Archive for January, 2009
New Revelations about NSA Domestic Spying
Former National Security Agency analyst turned whistleblower Russell Tice appeared on Keith Olberman’s Countdown last night, making new claims about the extent of NSA domestic surveillance during the Bush administration. Tice told Olberman that the NSA program was not only much wider than previous revelations suggested, targeting virtually everyone in America, but also that one [...]
Posted: January 22nd, 2009 under 4th Amendment, Data Mining, Main, Privacy, Tech, U.S., Video, Watchlist.
Comments: 1
Further Erosion of Fourth Amendment
Last week, a Supreme Court ruling deserving of much more attention than it has received to date, added to the steady erosion of Fourth Amendment protections Americans have been suffering since the September 11th attacks. Just how much the ruling has diluted the Fourth Amendment is open to debate, but there is little doubt that [...]
Posted: January 21st, 2009 under 4th Amendment, Law, Main, Privacy, Tech, U.S..
Comments: 2
Anonymizing Sites Selling User Data?
A recent blog post by Hal Roberts at the The Berkman Center for Internet & Society raises concerns about popular anonymizing and censorship circumvention services DynaWeb FreeGate, GPass, and FirePhoenix selling their individual user data to third parties. In the post, Roberts infers from a curiously-worded FAQ entry at Edoors.com that these three partner services [...]
Posted: January 13th, 2009 under China, Code, Corporations, Data Mining, ID, Law, Main, Privacy, Tech, U.S..
Comments: 1
Constitutionality of FISA to be Reviewed
A federal appeals court in Oregon will hold a hearing next month on a government appeal of a 2007 judicial ruling that said the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) is unconstitutional.
Full story at Secrecy News.
Posted: January 12th, 2009 under 4th Amendment, Law, Main, Privacy, U.S..
Comments: 1
Mapping the U.S. Dossier System
Studying how the U.S. government maintains records on its residents is not a simple matter of identifying “the dossier system” and following its history. According to the GAO, as of 2004, there were more than 122 data mining systems in over 50 government agencies and departments containing personally identifiable information on U.S. citizens. The names [...]
Posted: January 8th, 2009 under Corporations, Data Mining, Main, Tech, U.S..
Comments: 2
China web police monitoring public opinion
An interesting post in the Financial Times today talks about a new online surveillance trend in China, led by the Beijing-based company TRS Information Technology, that shifts from searching for politically sensitive keywords to “advanced text mining solutions enabling censors to monitor and forecast public opinion.” The article appears to takes a negative view [...]
Posted: January 6th, 2009 under China, Code, Corporations, Data Mining, Main, Tech.
Comments: 1



