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BBC Washington correspondent Justin Webb reports on a Pentagon project looking into ways of monitoring everything everyone does, as part of its war against terror. (its for your good :P)
In the film Minority Report, Tom Cruise heads a futuristic police team who have the technology to spot people who intend to commit serious crimes before the crime itself takes place. The premise might seem far-fetched but it could be closer than we think. In the Pentagon in Washington, a team is working on plans to collect as much information about every single aspect of everyone in America as they can. This includes everything from doctor's records to bank deposits, email to travel tickets, phone conversations to magazine subscriptions. (thank God Im not in america, but how many time we have to wait until this become world wide?... Privacy is a right on the rest of the world) The reason, according to the Under Secretary of Defense Pete Aldridge, is to catch people intending to carry out terrorist crimes. "The bottom line is that this is an important research project to determine the feasibility of using certain transactions and events to discover and respond to terrorists before they act." Willing public Backers of the project, known as Total Information Awareness, admit that it sounds Orwellian. A reluctant supporter of the Pentagon's plans is Frank Gaffney, a former assistant defence secretary. He says that it would only take one more terrorist attack and public support is assured. "At that point there will not only be a willingness to submit to those sorts of infringement but a demand that they be infringed upon in the hope of trying to protect us. "If there were no war on terror, this is not something that we would want to do." Not everyone though is convinced, particularly since the man heading the Pentagon team has a dubious past. Hi tech doubts Total Information Awareness is the baby of Admiral John Poindexter. As an adviser to former President Reagan, he sold arms to Iran and using the money to fund the Nicaraguan contras. Most opponents, though, focus on the wider question of what Admiral Poindexter is trying to achieve and how likely it is to fail. Mark Rotenberg monitors government attempts at surveillance and snooping. He believes hi-tech solutions are often the ones with the highest rate of failure. "This is a technology intensive approach that assumes if you have enough data you can produce clear conclusions," he said. "We went through a period of time recently in Washington with the sniper attacks when everyone was looking for a white truck. "We could have had a computer database running profiles of every white truck owner in the country to try to decide which of them was the sniper. In fact, the answer was that none of them were." The white van was found to be a false lead in the infamous Washington sniper case. In the film Minority Report things go horribly wrong with the system. Many in Washington are predicting that this real-life scheme, if it ever got off the ground, would lead to hi-tech chaos and failure. |
I'm not sure if they will let you use 'Free' US if this all goes through.
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ah... huh??? Pre Crime.. What...
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the sad irony is that the USA calls themselves the defender of the free world when they track down every software pirate, and let things like palladium and homeland security act pass through.
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yeah..
usa got many great things, but it seems like words like "privacy" and phrases like "freedom of speech" isnt handled the same way as here in europe. Digital Millennium Copyright Act must be a prime example of stuff like this. |
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