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DARPA to Fund TIA Study 18

clonebarkins writes "Federal Computer Week has an article on a DARPA-funded study of privacy-related concerns related to TIA. "We envision software that will mask the identity of any individual whose pattern of activities triggers the suspicion of investigators," says the program manager of the Information and Intelligence Exploitation Division. Yeah, sure--that'll happen about as soon as Ashcroft converts to Islam."
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DARPA to Fund TIA Study

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  • yah, right (Score:3, Funny)

    by elmegil ( 12001 ) on Tuesday April 29, 2003 @01:51PM (#5835934) Homepage Journal
    Because after all, masking the identity of individuals who the Defense Department thinks might be a threat is the WHOLE POINT, right?
  • by GuyMannDude ( 574364 ) on Tuesday April 29, 2003 @02:40PM (#5836443) Journal

    Yeah, sure--that'll happen about as soon as Ashcroft converts to Islam.

    Can we please have the submitters refrain from making editorial comments in their story submissions? Please use the Comments section like everyone else. We get enough of being told what to believe from the mass media. We don't need it on slashdot, too.

    My request is directed towards editors, as well.

    GMD

    • by zogger ( 617870 )
      why even have any sort of inter active website, with commentary being a main part of the whole construct?

      That's the deal here, come up with an article, use your born with rights to drop an opinion, add more links to support your case, perhaps, and so on. Get the ball rolling. That's a valid point he made, it's a sarcastic comment to make a political point-what the government says and what it does is more often than not two different things. That is called "lying" what they do a lot, and there's so much evi
      • I'm not sure if you understand my point or not. If so, your reply isn't really responding to it (at least the first half of your reply). It's going off about the fact that politians lie and we all have the right to speak our mind and so forth. Well, I happen to agree with all that. I'm not complaining about people speaking their opinions -- I'm complaining about those opinions being part of the story summary.

        I come to slashdot to read the comments primarily because I DO want to hear what others are thi

        • --I understand that point. Guess it's a matter of taste then, I don't care about it all that much. I also know should I choose to I can submit my own articles, with whatever little quips I want to insert. I like a zesty forum! Not flame wars and vulgar city, just *zesty*, lotta action. I think part of the deal is, you DO get to put your own little synopsis here with an article submission. If you couldn't, it would be basically a link and the article authors headline title, and that's it. Or it would be pre
    • Can we please have the submitters refrain from making editorial comments in their story submissions?

      Can we please have the registered users' posts be on-topic? Please use the Comments section like everyone else. We get enough off-topic posts from Anonymous Cowards. We don't need it from registered users too.

      The entire concept of Slashdot is to editorialize.

  • Bad idea... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Paddyish ( 612430 ) on Tuesday April 29, 2003 @03:02PM (#5836657)
    In theory, TIA would enable national security analysts to detect, classify, track, understand and pre-empt terrorist attacks against the United States by drawing upon surveillance and patterns in public and private transactions.

    And in theory, communism worked beautifully. Too bad no one thought it through to the nth iteration...

    It would be interesting to see details on how
    1.) 'Threatening' patterns and their levels are selected, and
    2.) How someone could spam the system with threatening activity.

    Mmmm...spam...

    • Re:Bad idea... (Score:2, Insightful)

      by ArsonPanda ( 647069 )
      It would be interesting to see details..

      Of course, its only a matter of time until even asking for such details lands you in a cell in cuba, for public safty. Wouldn't want you knowing how to get around it now would we? After all, the DOJ has already made great strides in gutting FOIA.
    • Re:Bad idea... (Score:3, Insightful)

      Very good point, however it seems people here in the states at least are so worried about terrorists and everything that they seem to like the idea of TIA. I believe that the general public does not understand it and its consequences. Right now we as citizens have security through obscurity. When, not if, all of the government agencies all the way down to the local library have a single "master database" to cross reference everything then we are in trouble.

      This does show potential for security, but the

    • In Theory there is no difference between Theory and Practice. {Doctor Strangelove}
  • Question 6: How will privacy issues be resolved?

    Answer:
    Congress will have the major role in resolving any privacy issues that result from TIA research. All TIA research complies with all privacy laws, without exception. In addition, the oversight boards that the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology and Logistics has established will ensure that TIA develops its products and disseminates them in a manner consistent with public policy concerns.
    ...so, uh, I'm supposed to trust my Congre
  • If we don't like these various ways the government is trying to gain information about us, why don't we protest in good /. fasion? By this I mean, do it the backwards and intelligent way. So the gov wants our info? Fill the system with faulty info, eg: borrow wierd books from the library, or whatever will mess with the system. Let them have their toys, lets just make the output pointless and useless garbage. If we tell them we don't want them to do it, and make it pointless for them to do it, that might ma

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