportation, Housing,
Critical Resources, Government, Communications"). All that information
would then be pulled together and scanned for "suspicious" patterns.
Given the density of the "data trails" that we all create in our daily
lives today and in the future, it was a recipe for the routine
surveillance of Americans and their every move.
TIA was supposed to have been killed off by Congress in 2003 amid
widespread objections to its sweeping Orwellian scope. There have been
always been hints about a secret annex to the law that permitted some
limited aspects of TIA to operate within the Pentagon’s black budget for
intelligence and with respect to foreigners only. Now it appears that,
like a vampire that can’t be killed except with a stake through its
heart, TIA has arisen again from its coffin in full body with its
voracious appetite for privacy of Americans and foreigners alike.
The reporter on the Journal piece, Siobhan Gorman, describes stunning
new spying capabilities that flow from a distributed collection of new
domestic spying capabilities (each of which the ACLU has long warned
against):
* TIA and data mining more broadly
* The NSA’s illegal wiretapping program, the so-called Terrorist
Surveillance Program (TSP)
* The Patriot Act’s broadening of FBI power to collect third-party
personal information without a subpoena through Section 215 searches and
National Security Letters.
* The Treasury Department’s expanded surveillance of financial
transactions through Cash Transaction Reporting and Suspicious Activity
Reporting.
* The CIA’s illegitimate access to the SWIFT database to monitor
international financial transactions.
* DHS’ efforts to increase collection and monitoring of airline
passenger data.
* Partnerships between government agencies and private sector entities
to collect and monitor customers’ data and transactions.
* The erosion of privacy through the judicial creation of a distinction
between content and "transactional" or "addressing" information (such as
the recipients of e-mails or phone calls and the times and dates of each
communication) through the Patriot Act and prior developments.
In the ongoing battle over FISA and the NSA’s warrantless spying program
(which appears to be but one part of this larger effort), the government
has been saying in effect, "trust us." Why should we trust an agency
that has been running this secret program in contravention of the Wyden
Amendment, the law passed by Congress shutting down TIA.
It’s time for Congress to find out exactly what is going on here, inform
the public, and put a stop to what appears to be the construction of a
sweeping infrastructure for the routine mass surveillance of innocent
people.
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