Using Consumer Data to Hunt Terrorists 36
A reader writes: "Our biggest privacy issues might not be Internet auditors after all. The federal government may be using consumer data to hunt for terrorists, including private information with the cooperation of companies or individual employees. Apparently an IT/marketing employee turned over buying records from a national grocery store chain to investigators and the company hid that violation from its customers.
The story mentions, toward the end, the Gilmore lawsuit that was discussed on /. but goes way beyond that issue.
http://www.villagevoice.com/issues/0230/baard.php "
What kind of "terrorists"? (Score:2, Insightful)
I can't really tell.
Inch by inch... (Score:4, Insightful)
Oh yeah, this (Score:2, Informative)
NoCards.org [nocards.org]
Re:Inch by inch... (Score:1)
I don't carry a credit card, or store cards. If I want to buy something over the 'net, I'll phone the shop and post them a cheque, or send cash by registered post. I have a debit card, but normally use it just to take out cash at the same ATM. If I'm leaving town, I'll get enough cash to cover my ticket and my expenses (I tend to try and regulate my withdrawals to the same amount a week regardless of what I'm doing).
I walk the long way home to avoid CCTV cameras. Only five minutes out of my way, and much prettier. I try to buy from smaller, local stores to support local business.
Sure, there are small inconveniences, but on the whole I'm happy.
Re:Inch by inch... (Score:2)
A Colossal Breach of Trust and Waste of Time (Score:2, Insightful)
This new move by the Bush Administration is in violation of our constitution and everything America stands for. Is this his best Gorbachev impression, or something?
The fact is, this 'war on terror', if it is to be waged at all, should not target the American civilians who are funding it, let alone in such a redundant and violating way.
Re:A Colossal Breach of Trust and Waste of Time (Score:2, Insightful)
Thanks for the input though, you're quite right.
Re:A Colossal Breach of Trust and Waste of Time (Score:1)
Re:A Colossal Breach of Trust and Waste of Time (Score:1)
Re:A Colossal Breach of Trust and Waste of Time (Score:1)
the Bush administration is going out of its' way to avoid racial profiling. And the Oklahoma bombing is completely different from Al-Qaeda's terrorist acts.
Timothy McVeigh believed himself to be a soldier fighting against an oppressive government... he had absolutely no interest in dying at the time of the bombing.
This is a vast difference from the mentality of suicide bombers, who sacrifice their own lives to destroy others. This form of terrorism is rooted in an extremist sect of the Islam religion. White Americans simply do not think that the sacrifice of their own life will lead to heaven... should they choose to kill, they try to do it in ways in which they will not be destroyed in.
This is why slightly over 100% of suicide bombers are of Middle Eastern descent.
Re:A Colossal Breach of Trust and Waste of Time (Score:3, Interesting)
Note to none terrorists: Nitrate Ferterliser can be used as an explosive.
How ever explosives can be made from:
Fireworks, custerd powder, curry powder, talc
Timers can be baught under the generic terms clocks, and watches.
Power sauces for the electric bits, tecnically called 'battries' can be baught from 'Hardware' Stores, as can projectiles sutch as nails and glass as well as plastic coated extruded copper, called 'wire' that can be used to carry an electric current.
Detailed construction plans can be got from the Internet, which as all right thinking people know should be shut down imidiatly as it is used soley by terrorists to communicate.
Terrorists also use mobile phone networks to communicate so we should shut thoes down.
They also use snail mail to post boms and demands, as well as communicate with each other so we need to block them.
This just leves carrier pidgions. So I have decided that as a preemptive strike against terrorists we should shoot all the pidgions.
Thank you and good night!
Re:A Colossal Breach of Trust and Waste of Time (Score:2, Funny)
With all the renamed files on P2P programs, Osama Bin Laden's buddies are more likely to download sorority sex kittens 5 than anything harmful.
Re:A Colossal Breach of Trust and Waste of Time (Score:2)
Re:A Colossal Breach of Trust and Waste of Time (Score:1)
Ah, so all the filtering software makers'
biggest customers are obviously Al Qaeda
and the likes, who use it to shield their
Internet-using terrorists from porn.
Down with the filters!
Re:A Colossal Breach of Trust and Waste of Time (Score:1)
first: there is no constitutional right regarding consumer data
Second: Gorbachev brought free market reform to Russia opening the way hrough Perestroika to the west
This administration does not compare (ie...they are taking away freedom).
The dilbert prophecies.... (Score:3, Interesting)
*sigh* life imitates art again :-)
Re:The dilbert prophecies.... (Score:3, Interesting)
Then to demonstrate she ran the store's card through the scanner. The register beeped and printed a line on the reciept. "See", she said, "It's just that easy!"
"So how much did I save?" I asked.
She checked the receipt, "Um, well, nothing this time. But you could save up to 20 % on selected items!"
"No thanks", I said.
Re:The dilbert prophecies.... (Score:2)
Visit:l
http://epistolary.org/rob/bonuscard/
http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/28/25626.htm
I make it a point to swap my cards with my buddies every few months or so. It would be fun to see the looks on the faces of the Data Miners at the local KwikiMart when the single Belgian guy suddenly starts buying enough curry and Indian groceries to feed a family of 4... <grin>
Re:The dilbert prophecies.... (Score:2)
So for a while, things like diapers and formula no doubt were showing up in his single-guy profile.
Yeah, it's all bad data, mostly.
Re:The dilbert prophecies.... (Score:2)
Maybe that store is different, but many of those stores jack up the non-card prices. So you would be "saving" money with the card at that store, however the card price be the same as a store without cards. The card stores are a rip-off no matter what way you look at it.
Re:The dilbert prophecies.... (Score:1, Interesting)
1. This one techy guy, when I asked him "do you have a [my store's name] card?" just perked up with "Nope!" I said, okay, and started scanning his groceries, but mentioned, by the by, that shame on him for not letting us track his buying preferences. He told me, heh! he's worked with security and data mining, he knows what we're about. I said, yeah, sure, of course you're not a terrorist. But see those cameras there and there? They'll be correlated with you, as well as everyone else who cheerfully refuses to allow themselves to be tracked. It'll be 27.34, please? Okay, out of 40 cash -- and here I make a point of examining the serial numbers, and tell him, Ah, nevermind, fresh pristine ATM bills. You're as good as identified now. I'm sorry for the terrorist stuff before, but -- and $2 dollars and 66 cents will be your change -- but you do understand that these are issues of national security. It's okay, though, I don't blame you for wanting not to be tracked. But have you heard of the Patriot act? Well pretty soon it won't be a choice. Have a nice day. (then to next customer). Hi, how are you doing today? Thanks for your patience. Do you have a [my store] card? (Why yes, as a matter of fact, I do...)
2. Sometimes when cusomters say they have a (my store) card I'll tell them "What a good little consumer you are! -- Letting us track your buying preferences". This one woman said: "Hey, if it means I can save a few bucks, you can camp outside my apartment and tape-record my home life."
Better Title (Score:2, Insightful)
When will we stop acting surprised, and start acting to prevent this crap?
Straw into Gold? (Score:4, Insightful)
Now some marketing drone has foisted what is quite likely an equally worthless heap of data onto the Feds. Am I supposed to be worried that they'll be any better at data mining? I'm more worried about what they'll miss while they're wasting my tax dollars writing code to find out who bought falafel with their Pampers.
Don't call EFF. Call John Stossel and Citizens Against Government Waste (http://www.cagw.org)
Re:Straw into Gold? (Score:1)
Re:Straw into Gold? (Score:1)
Re:Straw into Gold? (Score:3, Interesting)
And that's the worst part.
I've got nothing against the proper use of profiling and data mining to hunt down the enemies in our midst - but what's proposed is too-easily defeated. It smells like a scam to bring in consulting bucks, and offers no real security.
Suppose we tune our food-purchasing-database scanners to look for of Arab males under 30 who happen to live, work, and travel together. (Snide remark: ...because we know goddamn well the fucktwaddles at the airport won't catch them, as said fucktwaddles are too busy patting down your mother and feeling up your daughter to watch for groups of Arab males under 30 travelling together.)
But because Joe Camel knows we're looking for single Arab males under 30 who claim to live alone, yet still buy enough falafel for five people, he'll adjust his purchases to match, perhaps by buying a box of Pampers when he buys falafel for the gang. (If he's smart, he'll upgrade the size of the Pampers every few months, then start buying baby clothes.) The databases will conclude that Joe Camel has a wife and brand-new kid, which doesn't fit the profile of "terrorist", and he'll slip through the cracks.
Meanwhile, Joe Slashdotter, who hosts the dorm LAN party every week where he swaps grocery cards with his friends, gets h0z3d at 3am by the f3i, because two of his friends were vegetarian, and the food-tracking software rang the alarm because his purchase records didn't make any sense. (He bought nothing for a week, then ten pounds of falafel, then nothing for another week! WTF? Call the cops!)
Food profiling is a lousy idea because it's too easily-defeated by knowledgeable adversaries, and results in too many false positives even when not under attack by adversaries.
Re:Straw into Gold? (Score:1)
If the F3I, N5A, etc. didn't have the wetware skills to catch on to the blips raised by the 9/11 gang in their existing systems, then their attempts to do anything with some pre-h0s3d, massive data archive is going to be a dismal, time-wasting failure. _Thats_ why I'm not worried about being food profiled.
What does pi55 me off more than mining my grocery data is Uncle Sugar's predisposition to burrow deeper into our privacy and throw more SIGINT and software at terrorism when they don't know what to do with what they've already got, fr'chrissakes.
This story only rates a 1 on my BlackHelicopter scale.
Terrorist profile: (Score:2)
-
My profile (Score:1)
Condoms (must be for the 72 virgins) .40 ammo (must be for hijacking a plane)
K-Y Jelly (must be for the 72 sheep)
4 boxes of Winchester S&W
Mountain Dew (now I'm a cyber terrorist)
Ramano cheese (Italian mafia terrorist!)
Extra Virgin Olive oil (kinky bastard... He's corrupting our youth!)
DVD of Blazing Saddles (He's learning to disguise himself, OMG!)
Milk (he's a baby stealer too?)
Reese's Pieces and Rolos (now he's after our women. To arms!)
Solder and speaker wire (He's making a thermal nuclear bomb!)
Onions (he's preparing to torture someone)
Basalmic Vinegar (Sick freak!)
jalepenos peppers (this is just too much! Attorney General Ashcroft, save us!)
I wonder....
When are people going to realize (Score:2, Insightful)
how potentially harmful archives of this data can be in the right hands. Something as innocent as 100 year old marriage and baptismal records was used to systematically identify and round up hundreds of thousands of people for extermination [amazon.com], using nothing more than punch-card sorters.
In the future, these archives may very well be used to produce lists of "undesirables"; your shopping records can be used to extract lifestyle and health information, and even identify your religion (ex. - Kosher products for Jews, no alcohol or pork for Muslims, and Vegan for Hindus.)