Monday, July 12, 2010

10 Ways We Are Being Tracked, Traced, and Databased

The war on "terror" is a worldwide endeavor that has spurred massive investment into the global surveillance industry - which now seems to be becoming a war on "liberty and privacy."  Given all of the new monitoring technology being implemented, the uproar over warrantless wiretaps now seems moot.  High-tech, first-world countries  are being tracked, traced, and databased, literally around every corner.  Governments, aided by private companies, are gathering a mountain of information on average citizens who so far seem willing to trade liberty for supposed security.  Here are just some of the ways the matrix of data is being collected:
  • Internet -- Internet browsers are recording your every move forming detailed cookies on your activities.  The NSA has been exposed as having cookies on their site that don't expire until 2035.  Major search engines know where you surfed last summer, and online purchases are databased, supposedly for advertising and customer service uses.  IP addresses are collected and even made public.  Controversial websites can be flagged internally by government sites, as well as re-routing all traffic to block sites the government wants to censor. It has now been fully admitted that social networks provide NO privacy to users, while technologies for real-time social network monitoring are already being used.  The Cybersecurity Act attempts to legalize the collection and exploitation of your personal information.  Apple's iPhone also has browsing data recorded and stored.  All of this despite the overwhelming opposition to cybersurveillance by citizens. 
  • RFID
  • Traffic cameras 
  • Computer cameras and microphones
  • Biometrics 
  • DNA -- Blood from babies has been taken for all people under the age of 38.
  • Microchips 
  • Facial recognition   
  • More Here..

3 comments:

  1. As that Alex Jones t-shirt proclaims:

    "The Answer to 1984 is 1776"

    ReplyDelete
  2. There are various ways to limit being tracked on the internet, and they are not all that hard to use if you care about the issue. A simple start is to manage the cookies (learn what they are and don't allow marketers) and use NoScript.

    ReplyDelete

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