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Weekly column: How will surveillance tech evolve in 10 years?





http://news.com.com/2010-1069-979276.html

    George Orwell, here we come
    By Declan McCullagh
    January 6, 2003, 10:58 AM PT

    The biggest problem with criticism of Adm. John Poindexter's massive
    spy proposal is not in the argument over the system being so darn creepy.

    Of course it's creepy. This new federal agency deliberately chose the
    motto "knowledge is power," crafted a logo certain to inspire
    conspiracy theories, and is itching to assemble a detailed
    computerized dossier on every American. And that a figure such as
    Poindexter--disgraced in the Iran-Contra scandal and with a database
    addiction dating back to at least 1987--is running the show is a
    detail worthy of a Jonathan Swift satire.

    No, the biggest problem with the criticism of the Total Information
    Awareness system is that it's too shortsighted. It's focused on what
    the Poindexters of the world can do with current database and
    information-mining technology. That includes weaving together strands
    of data from various sources--such as travel, credit card, bank,
    electronic toll and driver's license databases--with the stated
    purpose of identifying terrorists before they strike.

    But what could Poindexter and the Bush administration devise in five
    or 10 years, if they had the money, the power and the will?

    That's the real question, and therein lies the true threat. Even if
    all of our current elected representatives, appointed officials and
    unappointed bureaucrats are entirely trustworthy--and that's a pretty
    big assumption--what could a corrupt FBI, Secret Service or Homeland
    Security police force do with advanced technology by the end of the
    decade? What if there was another terrorist attack that prompted
    Congress to delete whatever remaining privacy laws shield Americans
    from surveillance?

    [... remainder snipped and available at 
http://news.com.com/2010-1069-979276.html ...]




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