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Privacy

Covid-19 Could Normalize Surveillance - or Provide a Moment for Reasserting Rights (cnn.com) 85

"Will we look back at 2020 as the moment privacy finally evaporated?" asks CNN's international security editor: Privacy International called Covid-19's impact on privacy "unprecedented." "9/11 ushered covert and overt surveillance regimes, many of which were unlawful," said Edin Omanovic, the campaign group's advocacy director. The surveillance industry "understands that this is an opportunity comparable to 9/11 in terms of legitimizing and normalizing surveillance. We've seen a huge willingness from people to help them as much as possible...."

The title of Shoshana Zuboff's book "The Age of Surveillance Capitalism" referred to the power and wealth accrued by tech companies who amassed huge amounts of data over the past two decades. She thinks Covid-19 could mark a moment not of the continued, inevitable dominance of these giants, but instead of people reasserting their rights in the way they should have done when these new online hyperpowers emerged. "9/11 compromised our democracies in relationship to tech companies and their growing capabilities," she said. "We ended 2019 with people around the world in the process of waking up and appreciating the fact that surveillance capitalists have amassed these immense empires of unaccountable power... We're hitting this wall of mistrust, because we have failed over the last 20 years to create the institutions, legislation and regulatory paradigms that allow us to trust in this new invasive world..." This is a moment for better-informed societies to create the legal framework they've lacked to master the power of technology for their benefits, she said...

Yet, like 9/11, the moment is one of panic, coping, and rush for a return to normality, and less of a nuanced discussion about how the crisis can become an opportunity to fix the wrongs of the past. Without that discussion, our new normals may become a world in which a little bit more of our inner selves is out there in the ether, at risk of misuse.

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Covid-19 Could Normalize Surveillance - or Provide a Moment for Reasserting Rights

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  • by nospam007 ( 722110 ) * on Sunday May 17, 2020 @02:51PM (#60070990)

    The ear recognition and gait recognition industry is ready to pounce since everybody will wear masks for years.

    • everybody will wear masks for years

      No, they won't.

    • Good thing I've been listening to the Ministry of Silly Walks [dailymotion.com] for some time now...
  • by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Sunday May 17, 2020 @03:02PM (#60071036)

    Hardly any of you bought it when it was published last year, but this pandemic is giving me another opportunity to mention it!

  • by Rick Schumann ( 4662797 ) on Sunday May 17, 2020 @03:07PM (#60071052) Journal
    ..rather than be forced into any 'surveillance/tracking' program. I'm far from alone in that, too. Convenience will never overrule what's right, and only a fool gives up actual civil liberties and basic human rights for so-called 'security'.
    • go somewhere else to exercise your free-dumb to spread disease

      • go somewhere else to exercise your free-dumb to spread disease

        I wear a mask and gloves when I'm in public as I feel it's the right thing to do. But I also respect that people should have the choice during this pandemic.

        COVID-19 is pretty scary, but it's not like HIV or any number of other viruses. It's pretty contagious, but not insanely so. COVID-19 has an R0 somewhere between 2 and 2.5. Which is a hell of a lot better than the initial estimates that looked like it was closer to an R0 of 5. For comparison the common flu has an R0 of 1.3. SARS had an R0 between 2 and

      • There's a big difference between taking common-sense precautions in an extended emergency situation and allowing yourself to be in such a blind panic that you knee-jerk agree to giving up your civil and human rights just because some nosy power-grubbing assholes want the abilty to track and surveil everyone whenever they want regardless of having any valid reason or not; give these motherfuckers an inch and they'll take a mile "for our protection" they'll say, but it's all bullshit.
        Tracking our movements i
        • Government will misuse this power. They always do. Things passed for anti-terrorism get used for regular crime.

          And do you know if it's impossible to spy without uncorruptable logging for later review by elected officials? It is not. Imagine Nixon's plumbers, who only had to sit there and push buttons to listen in on everything the Democrats were doing -- or vice versa.

          Do not build these things to begin with. Then it can't be misused.

          We really need a Supreme Court ruling that people take the security of

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • If you're so scared of getting sick, you have the freedom to stay home.

    • The big question is: where will you be able to go without carrying a cell 'phone that has mandated tracking software ? The answer will depend on which country you live in, what sort of transport you use, etc.

      • The big question is: where will you be able to go without carrying a cell 'phone that has mandated tracking software ? The answer will depend on which country you live in, what sort of transport you use, etc.

        Where will I go? Right to the effing polls.

    • Apple or Google and other software apps on your phone are already continuously tracking your location with very high accuracy. Furthermore, this information is bought and sold between companies although it is lightly anonymized (which is easily reversed). Of course, the government also has access to this information if+when they want it too. We already live in a total surveillance society and there isn't a realistic way to opt-out while remaining a modern person.

      • I do not own or plan on ever owning a smartphone and the $40 plastic clamshell phone I use now has the GPS receiver completely disabled by Yours Truly by identifying the GPS antenna itself (it's a tiny surface mount component, how amazing!) so you're not tracking me by that anyway except by cell tower triangulation, and that assumes the phone is even turned on or is not in Airplane Mode, which it is when I'm driving around anyway.
        • Airplane mode is done in software, it's not a physical lockout. That means they can remove it with a software update.
        • You can try to fight the tide of history, but it is a lost cause. Even if you don't use a smart phone, do you use credit cards? Do you drive on the highway (license plate scanners)? Do you walk around in public with your face exposed (video cameras + facial recognition)? How about your web surfing habits? Do you always use an anonymizing VPN that you trust and can't be hacked or forced open by the govt?

          Like I said, we already live in a total surveillance society, which will only become ever more comple

    • Boy are YOU out of touch. The sheeple are ubiquitous. Thank goodness!
      • There are enough of us who are not part of the 'sheeple' that I think we can prevent the 'sheeple' from sabotaging all of us.
    • There is no need to cancel cell phone service. Just don't take it with you. Mine lives on the dining room bookcase. A land line is no longer an option unless whoever buys out Frontier actually starts fixing the lines again. And you need two-factor verification too often for a landline alone to be useful. VOIP stops working if the power goes out, so you need a phone to tell the power company the power is out.

      My problem is the Verizon 4G does not reach my house, where 2G does. And I got Verizon instead of AT

      • Tbh cell phones with you are worth their weight in gold just to be able to call a tow truck without having to go knock on someone's door a mile away on the highway.

    • Really? Who is your carrier?

      AT&T?

      Location Information includes your street address, your ZIP code and where your device is
      located. Location information is generated when the devices, Products or Services you use
      interact with cell towers, Wi-Fi routers, Bluetooth services, access points, other devices, beacons
      and/or with other technologies, including GPS satellites

      Verizon?

      6. Location of yourwireless devices
      We collect cell tower location information. Based on what you

      T-Mobile?

      Geolocation data, specifically data that identifies the approximate or precise location of your mobile device. We may also use technology in our retail locations to collect data about the presence of your device;

  • Tellling example (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Brett Buck ( 811747 )

    A telling example of where it will lead - unless we stop it - has already been provided. The *very first real act* in reacting to COVID-19 was to effectively suspend the first amendment. Intended to last *2 weeks to flatten the curve* even with wild over-estimates of the danger, now, the danger has proven far less than the worst-cases, hospitals sit nearly empty almost everywhere, ventilators are sitting unused, and it has instead been *2 months* with many places no real end in sight, and some predicting th

    • Unfortunately most people simply look at the news for how to think. CNN tells everyone that they should be scared and that everyone is an idiot that doesn't believe them. FOX tells everyone random stuff. All of the media works on being paid for clicks and views.

      The main story ended a while back. If this was about simply flattening the curve, we have done that. The data seems fairly clear that the only places that ever even came close to running into issues with the hospitals were places like New Y

      • We have to keep pounding the truth, that this is about not overwhelming hospitals, not stopping transmission itself. It is not, in fact, about "protecting you". These are nasty, nasty politicians. I might suggest drunk on power, but that likens it too much to historical collapses into dictatorship.

        On the other hand, maybe that's not such a bad idea for people to keep in the back of their minds.

    • Excess deaths are spiking pretty much everywhere to the tune of tens of thousands per month. Put your tin foil hat away.

    • hospitals sit nearly empty almost everywhere

      Wow, it's amazing how much work my nurse wife and her coworkers have been getting lately at one of those "almost empty" hospitals you seem to have spun out of whole cloth.

    • Worldwide, about 320,000 have died [worldometers.info]. However, the UN cautions that hundreds of thousands of kids [reuters.com] will die from the lockdowns. And that's just children. These lockdowns are seriously running the risk of killing more people than they are supposedly saving.
      • It will take a while to see where this goes. Infection Fatality Rate estimates are in the ~0.5% range (but could be > 1%)., with R0 in the 3-5 range. That means that under normal conditions, about 80% of people will get it and about 0.3% of everyone will die. That would be 500K in the US, and 25M world wide.

        Maybe. A vaccine would change everything. Countries with effective test/ track programs are beating it. This is just what happens if we let life go on as normal.

        See for example https://www. [medrxiv.org]

    • The *very first real act* in reacting to COVID-19 was to effectively suspend the first amendment.

      What are you talking about? This is utter nonsense. You're making things up.

  • by holophrastic ( 221104 ) on Sunday May 17, 2020 @03:11PM (#60071066)

    Thousands of years of civilization go by, and people think these are new questions. We don't need new laws. What we need is to translate existing laws into to scenarios.

    Forget "digital", forget "recognition". Focus on "surveillance".

    We've had surveillance laws for how many hundreds of years? If I'm not mistaken, the word comes from "soldier", so that's how old it is. I may be mistaken.

    We've always had loads of civil rights, and there have always been times, reasons, and scenarios to cut them short in times of emergency.

    There are three kinds of "martial law". There are all sorts of warrants and wire tapping and no-knocks, and crowd control, and protests, and riots, and propaganda.

    Today, there is a very good, very great, very valid reason to forego a lot of civil rights in favour of health. As is always the case with health, you can't balance health with anything else; doing so degrades health, always.

    Today, we ought to easily be able to ditch the rights for the health.

    The only problem is that we don't have laws to back out of such scenarios when it's over. Ditch the health, retrieve the rights. Just like every other emergency you've ever had, big or small.

    In, then out. Search warrants apply, and usually only within a small context, and then they stop applying.

    • ^^^ mod this up

    • by fustakrakich ( 1673220 ) on Sunday May 17, 2020 @03:44PM (#60071168) Journal

      It's not that it's new. But are we going to let it be permanent like all the bullshit after 9/11? And we sure shouldn't give up our rights to transparency in government processes. And if health is so important, let's demand our right to real universal health care.

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        The only thing that should be "permanent" is the constitution. Everything else ought to be "within a context" or "within a scenario". A "when...until" so-to-speak.

        I should point out that I'm not in your country. My country does have healthcare. Your country doesn't actually want it. You see healthcare as a luxury item -- I have a good job that gives me healthcare, you don't, I'm better than you, with my healthcare and with my luxury car.

        But there are two reasons why rich americans should want to pay fo

        • You need not spend so much effort thinking about it. Just look at things from the socio/psychopath's point of view. That's how they do things

        • Reason 3: When the poor people who work in your factory and take care of your kids get sick it costs you money. You could pay the entire cost of dealing with that yourself, or you can get society as a whole to pay for that. What option is cheaper to you? Reason 4: Americans without healthcare (75 million) don't go to hospitals, so infectious diseases don't get dealt with. Meaning they spread it to you and your family, and the country gets sick for longer and you pay for that. Only those who own stock in
    • You are confusing "rights" with "license". License applies for things that are granted by Law, and can be removed by Law. "Rights" exist independently of Law and cannot be taken away.

      The United States Constitution grants Licenses, not Rights.

      For example, killing is a right. It cannot be taken away by any law, no matter how much one wishes to take it away, the right to kill will always exist. However the law may grant "license" to kill with impunity under certain circumstances, and have "consequences" fo

      • That is all factually wrong. The US Constitution does not grant rights to people, it limits the ability of the government to take Rights away. The fundamental premise of US law is that you have the right to literally do anything you want until that right is taken away by a law. This is what sets the US apart from most government systems which predated it, in most systems the citizens only have the rights which are granted to them by law.
        • by nagora ( 177841 )

          in most systems the citizens only have the rights which are granted to them by law.

          Do you have an example of such a system?

    • Your data security needs to be independant of external forces. Maintain good security and it matters not a whit what others decide to do.
      • But security is an endless game of one-upmanship where the criminal gets huge rewards, and the rightful owner gets huge costs.

        Data "security" is rarely worth the cost of even reasonable success. Unless you can afford the huge cost of actual security, much like in any other world, hiding is always your best bet. That's why almost all animals hide -- camouflage, small, subterranean, patterns, speed, shelter, height, nocturnal, schooling. Only the apex predators and gigantic blobs can afford sharp claws and

  • well after the 1th and 2th Amendments are gone then the USA is it is now is over

    • Please go back to school and learn this new-fangled thing called PUNCTUATION.

      Did you mean "Well, after the 1th and 2th Amendment are gone, the USA as [sic] it is now, is over."
      Or "Well after the 1th and 2th Amendment are gone, then the USA as [sic] it is now is over."

      Your inclusion of the word superfluous word "then" implies the second meaning. What do you expect the time frame to be between the 1th and 2th Amendments being gone, and the USA as it is now is over? 1 year? 1 decade? 1 century? 10 centuries?

  • It could also provide a moment to show there are ways we can handle even this challenge without curtailing or at least minimizing trampling over the freedom of speech, movement, and assembly but it seems few people give a rat's ass about that
  • ... it's total fucking lawlessness. The last 200 years lobbyists have lobbied away the publics basic rights and freedoms.

    We had the bailouts in 2008 if anyone remembers, and the congress slap the banks on the wrist.

    Tech companies are stealing software on a massive scale since the rise of the internet. Your phone and apps are spying on you and to participate in the entertainment culture requires giving up any kind of semblence of human rights.

    The free market mythology many were raised on is a sham, the wo

  • Look at the beat down Judge Bradly of SC of Wisc gave the states attorney , amd look at their ruling.
    Look at the reaction to the Texas hair salon lady.
    Look at Elon Musk.
    Look at all the examples of hypocrisy, and stupidity. Pritzger sending his family to Florida. The Pennsylvania official saying that people should leave their elderlyt in nursing hiomes while pulling her mother out. Fredo.

    People were willing to put up. with it for a while, but now they are getting fed up.
    I suspect that what will happ

  • The public has already made it clear they prefer the illusion of security to personal liberty... this fight was lost without most even realizing there was a battle going on. Wear your mask, adhere to government approved activities, keep your distance from your neighbors, and track everyone you've been in contact with... all the cool kids are doing it.

  • I cannot be the only one to react this way. I'm a 2x Obama voter yet now don't have the energy to vet CNN crap as the noise to signal is so high. I'm sure I miss good info with this filter but am not will to spend the time.
    • Sorry to hear about your lack of critical thinking (Obama is a Republican). CNN used to be a news network before they discovered that entertainment has a higher profit margin.
  • Will you give up your privacy to support contact tracing? Do you trust private companies and the government to keep track of everywhere you go and who you interact with and not to abuse this information? Do you care at all about your privacy? Do you really think that this information would never be abused? Do you really think that this information would not be used for marketing?

    Do you really think that this information would not be stolen, leaked, rented, sold, and subpoenaed? Do you sincerely think that t

  • We always have politicians waiting for something like this to railroad fascist and dystopian ideas into law. Same happened with 9/11.

      This proves that people need to always be on guard not just because of the disease (or terrorists), but because of our own politicians who are more than eager to use these events to further shackle us down.

  • Look at what's already happening in the UK... Last week, Wired reported [wired.co.uk] that they had access to documents that showed that not only did the UK government plan to roll out successive and future versions of their "Covid-19 Track and Trace" application, but that future versions would ask for more and more privacy-busting information.

    When initial proposals were made in the UK, Apple and Google proposed a "distributed model" in which collected data would be anonymized before upload. The government ignored tha

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