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Related: About this forumx-post from LBN: "Millions of cars tracked across US in 'massive' real-time DEA spy program"
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/jan/27/millions-of-cars-tracked-across-us-in-massive-real-time-spying-programAmerican Civil Liberties Union warns scanning of license plates by Drug Enforcement Agency is building a repository of all drivers movements
The United States government is tracking the movement of vehicles around the country in a clandestine intelligence-gathering programme that has been condemned as a further official exercise to build a database on peoples lives.
The Drug Enforcement Administration was monitoring license plates on a massive scale, giving rise to major civil liberties concerns, the American Civil Liberties Union said on Monday night, citing DEA documents obtained under freedom of information.
This story highlights yet another way government security agencies are seeking to quietly amplify their powers using new technologies, Jay Stanley, a senior policy analyst with ACLU, told the Guardian.
The United States government is tracking the movement of vehicles around the country in a clandestine intelligence-gathering programme that has been condemned as a further official exercise to build a database on peoples lives.
The Drug Enforcement Administration was monitoring license plates on a massive scale, giving rise to major civil liberties concerns, the American Civil Liberties Union said on Monday night, citing DEA documents obtained under freedom of information.
This story highlights yet another way government security agencies are seeking to quietly amplify their powers using new technologies, Jay Stanley, a senior policy analyst with ACLU, told the Guardian.
The ACLU's own take on this:
https://www.aclu.org/blog/technology-and-liberty-criminal-law-reform/foia-documents-reveal-massive-dea-program-record-ame
FOIA Documents Reveal Massive DEA Program to Record Americans Whereabouts With License Plate Readers
01/26/2015
By Bennett Stein, ACLU Speech, Privacy, and Technology Project & Jay Stanley, Senior Policy Analyst, ACLU Speech, Privacy & Technology Project at 7:15pm
The Drug Enforcement Administration has initiated a massive national license plate reader program with major civil liberties concerns but disclosed very few details, according to new DEA documents obtained by the ACLU through the Freedom of Information Act.
The DEA is currently operating a National License Plate Recognition initiative that connects DEA license plate readers with those of other law enforcement agencies around the country. A Washington Post headline proclaimed in February 2014 that the Department of Homeland Security had cancelled its national license-plate tracking plan, but all that was ended was one Immigrations and Customs Enforcement solicitation for proposals. In fact, a government-run national license plate tracking program already exists, housed within the DEA. (Thats in addition to the corporate license plate tracking database run by Vigilant Solutions, holding billions of records about our movements.) Since its inception in 2008, the DEA has provided limited information to the public on the programs goals, capabilities and policies. Information has trickled out over the years, in testimony here or there. But far too little is still known about this program.
In 2012, the ACLU filed public records requests in 38 states and Washington, D.C. seeking information about the use of automatic license plate readers. Our July 2013 report, You Are Being Tracked, summarized our findings with regard to state and local law enforcement agencies, finding that the technology was being rapidly adopted, all too often with little attention paid to the privacy risks of this powerful technology. But in addition to filing public records requests with state agencies, the ACLU also filed FOIA requests with federal agencies, including the DEA.
The new DEA records that we received are heavily redacted and incomplete, but they provide the most complete documentation of the DEAs database to date. For example, the DEA has previously testified that its license plate reader program began at the southwest border crossings, and that the agency planned to gradually increase its reach; we now know more about to where it has grown. The DEA had previously suggested that other sources would be able to feed data into the database; we now know about some of the types of agencies collaborating with the DEA.
Looks like TPTB are using "Brazil" as a manual for statecraft...
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x-post from LBN: "Millions of cars tracked across US in 'massive' real-time DEA spy program" (Original Post)
friendly_iconoclast
Jan 2015
OP
libodem
(19,288 posts)1. Brazil
Had a deep impact on my psyche in 1984. The surreal nature of the film really bothered me and left me thinking.