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Sign upI just heard a terrifying ad on Spotify recruiting people for the CIA for 'clandestine services'...
From the CIA Clandestine Services website:
- We are an elite corps of men and women shaped by diverse ethnic, educational and professional backgrounds.
- We conduct our clandestine mission worldwide.
- We collect actionable human intelligence that informs the U.S. President, senior policymakers, military, and law enforcement.
“Serving in the National Clandestine Service is more than just a career; it is a way of life.”
Clandestine services are responsible for the collection of intelligence through human sources such as “moles” or other human-enabled means and other counterintelligence activities.
Recording Everything: Digital Storage as an Enabler of Authoritarian Governments
brookings.edu“Within the next few years an important threshold will be crossed: For the first time ever, it will become technologically and financially feasible for authoritarian governments to record nearly everything that is said or done within their borders—every phone conversation, electronic message, social media interaction, the movements of nearly every person and vehicle, and video from every street corner.
Plummeting digital storage costs will soon make it possible for authoritarian regimes to not only monitor known dissidents, but to also store the complete set of digital data associated with everyone within their borders. These enormous databases of captured information will create what amounts to a surveillance time machine, enabling state security services to retroactively eavesdrop on people in the months and years before they were designated as surveillance targets. This will fundamentally change the dynamics of dissent, insurgency and revolution.
ATF Wants "Massive" Online Database to Find Out Who Your Friends Are
wired.comThe ATF doesn’t just want a huge database to reveal everything about you with a few keywords. It wants one that can find out who you know. And it won’t even try to friend you on Facebook first.
According to a recent solicitation from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, the bureau is looking to buy a “massive online data repository system” for its Office of Strategic Intelligence and Information (OSII). The system is intended to operate for at least five years, and be able to process automated searches of individuals, and “find connection points between two or more individuals” by linking together “structured and unstructured data.”
Primarily, the ATF states it wants the database to speed-up criminal investigations. Instead of requiring an analyst to manually search around for your personal information, the database should “obtain exact matches from partial source data searches” such as social security numbers (or even just a fragment of one), vehicle serial codes, age range, “phonetic name spelling,” or a general area where your address is located. Input that data, and out comes your identity, while the computer automatically establishes connections you have with others.
In a free country, “Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms” would be the name of a convenience store.
Texas Inventories Children: Students Being Microchipped to Save School Revenue After Texas Education Funds Cut
Officials at Northside Independent School District in San Antonio, Texas, apparently view George Orwell’s novelNineteen Eighty-Fouras an instruction manual rather than a cautionary tale.
Over 6,000 students will be required to carry microchipped ID so that the district can track their movements in school and on school buses. Radio-frequency identification (RFID) chips will be embedded in student IDs. Doors within the two affected schools are presumably now fitted with sensors that track students as they move from class to class, from the cafeteria to the bathroom. The district’s administration is determined to increase student attendance.
The reason? The Texas legislature cut state education funds, and Northsidelost $61.4 millionin tax dollars last year. Local TV stationKENS5explains the connection between attendance and funding:
The district loses $175,000 a day in state funding because of tardy or absent kids.… The district bean-counters expect to gain more than $250,000 in attendance revenue from the state, and $1.2 million from Medicaid, because the district will be tracking special-needs kids, too.
The $15 replacement fee for lost cards will almost certainly be profitable as well, since children predictably lose things.
The RFID system is a tested revenue raiser, with two other Texas school districts enjoying hundreds of thousands of dollars in increased funding after tagging children. So Northside iswilling to spend$525,065 in start-up costs and $136,005 a year for administration in order to keep children from escaping its grasp. If the technology trial is successful, the district will expand the program to all of its 112 schools.
Many parents object. Protests have been held at each of the schools, withFacebook pagesandYouTube videosbeing used to organize the dissent.
Safety concerns
Parents express concern about their children’s privacy and safety. Originally designed to track inventory and animals, RFID technology allows information to be read from a distance by radio waves without the bearer’s knowledge. Since each chip contains a unique ID number, anyone who reads the chip will know the exact location of a specific child. Parents are quite reasonably concerned about the possibility of ill-intentioned people monitoring their children’s every movement. It is notoriously easy to “eavesdrop” on RFID transmissions.
In conjunction with the Electronic Privacy Information Center and the Privacy Rights Clearinghouse, the consumer privacy group Consumers Against Supermarket Privacy Invasion and Numbering (CASPIAN) issued a report entitled “Position Paper on the Use of RFID in Schools” (August 21, 2012). The paper warns,
a student’s location could be monitored from a distance by a jealous girlfriend or boyfriend, stalker, or pedophile. Individuals run this tracking risk any place they carry or wear a school-issued RFID tagged item — even miles from the campus. (PDF)
Depending on the information being collected, a tagged individual may also run an increased risk of identity theft.
Ironically, proponents of chipping children argue for the safety benefits of doing so; in case of a fire, teachers would be able to locate every child. Proponents also counter the privacy concerns of parents, maintaining that the ID contains no personal information, such as a home address. They insist that most RFID systems can operate only over the distance of a few meters. As long as the ID is not worn elsewhere, the monitoring will be limited to school grounds. The operational range of RFID chips, however, depends on a variety of factors, with some chips being readable at 100 meters.
For example, if the ID were to contain an active tag with a battery as opposed to a passive tag (as it reportedly does) the range would be dramatically increased. Moreover, the technology is constantly improving.
Parents must rely on the official account of what information the ID contains and the official promises that no abuse of information will occur. Even if the current assurances are sincere, however, it is not possible to predict what next year’s school bureaucrats will decide to do. The RFID cards establish a framework for abuse.
Other objections to tagging children
The CASPIAN Paper raises a variety of other concerns about the RFID system, including the following:
It is dehumanizing to have a bureaucracy track the minutiae of your day down to the amount of time spent in a bathroom stall.
It infringes on the freedoms of speech and association, e.g., by discouraging students from seeking the services of a counselor.
It runs counter to the religious and other deeply held convictions of some students.
It has a high potential for abuse, e.g., through hidden sensors “in bathroom fixtures, floor tiles, woven into carpeting and floor mats,” etc.
It conditions students to the constant monitoring of their behavior and whereabouts so that they accept “this kind of treatment as routine rather than an encroachment of privacy and civil liberties.”
CASPIAN argued that schools should require “informed, express written consent from individuals who agree to participate,” as well as from their parents. The consent “should remain on record,” and a way to revoke the consent should be provided. But do schools legally need consent from children and parents?
The Constitution and school children
Many objections to the RFID system appeal to the constitutional liberties of the children involved. The constitutional provision most in question is theFourth Amendment, which reads,
The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.
But are children “people” under the Fourth Amendment? The answer is mixed.
In the essay “The Fourth Amendment Rights of Children at Home: When Parental Authority Goes too Far” (William and Mary Law Review, vol. 53, 2011–2012) law professor Kristin Henning writes,
Notwithstanding the general consensus that children are entitled to the benefit of Fourth Amendment protections in juvenile proceedings, the Fourth Amendment rights of children have been modified in certain “special needs” contexts — most notably schools, where state officials are responsible for the care and safety of a large number of youth.
From random drug testing (Vernonia v. Acton, 1995) to “a principal’s search of a child’s purse” (New Jersey v. T.L.O., 1985), the United States Supreme Court has found that school children have a reduced expectation of privacy and can be searched without a warrant. Henning comments,
In balancing the privacy interests of the child and the needs of the teachers and administrators, the Court concluded that the substantial need for “swift and informal” discipline to maintain order on the school grounds justified imposition of a reasonableness standard and departure from the warrant and probable cause requirements.
In routine administrative matters, such as the taking of attendance, school children have virtually no constitutional rights and, therefore, no civil liberties.
Conclusion
The 2012 CASPIAN paper states, “The 2003 Position Statement on the Use of RFID on Consumer Products, endorsed by over 40 of the world’s leading privacy and civil liberties organizations, clearly established that RFID should never be used for tracking people.”
Less than a decade later, school districts are openly requiring children to be tagged. These are not convicted criminals being tracked, and they are not volunteers. They are children whose parents are given no voice in whether they become human inventory.
Public protest is the only effective brake on the tagging of children for government profit. In 2005, a similar RFID experiment occurred in a California elementary school. After parental protests, including a complaint filed with the American Civil Liberties Union, the school board dropped the program.
In Texas, it is not merely parents but also students who are challenging the RFID system.WorldNetDaily(August 31) reports,
Student Andrea Hernandez, with support from her father, has decided to challenge the district’s plan. The station reported she has decided to wear an older photo ID.… Protests have been launched in front of the schools, and local stations are reporting the controversy. [RFID expert Katherine Albrecht] said in a statement to supporters the issue now is before the school district, and protesters are awaiting the superintendent’s response. “We don’t give up or give in,” she said.
WOW THIS IS WHERE I WENT TO HIGH SCHOOL
AND I THOUGHT IT WAS BAD THEN
WOW
Declassified FBI Documents Detail How the FBI Tracked Internet Activist Aaron Swartz
guardian.co.ukA blogger has published once-classified FBI files that show how the agency tracked and collected information on internetactivist Aaron Swartz.
Swartz, who killed himself in January aged 26, had previously requested his files andposted them on his blog, but some new documents and redactions are included in the filespublished by Firedoglake blogger Daniel Wright.
Wright was given 21 of 23 declassified documents, thanks to a rule that declassifies FBI files on the deceased. Wright said that he was told the other two pages of documents were not provided because of freedom of information subsections concerning privacy, “sources and methods,” and that can “put someone’s life in danger.”
The FBI’s files concern Swartz’s involvement in accessing the Public Access to Court Electronic Records (Pacer) documents. In pursuit of their investigation, the FBI had collected his personal information and was surveilling an Illinois address where he had his IP address registered.
“So all based on a handful of rather unremarkable emails sent to a woman fortunate enough to have a friend at the FBI, the FBI traced all of Broadwell's physical locations, learned of all the accounts she uses, ended up reading all of her emails, investigated the identity of her anonymous lover (who turned out to be Petraeus), and then possibly read his emails as well. They dug around in all of this without any evidence of any real crime - at most, they had a case of "cyber-harassment" more benign than what regularly appears in my email inbox and that of countless of other people - and, in large part, without the need for any warrant from a court.”
—If you are interested in the Petraeus scandal (and who isn’t?!), I highly recommend you read this piece over at the Guardian regarding our surveillance state. Actually, you don’t have to be interested in the Petraeus scandal (although it gets weirder every day), but if you are at all interested in the insanity of post-9/11 law enforcement powers, read up!
Mind-boggling fact in the article: “Every day, collection systems at the National Security Agency intercept and store 1.7 billion e-mails, phone calls and other types of communications.” So, basically, your dick pics are stored in NSA archives until such time as they are needed.
Homeland Security 'Fusion' Center Director: We're Not Spying On Americans... Just Anti-Government Americans
techdirt.comYou may recall that, last fall, a Congressional investigation completely slammed Homeland Security’s “Fusion Centers” — noting that despite DHS insisting that they were critical to “fighting terrorism,” the actual evidence showed that they had done nothing helpful in the fight against terrorism, but were instead chock full of wasteful (possibly fraudulent) spending… and with an added dose of civil liberties violations (just for fun).
Apparently, the Fusion Centers are trying to rehabilitate their own image, but they might want to send their officials to press training a bit more before sending them out into the wild. Reason alerts us to an interview that the director of the Arkansas State Fusion Center did with some local TV stations in which he appears to completely contradict himself — first arguing that the Fusion Centers don’t spy on Americans… and then saying they spy on “anti-government” Americans. First, there was this:
“There’s misconceptions on what fusion centers are,” he says. “The misconceptions are that we are conducting spying operations on US citizens, which is of course not the fact. That is absolutely not what we do.”
Okay then. We’ve established won’t you don’t do. So, tell us, what doyou do?
Davis says Arkansas hasn’t collected much information about international plots, but they do focus on groups closer to home.
“We focus a little more on that, domestic terrorism and certain groups that are anti-government,” he says. “We want to kind of take a look at that and receive that information.”
Government uses "TrapWire" to monitor private surveillance
io9.comLast night, Wikileaks revealed the existence of a nation-wide network known as “TrapWire”, which monitors surveillance data and feeds it back to a central database. It’s like CCTV, only completely secret and unaccountable!
Every few seconds, data picked up at surveillance points in major cities and landmarks across the United States are recorded digitally on the spot, then encrypted and instantaneously delivered to a fortified central database center at an undisclosed location to be aggregated with other intelligence. It’s part of a program called TrapWire and it’s the brainchild of the Abraxas, a Northern Virginia company staffed with elite from America’s intelligence community. The employee roster at Arbaxas reads like a who’s who of agents once with the Pentagon, CIA and other government entities according to their public LinkedIn profiles, and the corporation’s ties are assumed to go deeper than even documented.
The details on Abraxas and, to an even greater extent TrapWire, are scarce, however, and not without reason. For a program touted as a tool to thwart terrorism and monitor activity meant to be under wraps, its understandable that Abraxas would want the program’s public presence to be relatively limited. But thanks to last year’s hack of the Strategic Forecasting intelligence agency, or Stratfor, all of that is quickly changing.
Hacktivists aligned with the loose-knit Anonymous collective took credit for hacking Stratfor on Christmas Eve, 2011, in turn collecting what they claimed to be more than five million emails from within the company. WikiLeaks began releasing those emails as the Global Intelligence Files (GIF) earlier this year and, of those, several discussing the implementing of TrapWire in public spaces across the country were circulated on the Web this week after security researcher Justin Ferguson brought attention to the matter. At the same time, however, WikiLeaks was relentlessly assaulted by a barrage of distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks, crippling the whistleblower site and its mirrors, significantly cutting short the number of people who would otherwise have unfettered access to the emails.
This is absolutely huge. Not only are all of our communications constantly monitored without warrants, now any camera in public will be feeding your image back to the government for analysis. The fourth amendment is functionally dead.
Of course, our government will do nothing about the illegal DDoS attack that Wikileaks is experiencing as direct backlash against this; since Wikileaks isn’t owned by the ruling class and since laws don’t apply to the ruling class (unless they effect other members of the ruling class), don’t expect any law enforcement whatsoever here.