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US No-Fly List Uses 'Predictive Judgement' Instead of Hard Evidence 264

HughPickens.com writes: The Guardian reports that in a little-noticed filing before an Oregon federal judge, the US Justice Department and the FBI conceded that stopping U.S. and other citizens from traveling on airplanes is a matter of "predictive assessments about potential threats." "By its very nature, identifying individuals who 'may be a threat to civil aviation or national security' is a predictive judgment intended to prevent future acts of terrorism in an uncertain context," Justice Department officials Benjamin C Mizer and Anthony J Coppolino told the court. It is believed to be the government's most direct acknowledgment to date that people are not allowed to fly because of what the government believes they might do and not what they have already done. The ACLU has asked Judge Anna Brown to conduct her own review of the error rate in the government's predictions modeling – a process the ACLU likens to the "pre-crime" of Philip K Dick's science fiction. "It has been nearly five years since plaintiffs on the no-fly list filed this case seeking a fair process by which to clear their names and regain a right that most other Americans take for granted," say ACLU lawyers.

The Obama administration is seeking to block the release of further information about how the predictions are made, as damaging to national security. "If the Government were required to provide full notice of its reasons for placing an individual on the No Fly List and to turn over all evidence (both incriminating and exculpatory) supporting the No Fly determination, the No Fly redress process would place highly sensitive national security information directly in the hands of terrorist organizations and other adversaries," says the assistant director of the FBI's counterterrorism division, Michael Steinbach.
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US No-Fly List Uses 'Predictive Judgement' Instead of Hard Evidence

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  • by serviscope_minor ( 664417 ) on Tuesday August 18, 2015 @08:58AM (#50338207) Journal

    Tell me Mr Anderson, what good is a phone call if you can't speak?

    Sure, feel free to walk to whereever you want to go.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday August 18, 2015 @09:34AM (#50338511)

      Not a REASONABLE choice.

      This is what happense when people relenquish CONTROL. Homeland security and their TSA dogs were supposed to just keep everybody safe, but we see it is much more than that. It's only a matter of time. until they expand on the information they require. They have already asked me for the name of Facebook account, and other information; disinformation can be useful. I provided them with nothing because "I don't have one".

      TSA is also located in train stations and bus stations, and we already have Border Patrol with checkpoints far away from the border, and other law enforcement setting up checkpoints in other parts of the country, and the judges are just going along with it, which makes them accessories, or just plain stupid. They have metal detectors and police in schools, and there are rumors of Metal detectors and armed guards being set up at movie theatres and malls.

      This is exactly what the Nazis did. It's what happens in all totalitarian societies, when powerful people get into political offices, and those people need removed. And many people are convinced that peaceul solutions are no longer an option.

      • in all totalitarian societies, when powerful people get into political offices

        People who get into political office are by definition powerful people. What is important is if they have a totalitarian mindset or not.

      • They have metal detectors and police in schools, and there are rumors of Metal detectors and armed guards being set up at movie theatres and malls.

        Which probably has less to do with anyone's totalitarian ambitions and more with the seemingly neverending supply of armed domestic terrorists striking there.

        • They have metal detectors and police in schools, and there are rumors of Metal detectors and armed guards being set up at movie theatres and malls.

          Which probably has less to do with anyone's totalitarian ambitions and more with the seemingly neverending supply of armed domestic terrorists striking there.

          Never ending supply? There were 1.27 billion movie tickets sold in the US and Canada in 2014. Let's say, for the sake of ease, that half those were sold to Americans. That's over 600,000,000 tickets. Now how many people were killed at theaters? 100? Probably less than that. So what purpose would metal detectors serve, other than to be a huge pain in the ass for everyone involved?

          I think you're right, that this is driven more by irrational fear than totalitarian ambitions. But those ambitions do exist

    • There are two very different lists which are both commonly referred to as a "No Fly" list, and they are very different. The article doesn't make it clear that the author knows the the difference, much less make it explicit which list the case is about.

      There are tens of thousands of people on the "no fly" list which is really a "no border crossing" list. These people aren't allowd to fly into the United States and federal authorities will be notified if they try to leave the country. Personally, I'm okay

      • by ZeroWaiteState ( 3804969 ) on Tuesday August 18, 2015 @01:54PM (#50340721)
        That list includes journalists who embarrassed the government, a few actors, some folks who had similar names to dangerous people, etc. This would have never become an issue if the government actually took people off the list when there was a mistake, but they didn't until forced by judicial sanction. For the longest time they refused to acknowledge that such a list existed at all, and refused to verify if anyone had ever been placed on it. How do you resolve mistakes in a list that's top secret? That was the whole problem; excessive secrecy led directly to the abuse they promised wouldn't happen. If they had acted responsibly we wouldn't be here now.
      • However, it seems reasonable that in a population of 320 million, there would be a few hundred who truly are dangerous, for whom there is enough evidence that _I_ wouldn't want to be on a plane with them.

        I think that's a lot like firearms though. As something of a philosophical point, if you're unable to trust somebody with a firearm, shouldn't they be in some sort of protective custody/supervision, at the least? I mean, I can probably kill more people with a 5 gallon can of gasoline than I can with a pistol.

        That being said, we also can't afford to lock up everybody, so I think we need to take a long hard look at our country and what we're doing to generate dangerous people. The first one that comes to m

  • by rossdee ( 243626 ) on Tuesday August 18, 2015 @08:58AM (#50338215)

    for racial /religious profiling

    • by bondsbw ( 888959 )

      Well, there are two solutions I can think of to fix this:

      1) Stop profiling and only use hard evidence. The downside is that they may be giving up a weapon that, for all its bad, is a net good. (As in, inconveniencing a few million people is worth saving a few hundred lives.)

      2) Stop profiling and put everyone on the no-fly list. Then make everyone clear their names before being allowed to fly.

      • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

        by Anonymous Coward

        The downside is that they may be giving up a weapon that, for all its bad, is a net good. (As in, inconveniencing a few million people is worth saving a few hundred lives.)

        Last time I checked, airport security theatre had not saved one single life or stopped one single terrorist attempt.

      • by StikyPad ( 445176 ) on Tuesday August 18, 2015 @09:54AM (#50338705) Homepage

        If inconveniencing a few million people is worth saving a few hundred lives, then inconveniencing a few hundred million people is worth saving tens of thousands of lives, yes?

        So let's ban driving.

        Shall we continue, or can we agree that line of reasoning would lead to all sorts of unintended consequences?

        "National security," needs to be reserved for existential threats. Terrorism is not, and has never been, an existential threat, and it should be treated proportionally, as a crime.

        • Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • The problem with those rag headed inner bread dim wits is, "what if they have a point?"

          In the middle east, the enemy is stupid bitches. Movie and game idea, give them education, and upon GED completion, a hand gun and a box of shells. Then run like hell is coming, because it is.
        • If inconveniencing a few million people is worth saving a few hundred lives, then inconveniencing a few hundred million people is worth saving tens of thousands of lives, yes?

          So let's ban driving.

          That would make it impossible to move enough food into cities, resulting in hundreds of millions starving to death. In fact the entire society would collapse since people couldn't get to work.

        • by stdarg ( 456557 )

          then inconveniencing a few hundred million people is worth saving tens of thousands of lives, yes?

          So let's ban driving.

          You're not taking into account different degrees of inconvenience. I'm shocked that you're at +5 right now.

        • by bondsbw ( 888959 )

          Most driving deaths are not caused by the act of an individual or organization whose goal is to kill people. They tend to be call "accidents" for a reason.

          Blowing up an aircraft or flying it into a building is no accident.

    • No, they don't want to get shut down for having an almost zero success rate.

      Kaggle should do a no-fly list crime prediction competition, at least we'd get some good data about the state of the art to discuss on slashdot. As it is, the pro government astroturfers here can claim 100% accuracy and half the readership will lap it up because $TERRORISM.

    • by whoever57 ( 658626 ) on Tuesday August 18, 2015 @11:07AM (#50339295) Journal

      Last year (?) a teenager was able to get over the perimeter fence and get on a plane. Later, they announced that they did not have the money to properly secure the fence. Depite this, exactly zero planes have been subject to terrorist attacks in the USA.

      What do we infer from this? The risk from terrorists trying to blow up planes in the USA is indistinguishable from zero. I can't be the only person to realize this.

      The administration must realize this, yet, they persist with the ridiculous rules about flying. Clearly, the searches, the no-fly-list, etc. have no connection to terrorism. There is some other reason for their existence.

      Reasons for the searches, no-fly-list etc.? Money? Control? Something else?

      • What do we infer from this? The risk from terrorists trying to blow up planes in the USA is indistinguishable from zero. I can't be the only person to realize this.

        The administration must realize this, yet, they persist with the ridiculous rules about flying. Clearly, the searches, the no-fly-list, etc. have no connection to terrorism. There is some other reason for their existence.

        Reasons for the searches, no-fly-list etc.? Money? Control? Something else?

        See this response [slashdot.org] for an answer to your question. See also how to boil a frog [wikipedia.org].

      • by Firethorn ( 177587 ) on Tuesday August 18, 2015 @02:21PM (#50341037) Homepage Journal

        Reasons for the searches, no-fly-list etc.? Money? Control? Something else?

        Theater. The appearance of doing something about the 'problem'. I've also heard of it being a disguised jobs/welfare program.

    • Profiling is constitutional, and may or may not be legal depending on jurisdiction.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

      Also

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

      And public sentiment seems to swing toward profiling being OK

      The second link says:

      A recent poll by USA Today showed Americans are in favor of more intensive security check for people who fit a profile of a terrorist based on age, ethnicity and gender.[12]

  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday August 18, 2015 @09:02AM (#50338239)

    "Land of the free", indeed... I'm quite amazed how you Americans put up with all that.

    • by edibobb ( 113989 )
      We are cattle.
    • If they want to keep this nonsense intact they would be wise to at least make it easy to get off the list. It shouldn't take more than five business days to look at a file and decide if someone is actually a threat or not. It should not require a lengthy court battle to be heard. It's not just the travel limitations that impact rights, it's also the fairness of available recourse.

  • by Nyder ( 754090 ) on Tuesday August 18, 2015 @09:12AM (#50338279) Journal

    Secret Laws and Rules do not create national security, they are the threat to national security. The problem is, without a clear set of rules, it's a law that is open to abuse towards whomever those who are in charge don't like. Secret laws & courts are what shows you that instead of caring about protecting it's citizen, the government is using it to further their own ends.

    We can NOT have freedom when we have secret laws & courts.

    • We can NOT have freedom when we have secret laws & courts.

      We cannot have freedom when we have any laws at all.

      Any law whatsoever restricts individual freedom. You are no longer free to do whatever you want, whenever you feel like it.

      No one anywhere is actually completely free. That's probably a real good thing.

      • by sjbe ( 173966 ) on Tuesday August 18, 2015 @10:13AM (#50338843)

        We cannot have freedom when we have any laws at all.

        Freedom is not the ability to do whatever you want whenever you want. Never has been. That is anarchy which is not the same thing. Freedom is FAR more complicated than the absence of laws. Freedom is not just absence of restrictions on you but also absence of things being done TO you. A complete absence of laws for you necessarily means a loss of freedom for me because there is nothing restraining you (or me) from removing other people's freedom. Societies cannot exist without rules, both formal and informal and yet freedom under reasonable definitions of the term still exists.

        If there is no law against slavery is the slave-owner free? The slave certainly isn't. But with laws against slavery we can fairly describe both people as free so the absolutist definition of freedom only existing when there are no laws simply makes no sense.

        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          by Ol Olsoc ( 1175323 )

          We cannot have freedom when we have any laws at all.

          Freedom is not the ability to do whatever you want whenever you want. Never has been. That is anarchy which is not the same thing. Freedom is FAR more complicated than the absence of laws.

          Then freedom is not possible to ever happen. Some peopel want to do things to others, and consider it a restriction of their freedoms to do those things to others.

          Any law anywhere, about anything restricts someone's freedom. And yeah, no laws is indeed anarchy. But everyone is free then, but of course, there are those who insist that one of their freedoms is removing freedoms from others.

          We see this in areas like gay marriage, where there are groups that would deny marriage to other groups, even thoug

          • Then freedom is not possible to ever happen. Some peopel want to do things to others, and consider it a restriction of their freedoms to do those things to others.

            If you take an absurdly absolutist definition of freedom (no restrictions on me ever) then yes, it isn't possible for a population >1. I don't really think that is a useful discussion however.

            Freedom in more practical terms is a relative state within a society. It is minimizing the restrictions on behavior rather than eliminating them altogether. It also provide reasonable protections against the harmful actions of others. It's sort of akin to the Heisenberg uncertainty principle. You cannot simulta

          • Then freedom is not possible to ever happen. Some peopel want to do things to others, and consider it a restriction of their freedoms to do those things to others.

            Two heterosexual men, one an engineer and one a mathematician are standing at the end of a hallway. At the other end is a beautiful naked woman. The two men are told that they may walk halfway down the hallway, then halfway down the remaining hallway, then halfway down the remaining hallway, etc. If they reach the woman they can have sex with her. The mathematician immediately realizes this is Zeno's paradox and sits down. The engineer starts walking. When the mathematician asks "Why are you walking? You ca

        • by lkcl ( 517947 )

          A complete absence of laws for you necessarily means a loss of freedom for me because there is nothing restraining you (or me) from removing other people's freedom.

          there is indeed something restraining you: your own moral and ethical judgement. and that's really what man-made laws are there for: to catch the people who have no understanding of either morals or ethics.

          the problem we have right now is that the process by which the laws are made has itself been blatantly corrupted, and there are people in positions of power who feel that they can blatantly ignore the entire legal process.

          at some point ordinary american citizens - probably pressurised by the rest of the

      • Some freedoms are spelled out in the various constitutions of various countries.

        And when secret laws and courts pretend those freedoms don't exist, or are optional, then you have a very serious problem.

        And these secret laws are doing precisely that ... no right to know how or why you're on a no-fly list, no redress, no due process other than "someone somewhere made an unsubstantiated allegation".

        Nobody is talking about being completely free. What they're talking about is maintaining the freedoms enshrined

        • What they're talking about is maintaining the freedoms enshrined in law which are being violated because a process of "because we said so" is in place.

          Just responding to the OP - and it seems he was saying that. You can disagree, and I'm not arguing for anarchy, or disring that there are no laws, nor for the concept of not knowing about the existence of a law until jack-booted thugs haul me off in the middle of the night.

          Nosiree - just responding to:

          We can NOT have freedom when we have secret laws & courts.

          We can not have freedom even if there is not one "secret" law or court either. It's not a call for anarchy, just a rather valid observatio

    • It's long past time that we undid the ridiculous excesses of the "war on terror."

      These programs are clearly not conducive to the long term maintenance of a free, open, and democratic society. Internal security programs like this are highly susceptible to abuse; but more importantly, look at how ineffective this and other abusive programs have proved in the past 14 years. All of the worst ones have not proved to have ANY significant impact on terrorist or other attacks.
    • We can NOT have freedom when we have secret laws & courts.

      To make matters worse, ignorantia juris non excusat (ignorance of the law does not excuse) is a fundamental legal principle in this country. Coupled with secret laws, no one can claim with certainty that they are a law-abiding citizen. That's probably what's driving the total surveillance state - we're all criminals that just haven't realized it yet.

      • To make matters worse, ignorantia juris non excusat (ignorance of the law does not excuse) is a fundamental legal principle in this country.

        Except in the case where the police violate the 4th amendment.

    • The government thinks it's OK to have Terrorists running around loose, so long as they don't set foot on an airplane. How about you arrest them to keep us safe instead of making them drive?
  • "Predictive judgment" is a somewhat technical-sounding name for "giving it our best guess based on all kinds of stuff we pretend to understand".

    Does it work? Absolutely- 30% of the time it works every time!

    They'd almost be better off just rolling some dice and making decisions based on the score.

  • They have hard statistical evidence that most likely terrorists are muslims. But because all the terrorist sympathisers and appeasers will start calling islamaphobia (like they did over the FBI most wanted list [wnd.com]) they want to keep this secret.
    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by GameboyRMH ( 1153867 )

      Are you trying to justify racial/religious profiling, or suggest that doing so against Muslims would *not* be islamophobic? Or suggest that anyone who can recognize simple bigotry against Muslims is a terrorist sympathizer/appeaser? Because I don't think it's working outside of your own head.

    • The have hard statistical evidence that most likely terrorists are white Christians, but that would jeopardize their funding.

      The no-fly list targeted Ted Kennedy and Dave Nelson, which is not consisted with either the terrorist or the Muslim portions of the theory.

  • In other news... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by meta-monkey ( 321000 ) on Tuesday August 18, 2015 @09:25AM (#50338395) Journal

    In other news, during criminal procedures the prosecutor will no longer be obligated to present evidence the defendant is guilty of a crime before incarcerating them.

    "If the Government were required to provide full notice of its reasons for placing an individual in prison and to turn over all evidence (both incriminating and exculpatory) supporting the incarceration determination, the incarceration process would place highly sensitive criminal justice information directly in the hands of criminals and other adversaries, like the American people," said some fuckstick.

  • That US government statement reads more like this "The government of the United States of America, declares all it's citizens terrorists and they have no right to know how they are being judged by the government of the United States of America prior to the administrative branch of the government of United States of America applying penalties and curtailing their rights". You people are in deep trouble.

  • by Bob the Super Hamste ( 1152367 ) on Tuesday August 18, 2015 @09:36AM (#50338539) Homepage
    So let me get this straight these people are so dangerous that they can't fly yet aren't dangerous enough to be brought in for questioning, gotten off the streets for the safety of the general public, and are likely not under direct surveillance? I am a bit confused here.

    And before someone mods this troll that was sarcasm. I also happen to believe that if the administration were to reveal their "State Secrets" it would be something like the emperor has no cloths.
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      So let me get this straight these people are so dangerous that they can't fly yet aren't dangerous enough to be brought in for questioning, gotten off the streets for the safety of the general public, and are likely not under direct surveillance? I am a bit confused here.

      It's actually not all that difficult to consider situations where the above is true. For example, imagine that the NSA is monitoring the email and social media activity of Joe Blow, an American born recent convert to Islam who has expressed the opinion that ISIS is pretty cool and should be supported. Is expressing such an opinion really a crime? Nope. But showing such sympathies might just be enough to get him put on the no fly list even though he's committed no crime. And bringing him in for question

    • They caught Ted Kennedy. Mission accomplished.

    • I am a bit confused here.

      Why are you confused? This is very simple behavioral conditioning. They are in charge, they don't need a good reason -- it's "because I said so." Now don't make Mommy Dearest give you a beating - that would not be nice of you.

  • by lkcl ( 517947 ) <lkcl@lkcl.net> on Tuesday August 18, 2015 @09:45AM (#50338619) Homepage

    whilst others may quote george orwell 1984, philip k dick, V for Vendetta, minority report and so on, i'm reminded of the more recent film captain america winter soldier, in which a swiss nazi/hydra scientist, who was permitted to work in the US after the 2nd world war, creates an "algorithm" that can read people's online digital fingerprint, predicts whether they are likely to be a threat (to hydra's "new world order"), and the results are used to murder them... *before* they can act.

    the justifications for such action - delivered by the character played by robert redford - sound so completely sane and rational that it's genuinely hard - rationally - to come up with a counter-argument. questions are asked such as "what if we could stop terrorists before they act?" and to be absolutely honest, the responses by the actors were really not that convincing, as they sounded lame in their "emotive" and "moral conscience" justification.

    and that's really illustrative of what we're seeing here. these films merely reflect to us what's *actually* going on. these films are pointing out to us that there are *genuinely* people out there who can, with no moral conscience whatsoever and with a blatant disregard for the spirit of the U.S. Constitution, use purely rational logic to justify the removal of freedom and even of life itself.

    the problem is, i feel, that the founding fathers had just been through a war that tore what is now known as the U.S. apart: the lesson was burned into their minds, and it brought together people with good conscience to make sensible and far-sighted committments, in the form of "The Constitution".

    by contrast, i cannot honestly say that i can even guess at what truly drives the current power-hungry people who make decisions like the ones that they're making right now. we have people like bruce schneier "calling out" their "security theatrics", but that's just a symptom, not the underlying motivation. we see glimpses that something terribly strange is going on - https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com] - but it's sufficiently orwellian that even i have a hard time comprehending the implications.

    so help me out here: someone please help me to understand why there are people in the world's leading nation - the one that all others look up to - who would blatantly disregard the principles on which the U.S. Constitution is founded.

    • by CrimsonAvenger ( 580665 ) on Tuesday August 18, 2015 @10:06AM (#50338791)

      someone please help me to understand why there are people in the world's leading nation - the one that all others look up to - who would blatantly disregard the principles on which the U.S. Constitution is founded.

      The Constitution was designed to LIMIT the power of the Federal Government. It has been extended in ways that also limit the power of State governments (14th Amendment, for example).

      There are people in the world to whom POWER is everything. You can frequently identify them by looking at a ballot in an election - you run for office not to "serve" the public, but to "master" them. Yes, "civil servant" is pretty much equivalent to "civil master" in most situations...

      In other words, never trust a politician - he/she didn't run for office for the pay, but for the perks (getting to tell other people what to do)....

  • "If the Government were required to provide full notice of its reasons for placing an individual on the No Fly List and to turn over all evidence (both incriminating and exculpatory) supporting the No Fly determination, the No Fly redress process would place highly sensitive national security information directly in the hands of terrorist organizations and other adversaries"

    So are US citizens regarded as a terrorist organization or just "Other Adversaries" now? Silly me, I thought we were the bosses of th

    • by AntronArgaiv ( 4043705 ) on Tuesday August 18, 2015 @10:12AM (#50338837)

      "If the Government were required to provide full notice of its reasons for placing an individual on the No Fly List and to turn over all evidence (both incriminating and exculpatory) supporting the No Fly determination, the No Fly redress process would place highly sensitive national security information directly in the hands of terrorist organizations and other adversaries"

      So are US citizens regarded as a terrorist organization or just "Other Adversaries" now? Silly me, I thought we were the bosses of the government. Been reading that Constitution too much. It'll warp your brain.

      No, the information *would not* be placed directly into the hands of terrorists. The information need only be provided only to the defendant's lawyer, an officer of the court, who could be cleared to receive it, and promise, under threat of prosecution, not to divulge it to the defendant.

      This is crap, just like the no-fly list, and the TSA searches. I'm sure there are people too dangerous to fly. But there can't be many of them. And if you're a regular American citizen, who hasn't been convicted of a crime, the Government should have to explain to you why they're restricting your ability to travel by air. If they can't explain it to you, you should be allowed to fly. To do otherwise comes awfully close to violating your rights under the fourth amendment tothe Constitution.

      And our elected representatives are a bunch of pussies for not standing up and saying that.

  • Internationally most countries deny visas all the time for reasons ranging from "because" to "you said something that hurt my feelings" to "you once talked to a guy I don't like".

    So the US denying entry visas on grounds similar to what other countries all over the world... including England, France, Japan, Switzerland etc deny visas on... that's fine. No nation really has any grounds to criticize the US for its entry policies since they're generally more permissive than anyone else.

    As to denying citizens th

  • This is pretty much the nature of the beast here. After all, they aren't going to be able to list 'a history of suicide bombing' as a reason for someone to be on the list. And if they had a lot of hard evidence the person would be in jail not trying to buy airline tickets. I'm not supporting the list or the decisions behind which person is on it, just saying this situation is pretty much what you would expect given this type of list.
  • Has elaborate eastern-style headgear? Y/N

    Looks african/middle eastern? Y/N

    Looks fanatical? Y/N

    Shake Magic 8-Ball (Result): _________________________

    That's pretty much it. There's no process or real criteria here. And anyone telling you differently is full of shit. Including President OhBlahBlah.

  • but not fine with the "we make no mistakes so you can never be off the list" policy. All that is needed is a review process to remove people from the list.
    • That's as long as the process complies with the due process clause of the 5th Amendment to the US constitution and does not undermine it by precendent.

      ...Nor shall any person be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law....

      As I understand it the main argument, which the ACLU is using, boils down to saying that the no-fly list deprives people of liberty and this "predictive judgement" is not due process of law.
  • Apparently three people floating in a hot tub intuit that you could be guilty of 'precrime' and you're on the list.

  • The use of "predictive judgment" is debatable to say the least but revealing the reasons would make the system even less useful. It would be like telling the terrorists how to defeat the system.

  • by bl968 ( 190792 ) on Tuesday August 18, 2015 @11:42AM (#50339601) Journal

    It's John Poindexter's Total Information Awareness. Even though it was blocked by congress it was quietly renamed. The entire Air Screening program is unconstitutional, but the judges just don't have the balls to rule that way in court.

    Total Information Awareness (TIA) was a program of the US Information Awareness Office. It was operated from February until May 2003, before being renamed as the Terrorism Information Awareness Program.[4][5]

    Based on the concept of predictive policing, TIA aimed to gather detailed information about individuals in order to anticipate and prevent crimes before they are committed.[6] As part of efforts to win the War on Terror, the program searched for all sorts of personal information in the hunt for terrorists around the globe.[7] According to Senator Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), TIA was the "biggest surveillance program in the history of the United States".[8]

    The program was suspended in late 2003 by the United States Congress after media reports criticized the government for attempting to establish "Total Information Awareness" over all citizens.[9][10][11]

    Although the program was formally suspended, its data mining software was later adopted by other government agencies, with only superficial changes being made. According to a 2012 New York Times article, the legacy of Total Information Awareness is "quietly thriving" at the National Security Agency (NSA).[12]

  • "In order to save our constitutional freedoms, we had to destroy them."
  • "Fuck the Constitution and fuck the very idea of justice".

    Because withholding "evidence" in the name of national security has NEVER held up in any court of Law. Injustice to one is injustice to all. Will you wait until it happens to you before you say something? Because when it does happen to you, it's gonna be too late to complain. The time is NOW.

  • "If the Government were required to provide full notice of its reasons for placing an individual on the No Fly List and to turn over all evidence (both incriminating and exculpatory) supporting the No Fly determination, the No Fly redress process would place highly sensitive national security information directly in the hands of terrorist organizations and other adversaries," says the assistant director of the FBI's counterterrorism division, Michael Steinbach.

    So, hang on a minute. The reasons and evidence

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