The founders put the 4th amendment into place for a reason. Anyone could have said "if you have nothing to hide, then it should be OK for us to look". If the government spies on you and learns something - like you are having an affair - they can blackmail you with it. If you think that's farfetched, just look at Martin Luther King. They did it to him. There is no due process control you can put in place at that point, all you have is trust that the persons involved won't misuse the information. Our freedom is meant to be based on more than the honor system. We just found out that the intelligence agencies were spying on the Senate Intelligence Committee, their own oversight mechanism. If that doesn't scare the bejeezus out of you, I don't know what will. I appreciate the concern over security, but it is wrong to conclude that this surveillance is the reason we haven't had an attack. The government has claimed that it has prevented 50 attacks, but an analysis of these threats shows that they were discovered by traditional investigative methods. So the infrastructure was not the critical piece. http://www.newamerica.net/publications/policy/do_nsas_bulk_surveillance_programs_stop_terrorists |
Go fuck yourself. |
No you fucking idiot. The difference is that private business can't fucking incarcerate you like the government can. Amazing. Just amazing. |
What evidence do you have to support that claim? Keith Alexander would LOOOOOVE you! |
They can't incarcerate you but they can and do routinely destroy people's lives by using the private information they've gathered for trashing peoples' credit history, jacking up their rates, denying them service, forcing them into bankruptcy and a whole host of other things as well as by letting the private and personal information they've gathered on you get harvested by hackers who in turn use it for identity theft and other crimes. AND... the average American is FAR more likely to have one of those things happen to him than ending up behind bars because of government surveillance. Far more, by MANY ORDERS OF MAGNITUDE. If you think private business is perfectly harmless then you are the fucking idiot. |
The NSA program was primarily for surveilling international telecom. But - even if NSA were to be completely shut down you'd still have no privacy there. If you are calling internationally, you have no privacy anyways - because several dozen other countries are also intercepting and spying on your calls.
http://www.theguardian.com/business/2014/jun/06/vodafone-reveals-secret-wires-allowing-state-surveillance?CMP=twt_gu |
For those who are actually concerned, take a look at the Reset the Net campaign on Boing Boing.
They provide a lot of tips for how you can protect your privacy from prying eyes - corporate or government. http://boingboing.net/2014/06/05/today-is-the-day-we-reset-the.html |
Sounds like someone has had trouble with the credit bureaus. |
Not me personally but MILLIONS of Americans do. |
Whether this is legal is a subject for debate, but the bulk collection of metadata seems like an inefficient use of public funds. |
Credit bureaus are not spy operations. They are a credit reporting system so that lenders know whether to trust you. Without it, there would be no credit cards. |
You are far too trusting. Credit bureaus also very frequently damage people financially by carrying false and incorrect information, in that sector you are presumed guilty rather than innocent and it is very, very difficult to get false and incorrect information amended. The private sector also routinely sells your private, personal information to any and all comers, who abuse it however they see fit. |
You have plenty of protections under the Fair Credit Reporting Act. It may be a hassle to fix inaccuracies, but it's not that hard. And you can limit access to who can get your credit data. This is a clear case of an industry that has a legitimate need to know information, and there are laws to protect its collection and dissemination. It is the opposite of spying. |