http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,57228,00.html

ACLU: It's Almost 1984 
Wired News Report Page 1 of 1 
10:11 AM Jan. 15, 2003 PT
Big Brother is watching you. The American Civil Liberties Union is quite
sure of it.

An ACLU report released Wednesday warns that the United States "has now
reached the point where a total 'surveillance society' has become a
realistic possibility."
The problem, said ACLU analysts, is twofold: Increasingly sophisticated
technologies make advanced surveillance a snap, while the erosion of
constitutional protections in the wake of Sept. 11 threatens the legal
safeguards shielding Americans from excessive government snooping.
"Given the capabilities of today's technology, the only thing protecting
us from a full-fledged surveillance society are the legal and political
institutions we have inherited as Americans," said Barry Steinhart,
director of the ACLU's Technology and Liberty Program, who co-authored
the report. "Unfortunately, the Sept. 11 attacks have led some to embrace
the fallacy that weakening the Constitution will strengthen America."
The ACLU described its report, "Bigger Monster, Weaker Chains: The Growth
of the American Surveillance Society," as an attempt to "step back from
the daily march of stories about new surveillance programs and
technologies and (to) survey the bigger picture."
Overzealous government snoops are not the only target of the report. Its
authors also condemned the increasing amount of prying being done by the
private sector, which compiles vast amounts of personal information in
the pursuit of marketing and sales goals. A lot of that data has a habit
of winding up in more official, sinister hands, the report said.
According to Dorothy Ehrlich, the ACLU's Northern California director,
the only thing standing between Americans and a full-fledged Big Brother
society is sheer incompetence. Inefficiency prevents the new technologies
from realizing their full potential, she said.
"Eventually, businesses and government agencies will settle on standards
for tying together information, and gain the ability to monitor many of
our activities," Ehrlich said, "either directly through surveillance
cameras, or indirectly by analyzing the information trails we leave
behind us as we go through life." 

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