I don't see anything wrong with this - they are scanning public activity - that's fair game as far as I am concerned, it's fishing through and storing the private stuff that bothers me.
Infact, the more I think about this topic the more I realise it's not the monitoring that bothers me - it's the storage element and the fact they could go back through in years to come and paint whatever picture they can about a person.
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"Sentiment analysis" that can determine your mood; "horizon scanning" that tries to pre-empt disorder and crime; facial recognition software that can track down individuals; geo-location that is able to pinpoint your whereabouts, and profiling that can map who you are and what circles you move in.
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All of that information is provided by the social media user, voluntarily to the public internet. If you don't want your mood analyzed then it is best not to post "I'm grumpy this morning" on Twitter. Companies do the same thing for marketing campaigns - I'm not seeing a problem here or how this relates as a "little brother" to other programs.
Not quite. I did some UI work for a phone-company and their in-store camera's were able to detect clients mood within a second. They even demo'd it and showed the mood of people walking in. Right now it's only capable of 'happy, neutral and not-happy' as well as suggest man/woman. I'm pretty sure the software driving those camera's will only get better. Combine that with facial recognition and it get's creepy.
You're advocating against anyone doing these things, I hope, and not just cherry-picking this particular program because it happens to be associated with PRISM?
I admit that this is interesting and insightful research. But I have to look at it in the context of our current world, and in this context it's likely to do more harm than good to humankind.
You should probably be campaigning for most Information School departments in universities to be shut down, then. My alma mater has been doing stuff like this for years. Random stuff I found by googling a bit:
What do you mean? What context, the last few weeks, the last few years or the last few decades?
They're doing nothing that you and I couldn't do already, as humans, without any special trickery. Just automating it. If you tweet something, I can read it. If you post something on Facebook as public, can read it. Post something on a public forum, I can read it. This is nothing new - marketers and spammers have been using this same data for years.
This is NOT a privacy issue if you in the first place decided to not make it one. It a big difference between information you've made publicly available and data-mining private information without a warrant. This article is a bit bullshit and headline grabbing to be honest, and looks at it from a PRISM perspective which is the wrong angle.
Its still a bit creepy. What if a video surveillance van was parked in front of your house/apartment? Sure it would just be watching what anyone else could see. But most people would be bothered by it.
Are they friending people under false pretenses to get access to more info.
Creepy yes, but that's a decision you make using a social network that "things could get creepy".
I think a van parked outside my house would be weird but anyone that lives in a UK city center apartment block essentially lives like that anyway - it's just that the cameras are bolted to lobby ceilings and lamp posts.
The friending thing is an interesting one - could it be argued that that is warrantless searching or, by accepting their friend request, are you allowing the police to monitor you... essentially inviting them in?
Operating 24 hours a day, seven days a week, a staff of 17 officers in the National Domestic Extremism Unit (NDEU) has been scanning the public's tweets, YouTube videos, Facebook profiles, and anything else UK citizens post in the public online sphere.
The HUGE difference here is the last three words of that paragraph, "public online sphere." They are doing no more then analyzing publicly accessible data just like any other company, specifically advertising and marketing companies, do on a daily basis.
A number of initial responses to this article seem to acquiesce to the program because it scans technically "public" information. Speaking from the context of the United States, the 4th Amendment to the Constitution is what may be violated by PRISM, which protects citizens from unreasonable search and seizure. It has been interpreted by the courts that this protects citizens when they have a "reasonable expectation of privacy."
At what point with the powerful sensor technologies and analytics techniques that government agencies can employ and are mentioned in the article (semantic analysis, horizon scanning, predictive analytics, facial recognition, geolocation) do we draw a line that a reasonable expectation of privacy has been violated? I am not sure that the users of social networks who are not tech industry workers necessarily expect the extent to which extrapolations can be made and conclusions can be drawn about behavior that is technically "public" and mundane at face value.
Another separate question to consider is whether agencies will distinguish between content that is "public" or "private" in the cloud. It may be reasonable that content put in the cloud publicly is searchable, but will agencies respect cloud providers/users administrative privacy options? If I put physical property in storage I expect a warrant will be required to search it, but if I put intellectual property in the cloud, will the government respect that as protected by the 4th amendment when it is much easier to obtain, especially with the cooperation of tech companies?
So it's just scanning public info, right? What about the creation of fake personas [1]? What if these fake personas posted, commented and attempted to gain more information, or attempted to sway/entrap people?
It seems the line to be crossed from (a bit more than public) surveillance to manipulation is a very very thin line.
Topic is connected to PRISM sooo much. I don't understand how so many people here can't see that technology and it's implementation bypassed the legislation and conversations for a majority of population except for cypherpunks and a few others?
Infact, the more I think about this topic the more I realise it's not the monitoring that bothers me - it's the storage element and the fact they could go back through in years to come and paint whatever picture they can about a person.
Disclosure: I'm British