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Airport Monitoring of Travellers via Blackberry 268

glhturbo writes "According to this article in Mass. High Tech, Massachusetts State Police stationed at Logan Airport will soon have access (via Blackberry handhelds) to "7 billion records" containing information on "nearly 98 percent of the U.S. population, including, for example, a person's prior residence and with whom he or she lived, criminal information, court filings, vehicles owned, and even restricted government data." The database is from a Massachusetts company, LocatePlus, started by a former policeman who was "on the waiting list for the FBI". Seems like a good tool, but major potential for abuse, and hopefully no false identifications."
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Airport Monitoring of Travellers via Blackberry

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  • Now... (Score:5, Funny)

    by Snagle ( 644973 ) on Monday June 28, 2004 @07:50PM (#9556511)
    Instead of just pulling celebrities out of the waiting line to check them, airport security gaurds can find out where they live!
  • by MntlChaos ( 602380 ) on Monday June 28, 2004 @07:54PM (#9556538)
    It'll be really nice to know that there are going to be tons of these little handheld devices with access to these huge dossiers on the whole population.
    • I wonder how long before someone leaves their's in the bathroom (like the skymarshal who left her gun in the bathroom) and it gets sold. This would make a great burglar's tool to find out who to rob while they are on a plane trip.
    • by Anonymous Coward on Monday June 28, 2004 @09:19PM (#9557010)
      blackberries have the ability to be wirelessly wiped out of data... the BES admin can lock down a device (with a password the admin sets) wirelessly or send the kill command which wipes all data from the device...
      • I doubt much of any data is going to be on the blackberry. Hopefully there will be some sort of password required to access the database, as well as ensuring only the government owned blackberry's can use it.
    • Actually, I know a guy that helped develop this system. I asked him this very question, and he said that they've had some very sophisticated biometric encryption produced so that only authorised personnel can use them.
    • >It'll be really nice to know that there are going to be tons of these little handheld devices with access to these huge dossiers on the whole population.

      One can hope that authentication is required everyone so often. No authentication is crackable, but enough will deter most perpetrators. Also, if they don't have the ability to disable a single unit...they're retarded.

    • The current BES (Blackberry Enterprise Server) allows you, as an admin to send a "poison pill" which will wipe the device automatically. They also have local passwords and an autolock feature set from the server. The device also wipes itself after 10 attempts with the wrong password.
  • Is it wireless? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Cat_Byte ( 621676 ) on Monday June 28, 2004 @07:54PM (#9556541) Journal
    If this is wireless I can see someone stealing one of these little suckers, getting the encryption code, and getting access to tons of info they shouldn't have. I could be wrong...just a speculation that made my eyes bigger for a second while reading this.
    • Re:Is it wireless? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Erwos ( 553607 ) on Monday June 28, 2004 @07:58PM (#9556566)
      I don't see how it's any different than any other "personal information awareness" technology in that respect. I mean, there's always the problem that someone who's not supposed to have access gains it (say, by password).

      There are relatively easy ways to help prevent this sort of abuse, too. Will they be implemented? Let's hope so.

      A Blackberry is not exactly the device I would be using to try to get the records of every person in the system, of course.

      -Erwos
      • Re:Is it wireless? (Score:2, Insightful)

        by wo1verin3 ( 473094 )
        >>I don't see how it's any different than any
        >>other "personal information awareness"
        >>technology in that respect. I mean, there's
        >>always the problem that someone who's not
        >>supposed to have access gains it (say, by
        >>password).

        The problem that here we're talking wireless which means a passive attack until the encryption is broken, you may not be able to detect an intrusion until it has already occured.

        Did you the article a while back about an airport security guard lea
      • You'd use a device pretending to be a blackberry with access to the information.
      • Privacy through implementation. A guard doesn't need to know who you are or anything about you and can still tell if you are safe. How's that? The implementation of the security device. For example say the security scanner takes both eye scan and prints to identify. Then it pops up your name and photo. The security guy looks at the photo and asks your name. If it matches, you pass through. This gives this particular security person no way in which to get people's information. Not only can he not jus
    • Ahh, now we'll get to see how hackproof Blackberries really are.

      Look out, Research In Motion! Lawsuits off the starboard bow!
    • Re:Is it wireless? (Score:5, Informative)

      by LostCluster ( 625375 ) * on Monday June 28, 2004 @08:04PM (#9556607)
      A: This service has zero info that you shouldn't have. It's all public records, the scary part of this service is that they seem to have most of the nation's public records about individuals assembled in an easy-to-query form.

      B: Since this company charges by the query, too many queries from a device will likely cause that device quickly be deauthorized by whomever's paying the bill.
      • rate limiting to be exact. But then again... we can only hope that they have someone who thought of it. Maybe they specifically wouldn't implement rate limiting because certain access points may have a high volume of requests moving through them.

        Unless those queries are fractions of a penny, wouldn't it be cheaper in the long term for the state to setup some type of non-profit or holding company and just buy out LocatePlus? Ha! i just RTFA and they said "between $1 and $7 per click. At what point does HomeL

      • by SmoothTom ( 455688 ) <Tomas@TiJiL.org> on Monday June 28, 2004 @08:38PM (#9556791) Homepage
        I'll bet that the Blackberrys will be on the flat rate plan rather than charged per inquiry:

        From their site:

        "Introducing LP-Police Unlimited Flat Rate

        LP-Police's unlimited low monthly rate of only $74.99 is unmatched by any other database available today! This database is restricted to use by Government and Law Enforcement only. LP-Police is an extensive database that includes searchable and cross-referenced public information on approximately 98% of the United States adult population. Subscribers to LP-Police are given unlimited access to the following searches: Telephone/Mobile/Cellular information, Address Information, Motor Vehicle Registration, Online Criminal and Sexual Offender information, Corporations and UCC and Real Estate Property."

        Have a good day!
        Tomas

      • Dossiers (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Ungrounded Lightning ( 62228 ) on Monday June 28, 2004 @09:15PM (#9556987) Journal
        A: This service has zero info that you shouldn't have. It's all public records, the scary part of this service is that they seem to have most of the nation's public records about individuals assembled in an easy-to-query form.

        The fact that info is public record does NOT mean that it's OK to assemble it with OTHER information that is ALSO public record and make the result - or even the original public records - available at electronic speed.

        One of the big objections to the creation of the Social Security System was that the SS# would serve as a universal identifier, making it easier to assemble dossiers of individuals from diverse public records. This almost killed the program - which was eventually passed on the promise (among others) that the nubmer would NEVER EVER EVER be used in that way.

        Remember that this was before WWII, which means before computers and even xerography. ("copying" was, at best, thermofax, blueprint, or photography.) AND in the midst of the "Great Depression", with its starving masses of people (including the elderly) who had just gone bankrupt and lost their homes, farms, and businesses in a pre "welfare" system environment.

        Can you IMAGINE how concerned they were to consider blocking the creation of the SS system JUST to prevent the hand-construction and misuse of manual dossiers composed of public information?

        The US classified information rules DO classify the JUXTIPOSITION of certain publicly available unclassified information - whenever this juxtaposition hints at something that IS sensitive. This happens in nuclear physics, radio, and several other fields. Why should individuals be any less protected from combining public information in a way that stips more of their privacy than the individual records standing alone?

        = = = =

        Databases run in their private time by policemen or retired policemen were, back in the '70s, a dodge to get around new laws banning ilicit governmental record keeping. These laws were passed after the government's investigative agencies at all levels (FBI, Military Intelligence, State/County/City police) went 'WAY out of bounds on domestic surveilance and so-called "dirty tricks" against people suspected of participating in the civil rights and anti(vietnam)war movement. (See COINTELPRO for an example.)

        They were SUPPOSED to destroy the ill-gotten info. But instead some of them absconded with it and set up for-profit companies to maintain it and sell access back to the very police departments that weren't supposed to have it. This let the departments continue to use it and CLAIM that they didn't have it.

        So this one is run by a former policeman, eh? Any bets on whether it's a modern continuation of one of those ilicit databases?

        = = = =

        Dylan said you had to pay to keep from going through these things twice. Well we DID pay and we're STILL going through them again! B-(

        B: Since this company charges by the query, too many queries from a device will likely cause that device quickly be deauthorized by whomever's paying the bill.

        Aren't we talking about the Federal Government's Homeland Security boondoggle department? Somehow I doubt that breaking the US budget is an issue.
    • deauthorizeESN(stolenDeviceESN);
    • Re:Is it wireless? (Score:3, Interesting)

      by camusflage ( 65105 )
      If this is wireless I can see someone stealing one of these little suckers, getting the encryption code, and getting access to tons of info they shouldn't have.
      Actually, this is one I can speak intelligently to. The device is BUILT from the ground up to be secure. I work for a large US bank. We implemented the BES, or blackberry enterprise server, approx. eight months ago. We now have 500 of these devices deployed. They are triple-des encrypted back to the bes in our data center, they are wipable OTA, they
  • A little scary (Score:5, Interesting)

    by MarsDefenseMinister ( 738128 ) <dallapieta80@gmail.com> on Monday June 28, 2004 @07:55PM (#9556547) Homepage Journal
    This is a neat little database, but I have to wonder what the quality of the database is. If it's like other databases, it's sorely out of date. Can't be an easy job to keep tabs on 98% of the population.

    And I also wonder about the false positive rate. Extensive databases might just show up how connected we are. Just like studies that show that a huge number of us are related to the Queen of England through some tenuous tie, if we dug deep enough I bet we could find links between millions of average Joes and people who are terrorists. Insignificant links, but how does the database know that? It comes down to the judgement of the officer, and his training. And any security system that shows a false positive rate is weakened by that. False negatives are much less damaging to security.

    I get a picture in my head from the movie "A Beautiful Mind" where John Nash is in his shed, putting pictures and strings on the wall, showing all the relationships between them. Except, these relationships are going to be in a database, and will be taken seriously just because a computer said so.

    • Re:A little scary (Score:3, Informative)

      by LostCluster ( 625375 ) *
      This kind of database is only as good as its input. If the public records of any given community are wrong, that mistake will flow into the database...
    • by geekotourist ( 80163 ) on Monday June 28, 2004 @10:05PM (#9557226) Journal
      Or so it was implied via this article on the Matrix program [slashdot.org] that found 120,000 people (.04% of the US population) having a high terrorism quotient. Take that an average person knows 1,000 people. Then, she must be 1.7 degrees away from a HTQ person. You're much more closely connected to a terrorist than to either of Kevin Bacon or Erdos, say.

      Yet I bet that their "120,000" number is about as good as my own analysis above- sounds very precise, but not at all accurate... But since those HTQ people are now defined- and who wants to waste data- they're going to show up in the gov't databases. And then their roommates and co-workers are going to get flagged as medium TQ people. And then their roommates get to be medium-low TQ people. And so on and so on... If you're lucky you'll only be a LLML TQ, but no one gets to be 100% free of the taint.

      Even though that original 120k number doesn't pass the sniff test. Sure, ".04%" seems like a small number, but that equals one in 2500 people. Is 1/2500 people in the US a terrorist? That'd be 1 terrorist per 10 airplane flights, or several terrorists per major sporting event, or 400 terrorists in Silicon Valley (plus the 30 laid off who've moved back home). Unless they're all fantastically incompetent, the US should have several terror events per day.

      [Pause to answer knock on door....]

      Oh, never mind, we are crawling with terrorists, like the Peace Fresno anti-war group [azcentral.com] with their monthly streetside protest. Forgot that civil disobedience is now terrorism [aclu.org]. Unless its lawful civil disobedience [rgj.com], of course. I'm just going to go back to my Orrin Hatch CD now.

  • too much (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Admael ( 750119 ) on Monday June 28, 2004 @07:55PM (#9556548)
    There are many things I'd give for the sake of convenience... but this is going a bit too far. I'll take my privacy, thank you very much. Who exactly is going to be able to view this information? And how far does this "restricted government data" extend? It's one thing when it's a trained government officer making sure I'm not toting a shoe bomb. It's another thing when the steward has access to all my records.
    • I'll take my privacy, thank you very much.

      Too late. I'm afraid Bush and Reichsminister Ashcroft (and Big Blunkett) are already intent on taking it. Taking your privacy, that is.
  • by spoonyfork ( 23307 ) <spoonyforkNO@SPAMgmail.com> on Monday June 28, 2004 @07:55PM (#9556549) Journal
    ... I should get to know the same information about the people "screening" me.
    • Mod up (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward on Monday June 28, 2004 @08:08PM (#9556633)
      seriously man, who knows what lives most guards at airports have led before taking that job. What if they are ex-cons, and this data is just what they were looking for to get their next kickback?

      Like, I won't arrest you if you pay me 10k.... Or I won't tell your wife you've been living in an apartment in Florida with an unmarried woman...

      The potential for abuse is just enormous.

      However, this kind of capability is not going to go away. What we need is a structure in place that will ensure that no abuses take place. It's a cliche, but we need a monitor of the monitors...

      Here's another one (but appropriate): who will monitor the monitors of the monitors?

      • Re:Mod up (Score:3, Funny)

        by WIAKywbfatw ( 307557 )
        Or I won't tell your wife you've been living in an apartment in Florida with an unmarried woman...

        Get it right. She's married too. And it's a house not an apartment.
    • I should get to know the same information about the people "screening" me.

      You can, but you have to pay for it. Go to the the database supplier's webpage [locateplus.com] and click the Privacy Policy at the bottom. I'm also including the opt-out information which I find disturbing. You will see:

      You cannot opt out of our having your information distributed by LocatePLUS.com. Public records, by law, must be available from the official public records office to anyone who requests them. Accordingly, because individuals cann

  • Terrorists? (Score:3, Insightful)

    by vurg ( 639307 ) on Monday June 28, 2004 @07:56PM (#9556552)
    Why would terrorists do the "airline" approach anyway? They know how more secure it is than ever before and they probably have a different plan now. And even if they do that approach, I don't think they will only rely on shaving their beards.
    • Re:Terrorists? (Score:3, Insightful)

      by LostCluster ( 625375 ) *
      I don't think terrorists are going to hijack an airplane and fly it into a building again because they know we won't fall for that one twice. However, knowing who is passing through our airports is still important because that is effectively a border point. We want to keep the known terrorists outside of the country.

      Where this technology comes in is that a cop can instantly test a person's claimed identity against the public records that idendity should have created... if things aren't matching up, this co
  • Security? (Score:3, Interesting)

    by shadowkoder ( 707230 ) on Monday June 28, 2004 @07:57PM (#9556560)
    What happens if one of these are compromised? Does some thief suddenly have access to " restricted government data" on most of the population?
  • by Snagle ( 644973 ) on Monday June 28, 2004 @07:58PM (#9556573)
    Once the government lists them on ebay in 3 years after "forgetting" to erase the access to the database. This sounds like a case of too much important info in the hands of too many incompetent people.
  • Strong encryption? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by HotNeedleOfInquiry ( 598897 ) on Monday June 28, 2004 @07:59PM (#9556582)
    How strong is the encryption used? I'd seriously question both the encryption and the key distribution in a scheme like this. There's plenty of room for mischef.
    • Pretty sure it's standard SSL. Police IT generally does care about security, contrary to belief.
    • by incast ( 121639 ) *
      If it goes through the mobile data service of the BlackBerry Enterprise Server (and I'm definitely guessing it does), then it's 3DES and it's FIPS-140 certified. It should be secure enough.

      Not to sound like a marketing drone, but more on the BlackBerry security model can be found at http://www.blackberry.net/solutions/government/sec urity.shtml
  • What year is it? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday June 28, 2004 @07:59PM (#9556586)
    Eh? Is it 1984 or 2004? These days I just can't tell.
    • by Anonymous Coward
      Its been 1984 since 1948. What do you think his inspiration was? This shit is not new. Remember the 'red scare'? Technology is just raising the stakes.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday June 28, 2004 @08:00PM (#9556589)
    I remember the goverment making profiles of people who where doing war protests and the like. Will this information be included in the profile? I also seem to recall an incident where a protester was flagged at harrased at an airport.
  • by aminorex ( 141494 ) on Monday June 28, 2004 @08:00PM (#9556590) Homepage Journal
    I think the editor misspelled "incredibly
    fucking evil".

    That's why I stopped flying.
  • I trust 99.9% of cops. But not ALL of them. Here, we're putting a VERY powerful tool into the hands of any state police officer.

    The question is, do they need instant, portable, unrestricted access to such a tool? And the answer is, no, they do not.

    This is the equivalent of giving everyone who needs to use your computer access to the root account.
    • It takes only one bad officer to ruin everyone's day.

      Man, this is mightily worrisome.
    • They can already get the data via wireless terminals in the police vehicles. Looked inside one of the latest greatest police cruisers, pretty darn high tech. This just puts it on thier body. It's nothing new in terms of "Big Brother", just makes it easier to use by not having a laptop. What do you want to bet they are equipped with a bar code reader that reads a bar code on your ticket and passport to verify your identity. Can Identity chips be far behind which are simply scanned when you walk in the door a
  • Secure? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Fiz Ocelot ( 642698 ) <baelzharon@gma[ ]com ['il.' in gap]> on Monday June 28, 2004 @08:03PM (#9556603)
    Just doing some quick googling for blackberry security seems to indicate that it may not be "secure". Although I did find something else about a seperate security module as well.

    With all of that data being sent to these things, it could be a treasure trove for identity theft if you could just set up a monitoring/logging device in the airport.

  • Seems as if they already have access to that information via a laptop in their autos, and now it is just an easier way of getting access to it. As a frequent traveller, it doesnt really bother me. Big brother keeps expanding anyway, especially with the *gasp* Patriot Act...

    GroupShares Inc. [groupshares.com] - A Free Online Trading Community
  • And meanwhile... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by GPLDAN ( 732269 ) on Monday June 28, 2004 @08:05PM (#9556615)
    The truck driver [cbs4boston.com] is driving 100 pounds of TNT in a delivery crate right into the airport unchecked. What pisses me off most about this loss of privacy, how your personal information including your underwear size and what are the last 3 videos you rented are - is that for all that work, and all that money spent on technology, they don't do shit to actually secure the place. You think you can drive a truck up to an El Al airliner in Tel Aviv unchecked? Not unless you want a .50cal Barrett round in the chest from 5000 meters away before you get anywhere NEAR the airliner.

    Read Marcus Ranum's book, the "Myth of Homeland Security." Yay, we paid for a bunch of blackberries that will get lost or stolen and some tech firm pocketed good change with a fat ass Oracle project. Yay.

    You, the passenger, aren't one damn bit safer. Tell yourself that while you watch the truck load the pretzels and soda pop out the window while the guys are looking in your toiletry bag at your toothbrush and blackberrying to see if you ever lived in Hoboken, NJ.

    Lastly, you know why the terrorists picked Logan to board? As CNN and others reported in the weeks that followed 9/11 - Logan's security was known to be the worst on the eastern seaboard.
    • Out of morbid curiousity, what's the relevance of Hoboken, NJ? Random city?
  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday June 28, 2004 @08:05PM (#9556617)
    I used to work in a Gov. office collecting money. Whenever a really cute girl came in, I would look up her address, DOB, license plate #, and that's all I had access to. When (very rarely) questioned as to why did this, I would respond "I have to varify her info." - we didn't keep SSNs -thank God!

    I also worked in the insurance industry. We also had the screen actors guild account - for everywhere but CA. My coworkers and me would look up movie stars and gawk at their personal info - most of it just said something like "Joe Berstein talent, NY,NY" or something like that - but the point is ---WE WERE SNOOPING.

    I have no excuse nor reason - we were star struck.

    My Point Personal information will be abused somehow!

  • Had it for a while (Score:3, Insightful)

    by CaptainSuperBoy ( 17170 ) on Monday June 28, 2004 @08:05PM (#9556619) Homepage Journal
    I saw this demonstrated on a Pocket PC about a year ago. I'm pretty sure it works through the normal cell network. They can pull up all your information based on your name, license plate, driver's license number, etc. I thought it was just for Mass. residents but I could be wrong. Doesn't seem any worse than "running your numbers" through a dispatcher, it just takes less time so it makes the police more efficient.
  • No mention of what kind of security they're using for this. Wouldn't it just suck if any random hacker could crack into this wireless network and...use your imagination, mine's burned out.

    What kind of security are Blackberries capable of? I hope it's not a telnet affair...
  • by mythosaz ( 572040 ) on Monday June 28, 2004 @08:12PM (#9556658)
    ...so, like 97%?
  • Oh that's nothing... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by sdo1 ( 213835 ) on Monday June 28, 2004 @08:14PM (#9556671) Journal
    In Boston if you ride on public transportation, you'll soon be subject to search [bostonherald.com].

    Don't forget folks, it's not only the Republicans who are itching to strip your rights away. Massachusetts is about as Democratic as you can get and they're in on it too.

    -S

  • "Airport Monitoring of Travellers via Blackberry". No, actually. Sorry to be pedantic, but this is LEOs with access to a database via a Blackberry. Okay, it makes things a little more accessible....but it's hardly Blackberry's on the lose!

    -psy
  • My father has a blackberry from work that he has been quite pleased with, aside from the fact that now he has no excuse for not keeping up with e-mail.

    Blackberries serve as data relays; although they can store a fair number of emails or other text based information, information about over two hudunred million people is a bit out of the question for these little gadgets, so for that reason, as well as security concerns, they likely retrieve data on a subjecct and then discard it after a while.

    They will al
  • by teamhasnoi ( 554944 ) <{teamhasnoi} {at} {yahoo.com}> on Monday June 28, 2004 @08:21PM (#9556706) Journal
    Truly, it's the missing 2% that we should really be worried about. I'm guessing there's a noticeable lack of CEOs, politicians, and others who can buy, wheedle or threaten their way out of the database.

    When I can find out Bill G's home address, Dick Cheney's driver's licence number, George's arrest record, and Ken Lay's bank balance - then I'll say it's fair.

    Anyone who says this is not ripe for abuse is a shareholder.

  • 98%? (Score:3, Interesting)

    by magarity ( 164372 ) on Monday June 28, 2004 @08:26PM (#9556722)
    nearly 98 percent of the U.S. population

    This is great. As long as the terrorist population in the USA is more than 2%, some of them are guaranteed to be caught. If 4% of the population are terrorists, and they all pass through that airport, half of them will be caught! Your tax dollars at work...
  • So what's the point of the census?
  • According to this article in Mass. High Tech, Massachusetts State Police stationed at Logan Airport will soon have access (via Blackberry handhelds) to "7 billion records" containing information on "nearly 98 percent of the U.S. population

    Nice to hear so much being spent on a system which wouldn't have had any information on the 9/11 hijackers. And another thing which will get me earmarked for special treatment as a non-US citizen living here.
  • hopefully no false identifications

    "Hope is not a plan."
  • Big Brothah (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Doc Ruby ( 173196 ) on Monday June 28, 2004 @08:38PM (#9556788) Homepage Journal
    Boston is also "randomly" searching its subway passengers [usatoday.com]. The Supreme Court ruled this month that Americans must give their name to police who ask [csmonitor.com], even without cause, or be arrested. Freedom's just another word for something left to lose.
  • The grid? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Raven42rac ( 448205 ) * on Monday June 28, 2004 @08:39PM (#9556798)
    Makes me seriously want to live off the grid. I do not feel any more secure knowing some hack has information on 98% of the U.S. population on a glorified palm pilot, what if this device "walks away"? All that info in the wrong hands (ACTUAL BADGUYS, id thieves, spammers, etc) is scary. I hate the fact that when 19 foreign citizens do some bad shit, 300 million legal Americans have to pay for the incompetance of our government to stop it. It is a classic kneejerk reaction, the current administration has eroded 200 years of balanced liberty and security in 4 years, that has to be some kind of record. I feel less safe, and downright ashamed of our preemptive attacks and feeble attempts at nation building. The way the little guy has taken it in the ass in these past 4 years is astounding. Where to begin? The overtime ripoff, outsourcing, tax cuts for the rich, PATRIOT act, PATRIOT II, TIA, DMCA, "show me your papers", and that is just the beginning. I would vote for Nader if I thought he could actually win, so I will vote for Kerry instead. Mr. Kerry has actually come out with stances on issues, most of which I agree with. I was worried he was not going to have any discernible viewpoint on anything for a second.
    • The DMCA, that famous republican bill of 1998.
      • They are the ones who gave it teeth, remember, who controlled the Congress at that time? The president is merely a figurehead.
        • So why vote for Kerry on these issues, if Bush is merely a figurehead?
          • I fear we are going in circles. We have a Republican President and a Republican Congress, makes it easier for them to get their agenda through that way, without fear of veto. The President is a figurehead who has to represent the values that our nation espouses, ours should not represent "bring it on" and "watch this drive".
    • Sorry to break your happy "interesting" ramble, but DMCA was passed in 1998 (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DMCA), under Clinton, and do you really think that "outsourcing" began just 4 years ago and not on the peak of the .com boom?

      I would have to conclude that you are just a TROLL, really.

      Paul B.
  • by acadiel ( 627312 ) on Monday June 28, 2004 @08:43PM (#9556819) Homepage
    You notice that there's no "opt out" anywhere on the locateplus.com [locateplus.com] website.


    At least some other database companies, such as lexis-nexis.com [lexis-nexis.com] will let you at least opt out. [lexisnexis.com]

    I wonder how long before these private databases are mandated to respond to "opt out" requests.
  • by geoswan ( 316494 ) on Monday June 28, 2004 @08:57PM (#9556886) Journal
    There are dangers in relying on electronic information. Particularly when it is used without any exercise of common sense [billingsgazette.com].
  • by Brian_Ellenberger ( 308720 ) * on Monday June 28, 2004 @09:03PM (#9556913)
    Note: I'm merely throwing out a hypothetical, this is not necessarily my belief. Just a discussion point.

    On Slashdot, it is commonly argued and agreed upon that "security thru obscurity" is a falacy and the best way to get yourself into trouble. Obscure facts and details are eventually discovered and exploited. It is better to have all source and algorithms out in the open, have everyone pick at it, find the holes and patch them.

    Compare this to the commonly held belief in keeping all personal information "secret". If someone tries hard enough, they can pretty much discover any information about yourself. Private detectives, for example, specialize in "hacking" personal information (arrest record, who you are sleeping with). Would it not be better to "open source" your life and deal with the consequences? Your SSN and Credit Card numbers should be secured with something better than mere obscurity, for example. If you are cheating on your spouse you would assume you are going to be caught and be able to deal with the consequences. With everything out in the open we don't have to worry about blackmail and dirty tricks and you better know people's character and motivations. Kinda like looking inside a program's source and seeing the flaws.

    Note, these are NOT my opinions, just things that went through my head at 10pm.

    Brian Ellenberger
    • With everything out in the open we don't have to worry about blackmail and dirty tricks and you better know people's character and motivations. Kinda like looking inside a program's source and seeing the flaws.

      The major difference is that what happens in your life really should matter only to you, your wife (if any, and she really cares) and maybe family and friends, and you can as well expect people to leave you alone. If you write a program which matters only to a handful of people it does not really ma
  • Wow... talk about a backlash. I'm sitting in an airport doing /. on one of these (normal blackberry) right now. These things are great little tools. Aside from email/phone/web, you can run Java and C++ apps on them and do all sorts of custom apps. Unlike my ipaq with a wireless card, this thing is almost always connected to the net for days without charge. Slow, but fast enough to do a secure lookup. This type of thing sounds like the perfect 'car computer' for bicycle cops. Silly to not use off the
  • by geekotourist ( 80163 ) on Monday June 28, 2004 @09:12PM (#9556970) Journal
    The data combines multiple sources including gov't files. It includes your associates (roommates past and present, family members, travel companions). I assume they use software like casinos use for this (i.e. if your old college roommate recently got caught card counting, you're going to have a harder time playing at casinos too.) but with data the casinos can't get like your CPNI (phone calls). The gov't data probably has your associations: memberships in the ACM, ACLU, or NRA can come from mailing list rentals, and the gov't / IRS knows deductable donations.

    So, what if the data is wrong? I'd say the results would be worse than identity theft or a simple bad credit report.

    With ID theft, bad data gets attached to you and affects your ability to find jobs, get loans, rent housing, etc. But, it only affects you (perhaps also a spouse). You can get your data and try to fix it. Takes 200 hours and never quite finishes, but you have rights and the credit agencies have duties.

    With this system, bad data will affect you and your ability to travel. The government has admitted that it has no responsibility to fix bad data in government files. So, you'll have few to zero chances to fix it. And the best part is bad data about you will creep out to taint anyone you've associated with. If you look bad, then so do your old roommates. And your new business partners. And whoever you call regularly. So now grandma will get a free breast cancer screening whenever she flies (mmmmm. Wand searches).

    From my favorite essay written by a precog on privacy post 9/11( the former Canadian privacy czar's excellent essay [privcom.gc.ca]), as I commented here [slashdot.org] in this thread on airlines gave away your privacy [slashdot.org] (and it definitely applies to those of us in the US, he's warning Canadians not to do what the US was doing already):

    • The more information government compiles about us, the more of it will be wrong. That's simply a fact of life...
    • wrong information and misinterpretations will have potential consequences. If information that is actually about someone else is wrongly applied to us, if wrong facts make it appear that we've done things we haven't, if perfectly innocent behavior is misinterpreted as suspicious because authorities don't know our reasons or our circumstances, we will be at risk of finding ourselves in trouble in a society where everyone is regarded as a suspect...
    • Decisions detrimental to us may be made on the basis of wrong facts, incomplete or out-of-context information or incorrect assumptions, without our ever having the chance to find out about it, let alone to set the record straight...
    • That possibility alone will, over time, make us increasingly think twice about what we do, where we go, with whom we associate, because we will learn to be concerned about how it might look to the ubiquitous watchers of the state.
    • The bottom line is this: If we have to live our lives weighing every action, every communication, every human contact, wondering what agents of the state might find out about it, analyze it, judge it, possibly misconstrue it, and somehow use it to our detriment, we are not truly free. That sort of life is characteristic of totalitarian countries, not a free and open society like Canada.

    "[gives example of Canada wanting to collect data, US style]... This is unprecedented. The Government of Canada has absolutely no business creating a massive database of personal information about all law-abiding Canadians that is collected without our consent from third parties, not to provide us with any service but simply to have it available to use against us if it ever becomes expedient to do so. Compiling dossiers on the private activities of all law-abiding citizens is the sort of t

  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday June 28, 2004 @09:29PM (#9557058)
    In 1987 I founded a company in Orlando, FL that did most of this.

    1987 was before the public was aware of the Internet, so it wasn't as prevalent. But, using CompuServe's packet switching network, we had access to most of the nation's public records: auto, plane & boat registration; worker's comp records; driver's licenses; arrest records; court filings; etc.

    We also had access to the "top half" of a credit report. The major credit bureaus make a fortune selling the non-credit related info they have: names, addresses, employment history, etc. Federal law *prohibited* most law enforcement agencies from directly accessing this data.

    For three years *we* made a small fortune reselling this info to several police/sheriff departments.

    This experience taught me three things:

    1. Gather all that information and even if a bunch of it is out of date or invalid, you can put together a VERY accurate picture of someone's life.

    2. Many LEOs were quite loose with information they were not supposed to access or share. By this I mean cops sitting in parking lots running every tag, DL and NCIC reports on every driver. I also received full information requests on cop girlfriends, ex-wives, etc.

    They are also more than willing to discretely share things like DL photos, NCIC records, etc. with people who give them data.

    Hell, at one time I found full info on an escaped murderer who had been hiding for 10 years. His wife once applied for a Sears credit card using his real SSN. THAT led to a California DL photo that confirmed it was him; auto tag in Nevada with an almost-current address; and a forwarding address from a gas company that owed him a refund - bingo.

    $5,000 reward, certificate of appreciation from 3 law enforcement agencies, and the knowledge that 98% of all $100 bills in circulation have enough drug residue on them to hit a drug dog. So, while taking that stack of $100s to the bank, I had a personal contact in the US Marshall's Office if I got stopped. :-)

    Oh, yeah, #3. The most important.

    How to hide in today's society if I really want to.

    chill
  • by linuxhansl ( 764171 ) on Monday June 28, 2004 @09:37PM (#9557104)
    here [slashdot.org] And I'll say it again:
    1. These tools/extended rights will be abused.
    2. They won't help to prevent terrorist attacks.
    How many terrorists are US citizens? Even if they previously they student visas, etc, terrorist groups just have to stay out of the US until right before the attack. There will be no records on them, and hence this does nothing to prevent them from pursuing their actions.
    But now there is this huge pool easily accessible information out there, just waiting to be used for other purposes.

    Anyway, IMHO there will never be an attack like 9/11 again, because on 9/11 the terrorists relied on the will and hope of the passengers to stay alive. Now, if a plane is hijacked the passengers will have to assume that they will die, hence it will be impossible to control them (what would you threadten them with?) That's what happened to the 4th plane on 9/11 when people on the plane learned about the other attacks via cellphone.

  • by ruhk ( 70494 )
    I read that title and said to myself, "They've gone too far! They can't get away with tracking my Blackberry as it moves through the airport!"

    Not that the REAL story isn't as worrying.
  • Blackberry Use (Score:5, Interesting)

    by ifonline ( 792445 ) on Monday June 28, 2004 @09:52PM (#9557173)
    I have one of these devices (I'm a cop), although I do not live in Mass, and it uses a different provider for the information. All of the information is based on collection from three sources: public records, driving records, and criminal history. The public records are fairly accurate, but they are not perfect. The driving and criminal records are more accurate, and reflect the same information that I can collect when running a vehicle tag or a driver's license. That's the key. I need to know who I am searching for in order to get the information. I can't just put in a name, for example, with no other information (such as a date of birth, SSN, city of birth, etc.) and expect to receive any information. It just doesn't work that way. Is it dangerous? Depends on your stance towards records queries, I suppose. I can get all of this information without the Blackberry, but it is more convenient when I'm on foot interacting with a crowd to have the device. Push come to shove, however, and I'll take you back to the patrol car to get the information. It works for both of us, in a sense. I don't have to go back to the car to get the info, and you don't have to waste the time coming with me. Something else to consider: I am required by law (at least in my state) to protect the information that I gather on a person. The law is so protective that I can be held responsible if someone else HEARS the information on my radio, including the person I am checking! This would undoubtedly extend to my control over the Blackberry. If I lost it, I would be in a great deal of civil liability. That doesn't prevent someone from using the device illegally, granted, but it is something to consider none the less.
  • Because no terrorist will ever be stupid enough to use such a service.
  • An airport is the logical place to start something like this, but, once the technology is proven and tested, it can be deployed anywhere.

    Which brings us, again, to the question: "Is the universal and effective law enforcement desirable?" If, suddenly, there was a method for the police to promptly find and arrest everyone they needed, would it be a good thing to have (even if we ignore the potential abuse problems)?

    Before you say: "Yes!" -- consider the fact, that the US' Founding Fathers were, most certainly, breaking the law(s) of the British Empire and committed treason...

  • by IanDanforth ( 753892 ) on Monday June 28, 2004 @10:31PM (#9557341)
    "Finally, while the nonpublic information may contain your maiden name, it does not include your mother's maiden name or any other information about your parents or family"

    So...if you have a kid, that kid is screwed. Or even better, if you know the first name of the mother (of whomever's identity your trying to steal), you can then easily find HER maiden.

    What a great system. No potential for abuse. Nope none. Because only law enforcement, private detectives and COMPANIES (not specified) can get access to this info.

    -Ian

  • by painehope ( 580569 ) on Monday June 28, 2004 @11:13PM (#9557533)
    it was only a matter of time. All of the "services" that LocatePlus offers are matters of public record, which means that by the law you, I, or any jackass Orwellian fascist w/ a frutrated Big Brother complex ( *ahem* Jon Latorella - that's you bub! ) can access them and do whatever the hell he wants with them.

    If you want an example of how available these records are now, check out Adams County Records [adams.il.us]. I've used them before to see if charges had been filed on friends, etc. So it's not hard to get, especially in the "digital" age.

    What is scary is the fact that our society ( and our judicial branch in particular - which should be motivated by an evolving sense of ethics and morality, which, well, DOESN'T SEEM TO BE FUCKING EVOLVING to cope with our changing world ) doesn't seem to be able to prevent these abuses. Because a private citizen ( or a government agency, for that matter, but they have a lot of liabilities under the law that private citizens don't, that limit their abuses ) compiling a database from public records ( which aren't always accurate ) and then selling it to government agencies ( which is now probably excused for their mistakes due to the fact they were using "someone else's system" ) is most definitely an abuse. It's the basest whoring of public information that I can possibly think of.

    Which beggars another question : if we were as intelligent and moral as we suppose, why haven't we done the following :

    1) rather than releasing records freely, release them under a public license, similar to the GPL. Since they would have to be copyrighted to be released under a license, why not copyright each citizen's information to that person, and their relatives owning their copyright when they die? Yeah, it sounds sick in a way - you're copyrighted, dude ! - but it would prevent commercial and governmental abuses like this. Your information is copyrighted to yourself, freely available under the Citizen's General Public License or some such shit, and any sentencing, divorce, etc., is an addendum to the copyrighted work - namely YOU. And you have to authorize any use of your records which involves commercial profit.

    2) Made laws disallowing the use of public records for direct commercial gain.

    3) Passed laws that required private and public agencies furnishing public or private information to other agencies to be be directly culpable for all misuse, negative repurcussions, etc., that result from any inaccurate or outdated information that they provide. This one rings home with me particularly strongly tonight, since I just found out that 2 medical bills that I paid over a year ago still show up on my credit as unpaid debts. There's no accountability there, even though I've badgered these bastards before to update their records.

    Yeah, making laws doesn't always solve a problem, but making the right ones will. Stop telling people who they can fuck, how they can get high, stop giving money to religious "charities", stop supporting people that are unwilling to work but still willing to reproduce, legislating the RIAA's paranoid crusade about whether I can copy a fucking DVD or not, and start making some laws that pull that metaphorical boot off of our face. Because I only see it getting worse. And this is the really goddamn scary part kids :

    I see it getting a whole worse before it gets any better.
  • by totallygeek ( 263191 ) <sellis@totallygeek.com> on Tuesday June 29, 2004 @12:51AM (#9557863) Homepage
    I really do not understand this. A fair percentage of violent criminals have no prior record before they commit their offenses. I am sure the same goes for terrorists. You have a student over here learning and then he is told to do a suicide mission or release some nerve gas. No one is really watching this fine upstanding person under 30, bright, personable.

    I mean, none of the 911 terrorists were being investigated and all had current papers to be here legally.
  • by Irvu ( 248207 ) on Tuesday June 29, 2004 @09:41AM (#9559980)
    Comes from the ACLU's Page on the U.S. Census:

    Q: Has census data been abused in the past?

    A: Yes. Information gathered by the U.S. Census bureau helped the government round up American citizens of Japanese ancestry during World War II. When the Federal government came up with the idea that these Japanese Americans were a security threat, it needed some way to hunt them down. The solution? Use the Census records. According to officials who were in charge of the internment process, Census Bureau employees opened up their files and drew up detailed maps. These maps showed where Japanese Americans were located and how many such people were living in a given area.2 In the end, nearly 112,000 people were captured and sent to internment camps, in one of the darkest episodes in United States history.3

    In the years after World War II, there have been repeated attempts to expand the use of Census records beyond mere statistical analysis. Recently, there was an effort to expand the number of public entities who have ready access to these banks of data, including state and local authorities, as well as the United States Postal Service.4 These developments underline the importance of new privacy protection laws to prevent history from repeating itself.


    See here [aclu.org].

    The Census Bureu's Take on it is:
    The historical record is clear that senior Census Bureau staff proactively

    cooperated with the internment, and that census tabulations were directly
    implicated in the denial of civil rights to citizens of the United States who
    happened also to be of Japanese ancestry.

    The record is less clear whether the then in effect legal prohibitions against
    revealing individual data records were violated. On this question, the judicial
    principle of innocent until proven otherwise should be honored. However,
    even were it to be conclusively documented that no such violation did occur,
    this would not and could not excuse the abuse of human rights that resulted
    from the rapid provision of tabulations designed to identify where Japanese
    Americans lived and therefore to facilitate and accelerate the forced
    relocation and denial of civil rights.


    See here [census.gov].

    The problem that I see with these things is that the database is maintained by cross-linking private data of likely dubious validity so we have know way of knowing if the false positives/negatives are even within reasonable bounds. Remember what heppened in florida when many african-american voters were mistakenly "scrubbed" from the rolls and denied their rights to vote? What guarantee do we have that "bad data" (as the peole in florida assert) or deliberate falsification (as others have charged) will prevent otherwise innocent people from flying.

    But, more importantly, the article makes no mention of controls, not only ensuring that a connected device is not stolen but that the data will not be misused by some guards who are seeking to stop all muslims. The potential for abuse in both forming the databases and in using them is frightening. Suppose the number of african-american men, or chinese people, or muslims who are stopped at the gates goies up even a little, who will be keeping an eye on that and keeping the airport honest? The Airport itself?

    Lest we forget, the reason that the FBI doesn't have a database on 98% of Americans including past locations, etc is that, up until now [slashdot.org], being innocent of a crime meant that you were entitled to some measure of privacy, and, that the goal was to curb abuses of police power not aid and abet them.
  • sigh (Score:3, Insightful)

    by samantha ( 68231 ) * on Tuesday June 29, 2004 @12:56PM (#9562373) Homepage
    Anyone, not even having to be a PI, can get their hands on much of this information about anyone who hasn't taken a lot of steps to avoid leaving so many cookie crumbs. That it has been organized for more convenient access was just a matter of time. We need to insure some things:

    a) that the information is accurate;
    b) that we can examine our information for accuracy and there is a way to correct it;
    c) that there are stringent laws governing the use of this information;
    d) that there are workable procedures for reporting abuse and taking legal remedies against abuse.

    The above will not make us completely safe of course. But they are necessary steps in the right direction in this world of dense information flows.

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