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Big Brother Everywhere

testosteronepit's picture




 

Wolf Richter   www.testosteronepit.com

The other day, a friend of mine, who was installing Skype on a new computer, was baffled when Skype suggested all sorts of contacts that weren’t on his Skype contact list but in his address book. This weekend, the Wall Street Journal provided an answer in its article on the voluminous personal information Facebook apps pilfer from users and their friends.

“Apps are gateways,” it said. Address book info, location, even sexual preferences ... nothing is safe. And not just of the user but also of the user’s friends—privacy settings don't stop your personal data from being grabbed by apps your friends are using. Turns out, the Skype app picks up address book data along with whatever else it can find.

The app economy is big bickies, as my friends from down under might say, with estimated revenues of $20 billion in 2011. Silicon Valley and San Francisco are hotbeds for app developers, and some of them are getting funded, and a select few have successful exits, such as photo-sharing app Instagram that ended up on Facebook’s shopping list for a cool billion.

At watering holes or events where developers and entrepreneurs hang out, the conversation often bounces across the app economy and the “cloud” it relies on, that notion of amorphous servers that handle storage and processing needs off site. Yet, the cloud is not amorphous. It is composed of companies with real people, servers, and computers, and some of the people are hanging out at bars, and soon they tell you how they access data their users have uploaded.

Cloud-based services brag about SSL encryption and make you sign in with complex passwords to make you feel secure, but like banks, their employees and data-mining algorithms can access your data stored on their servers to be monetized in some way. That’s the nature of the cloud on the commercial side.

But the government, which has largely been left behind in this quest for personal data, jumped into the fray with different and most likely less efficient methods. Examples abound. The latest—and most worrisome for international travelers—is Glenn Greenwald’s story about the travails that journalist and filmmaker Laura Poitras experiences every time she returns to the US. Among her documentaries were “My Country, My Country” which was filmed in Iraq and was nominated in 2007 for an Academy Award, and “Oath” which focused on two brothers in Yemen. “Poitras’ intent all along with these two documentaries was to produce a trilogy of War on Terror films,” Greenwald writes. And that got her on a list of Americans who receive special attentions from the Department of Homeland Security.

Virtually every time during that six-year-period that she has returned to the U.S., her plane has been met by DHS agents who stand at the airplane door or tarmac and inspect the passports of every de-planing passenger until they find her.... Each time, they detain her, and then interrogate her at length about where she went and with whom she met or spoke.

They also confiscated her electronic devices, including her camera, presumably searched and copied whatever was on them, before returning them often days later. And she wasn’t the only one. During an 18-month period from 2008-2010, more than 6,600 passengers—almost half of them US citizens—had had their electronic devices searched without search warrant, according to the ACLU.

For the government, that’s a lot of work to obtain the data of only six Americans a day—considering how much information millions of Americans give up every minute by using their smartphones, Facebook accounts, Google products, and thousands of other services, or whenever they click on ads or get on the internet, or simply walk into a store with their smartphone.

It would be much more efficient for the government to automatically grab every bit of information pulsing through the networks and store it on servers where powerful computers can break encryptions, translate foreign languages, and data-mine it ad infinitum. Which, if it isn’t happening already, will be happening soon, according to Wired Magazine: the National Security Agency is building its Utah Data Center in “immense secrecy” as a “final piece in a complex puzzle assembled over the past decade” to “intercept, decipher, analyze, and store vast swaths of the world’s communications,” even domestic communications by Americans. A $2 billion project. Perhaps one of those shovel-ready stimulus ones.

How far will the government go in trying to extract the last bit of information from its people? At this point, it appears to be lagging behind the commercial sector where big corporations and even startups that come and go obtain information because people hand it to them—eagerly or very unwittingly. And so an insidious and at once funny privacy issue erupted in France, or more precisely in a tiny village in Maine-et-Loire, with worldwide resonance. Read.... Can’t Even Urinate in his own Yard Anymore.

 

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Tue, 04/10/2012 - 09:37 | 2330872 SilverRhino
SilverRhino's picture

Amazing and terrifying at the same time.   Hypodermic needles are REALLY light and those things would make good kamikazes carrying sedatives.  

Tue, 04/10/2012 - 00:17 | 2330408 CompassionateFascist
CompassionateFascist's picture

Crap. I just drove by the Nano-Tech building at the local UC branch. Expected to see something the size of a shoebox. It's enormous.

Mon, 04/09/2012 - 22:57 | 2330259 eddiebe
eddiebe's picture

Fuck! I was already freaked out enough, and now this.

Mon, 04/09/2012 - 22:37 | 2330227 Money 4 Nothing
Money 4 Nothing's picture

12 gague with hi-brass buck shot, problem solved.

Tue, 04/10/2012 - 11:24 | 2331274 krispkritter
krispkritter's picture

Hell, it's a felony just to point a laser at an LE air unit in Florida.  You think they are going to let you shoot one of their expensive toys down?  At that point I'd think they'd start arming them and shoot back.  Electronic disruption is probably easier and can't be readily detected. This problem is gonna get a lot worse before it gets better unless the State's hold that someone peeping in your windows is illegal, that is until a warrant materializes.

Tue, 04/10/2012 - 11:58 | 2331403 pods
pods's picture

The state will peek into your window to find something wrong, then have someone make an anonymous tip so they can get a warrant.

Laws are for the little people, not the state.

Truly some scary stuff.  Armageddon cannot come fast enough.  Now where is my terminator movie collection....................Ahh, in the documentary section.

pods

Tue, 04/10/2012 - 07:47 | 2330669 narapoiddyslexia
narapoiddyslexia's picture

Latency dup

Tue, 04/10/2012 - 07:46 | 2330668 narapoiddyslexia
narapoiddyslexia's picture

Could be, if you can see them, you could knock out some with a shotgun. But a swarm of bots each the size of your thumbnail or smaller might be had to stop. There's no floor to the size. They'll be able to recharge in sunlight also. People need to learn to make their own bots. Find an 11-year old and start talking to them about it.

Tue, 04/10/2012 - 13:16 | 2331731 goldnguns
goldnguns's picture

Been doing it for years, as have many other remote controlled enthusiasts.  heck, we had chain saw motor driven aircraft carrying a camera with a radio downlink 10 years ago.  We flew the thing over the beach and ogled the scantily clad.  HAd contests of bombing a target with paint balls.  Used to launch the aircarft and follow it in the car buzzing oncoming traffic.  It is a very samll step for the government to have 24/7 overhead "presence" with sound and vidoe downlinked, or trolling by your backyard bar-b-cue, or picking up your unencrypted house wifi traffic. 

 

Read some of the EULAs from google and Apple, and dropbox, etc.  See if you want every piece of digital media on your device scanned for violation of copyright.  See if you want your every move recorded by GPS and uploaded to some "server".

If you plug any device into a network just assume at some point it is copied and forwarded.  There is no privacy. 

"Freedom is just another word for nothing left to lose"

 

Wed, 04/11/2012 - 11:18 | 2334548 blunderdog
blunderdog's picture

What you "want" isn't really relevant.

Tue, 04/10/2012 - 09:23 | 2330828 2500saturdays
2500saturdays's picture

made me think about 'the dog' in Farenheit 451.

That is a book most should go back and read again.

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