Spy vs Spy vs You
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Okay, this article is just too timely: U.S. to Expand Domestic Use Of Spy Satellites. I wish I was making this up. I wish this wasn’t coming directly from the WSJ. I wish I didn’t see this as an extreme violation of my civil liberties as an American.
According to officials, one of the department’s first objectives will be to use the network to enhance border security, determine how best to secure critical infrastructure and help emergency responders after natural disasters. Sometime next year, officials will examine how the satellites can aid federal and local law-enforcement agencies, covering both criminal and civil law. The department is still working on determining how it will engage law enforcement officials and what kind of support it will give them.
So, it’s okay for them to spy on us – with closed intelligence – just so we might be able to stop criminals from doing the things they’re going to do anyway? Yeah, that’s a pretty big leap of faith, and I have absolutely no faith in this being a good thing. Is this 1984? Big Brother is finally peering into your living room.
Access to the high-tech surveillance tools would, for the first time, allow Homeland Security and law-enforcement officials to see real-time, high-resolution images and data, which would allow them, for example, to identify smuggler staging areas, a gang safehouse, or possibly even a building being used by would-be terrorists to manufacture chemical weapons.
This is your government, folks. What if they thought you were a terrorist because you tried to bring toothpaste onto an airplane without first placing it safely inside a baggie?! Okay, so maybe that’s a bit extreme – but so is their unchallenged ability to WATCH EVERY DAMN MOVE YOU MAKE based on suspicions and no due process.
Unlike electronic eavesdropping, which is subject to legislative and some judicial control, this use of spy satellites is largely uncharted territory. Although the courts have permitted warrantless aerial searches of private property by law-enforcement aircraft, there are no cases involving the use of satellite technology.
More loopholes! w00t!
“This all has to be vetted through a legal process,” he says. “We have to get this right because we don’t want civil-rights and civil-liberties advocates to have concerns that this is being misused in ways which were not intended.”
Sure, because government officials can never be corrupted – nor can they be purchased by any special interest group at any price. I’m sorry, I just don’t buy it. I put my own life online because I choose to do that – but what about people who value their privacy? I mean, is that something we should so willingly suspend in the hopes that this “intelligence” and technology can help us make this world a safer place?
Then again, does spying make the world a better place?
Your privacy is constantly in jeopardy. It’s not just about blocking third-party cookies, comrades. Just how much of yourself do you no longer own? How much of yourself are you willing to give over to these various online social networks? How much of yourself are you willing to expose to the globe, to nameless / faceless people on the other end of the lens?
This deserves much, MUCH more thought…





7 Comments
Techmeme
November 9th, 2009
at 10:45pm
+ Discussion: Chris Pirillo, All Points Blog and digg
The Chris Pirillo Show
November 9th, 2009
at 10:45pm
[IMG] Chris Pirillo Spy vs Spy vs You DRM is Depressing The Initial Gnomedex Decompression Windows Vista Complaints Department What to Do with Old Electronics Radio Silence Free eBooks for Gnomedex Attendees! Okay, Maybe I?m the Idiot?
Seek
February 17th, 2008
at 6:57pm
someone could learn more about me than my closest friends and family just by connecting the scattered dots? Something that I put online when I was practically a kid will haunt me for the rest of my life? Nah, none of that pertains to me. Link:Spy vs Spy vs You ~ Chris Pirillo. I put my own life online because I choose to do that – but what about people who value their privacy? I mean, is that something we should so willingly suspend in the hopes that this “intelligence” and technology can help us make this world a
GeekBot
August 16th, 2007
at 6:06pm
I hate criminals. They make me scared. But not half as scared as I am of my government.
The Outsider
August 16th, 2007
at 6:32pm
Having once been inside that world, I can say that you’re right to be skeptical of the government’s concern with your individual rights, and you’re also correct to question the extent of information gathered and its later use.
The paranoia and fear of domestic terrorism has been played expertly by the intelligence agencies in concert with the White House. They don’t hesitate to use our concerns about foreign, non-democratic governments and organizations to advocate behaviors that make us more like them every day.
Secrecy is a potent tool that should be used sparingly and with efficient safeguards in place to prevent its abuse. We have no choice but to trust our representatives to act in secret in ways that uphold and abide by our Constitution. I don’t think our trust is being honored in this current atmosphere of paranoia over terrorism. If we refuse to hold the government accountable for its actions, even those taken in secret, then we have no one else to blame when our liberties are restricted and eliminated in the name of greater security.
Tyler
August 16th, 2007
at 7:06pm
Wow Chris, sounds like you have a lot to hide. If your so concerned about your privacy, maybe you should not share so much of your personal information. Do you know how easy it is to get your address? Pretty easy, as a matter of fact, I have it right now, and your phone number.
psycoticsinginchick
August 17th, 2007
at 9:21pm
I feel that by just living in the U.S. we have no identity. We’re just a number that the Gov can track our every move with.
“Yes hello, I’m reporting on SS # 432-123-5678 (not a real number) She has been caught going into a house with a bag, I repeat, she’s going into a house with a bag.”
And soon the S.W.A.T. team is swarming some ladies house only to find out that it was some Grandmother with a rather large purse entering her own home. In the purse was a present she bought for her husband for their 70th anniversary. But now it’s too late because they both just had a heart attack and died because the Gov suspected that she was of harm.