from SLATE:

Massive New Surveillance Program Uncovered by Wall Street Journal

By Ryan Gallagher

Posted Thursday, Dec. 13, 2012, at 5:09 PM ET

When a former senior White House official describes a nationwide
surveillance effort as “breathtaking,” you know civil liberties
activists are preparing for a fight.

The Wall Street Journal reported today that the little-known National
Counterterrorism Center, based in an unmarked building in McLean, Va.,
has been granted sweeping new authority to store and monitor massive
datasets about innocent Americans.

After internal wrangling over privacy and civil liberties issues, the
Justice Department reportedly signed off on controversial new
guidelines earlier this year. The guidelines allow the NCTC, for the
first time, to keep data about innocent U.S. citizens for up to five
years, using “predictive pattern-matching,” to analyze it for
suspicious patterns of behavior. The data the counterterrorism center
has access to, according to the Journal, includes “entire government
databases—flight records, casino-employee lists, the names of
Americans hosting foreign-exchange students and many others.”

[Aren't the former constitutional law professor living in the White
House and the political party he leads supposed to be in favor of
civil liberties?]

Notably, the Journal reports that these changes also allow databases
about U.S. civilians to be handed over to foreign governments for
analysis, presumably so that they too can attempt to determine future
criminal actions. The Department of Homeland Security’s former chief
privacy officer said that it represents a “sea change in the way that
the government interacts with the general public.”

The snooping effort, which officials say is subject to “rigorous
oversight,” is reminiscent of the so-called Total Information
Awareness initiative, dreamt up in the aftermath of 9/11 by the
Pentagon’s research unit DARPA. The aim of the TIA initiative was
essentially to create a kind of ubiquitous pre-crime surveillance
regime monitoring public and private databases. It was largely
defunded in 2003, after civil liberties concerns. However, other
similar efforts have continued, such as through the work of the
Department of Homeland Security’s intelligence-gathering “Fusion
Centers.” Most recently, Fusion Centers were subjected to scathing
criticism from congressional investigators, who found that they were
accumulating masses of data about “suspicious” activity that was not
of any use. The intelligence being swept up, the investigators found,
was “oftentimes shoddy, rarely timely, sometimes endangering citizens’
civil liberties and Privacy Act protections.”

Such sweeping surveillance efforts pose difficulties for the
authorities because they can end up drowning in data, attempting to
find a needle in a haystack, in the process deeming innocent people
suspicious. As the Journal’s Julia Angwin notes, the risk is that
“innocent behavior gets misunderstood—say, a man buying chemicals (for
a child's science fair) and a timer (for the sprinkler) sets off false
alarms.” The U.S. government clearly feels far-reaching surveillance
initiatives are necessary to help detect potential future terror
attacks. But ultimately, in a democracy, the decision should surely
rest in the hands of the American public. It is a question of balance:
How much liberty should be sacrificed in the name of security? The
revelations about the NCTC’s activities may be about to rekindle that
debate.
-- 
Jim Devine /  "Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your
own way and let people talk.) -- Karl, paraphrasing Dante.
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