Subject: Total Information Awareness Demonstration
for Poindexter
http://sfweekly.com/issues/2002-11-27/smith.html/1/index.html
The SF Weekly's column by Matt Smith in the Dec 3 issue points
out that there may be some information that John M. and Linda Poindexter
of 10 Barrington Fare, Rockville, MD, 20850, may be missing in their pursuit
of total information awareness. He suggests that people with information
to offer should phone +1 301 424 6613 to speak with that corrupt official
and his wife. Neighbors Thomas E. Maxwell, 67, at 8 Barringon Fare
(+1 301 251 1326), James F. Galvin, 56, at 12 (+1 301 424 0089), and Sherrill
V. Stant (nee Knight) at 6, may also lack some information that would be
valuable to them in making decisions -- decisions that could affect the
basic civil rights of every American.
Some people are suspicious that the degenerate Poindexter's
Total Information Awareness system will be used to harass and track the
activities of people who some significant fraction of society disagree with.
They fear a replacement of today's general tolerance (and official blindness
to one's Bill-of-Rights-protected activities such as speech and association),
with specific harassment of those whose names pop up in the database.
Such harassment of people who are not reasonably suspected of criminal activity
would destroy much of value in our society, such as the presumption of innocence
and the "live and let live" philosophy that encourages diversity.
Offering dissidents "a death of a thousand cuts" by constantly harassing
them and denying them the privileges of ordinary life would be far worse
than charging them with a (bogus) crime, which they could clear up merely
by demonstrating their innocence in court.
It would be good to have an early public demonstration of just
how bad life could become for such targeted citizens. While ratfink's
system is probably not working yet, and a large part of it is classified,
much of it can be manually simulated for demonstration purposes. Public
records can be manually searched and then posted to the net by people who
happen to be looking there for something else. Many Internet public
records search sites also exist; try searching for "People finder".
(Matt Smith at matt.smith@sfweekly.com has offered to "publish anything
that readers can convincingly claim to have obtained legally".) Photographs
and videos of the target, their house, car, family, and associates, can
be made and circulated to demonstrate facial recognition techniques.
Employees at various businesses and organizations such as airlines,
credit card authorizers, rental-car agencies, shops, gyms, schools, tollbooths,
garbage services, banks, taxis, honest civil servants and police officers,
and restaurants could demonstrate denial of service to such targeted people.
A simple "We won't serve YOUR KIND OF PEOPLE" would do, as was practiced
on black people for many decades. More subtle forms of denial of service
are possible, such as "You've been 'randomly' selected as a security risk,
I'll have to insist that [some degrading thing happen to you]". Or
merely, "I can't seem to get this credit card to work, sir, and those twenties
certainly look counterfeit to me."
Those with access to DMV and criminal records databases, credit
card records, telephone bills, tax records, birth and death and marriage
records, medical records, and similar personally identifiable databases
could combine their information publicly to assist in the demonstration.
This is how TIA is intended to work -- the government would get privileged
access to all these databases, access that the rest of us do not normally
have. But some of us have access to various of these databases today,
and can demonstrate how the TIA system might work.
People who associated closely with such a targeted individual,
such as their families, relatives, friends, neighbors, protective secret
service agents, and business associates, might find themselves swept up
in the information dragnet. Such a demonstration would graphically
reveal the societal dangers of deploying such systems on a wide scale against
a large number of citizens -- preferably early enough that such a deployment
could be prevented, rather than reversed after major harm was caused.
Even if some of the information that people end up revealing
or using about such targeted scumbags is incorrect, such a public demonstration
would highlight the damaging effects that incorrect database information
can have on innocent peoples' lives, when used to target them for harassment
without due process of law. When this happens to innocents under classified
or secret systems such as the No-Fly lists, the public seldom finds out
about it.
All in all I think such a demonstration would be highly educational,
as well as newsworthy and entertaining.
John Gilmore