A ‘Surveillance Society Clock’ created by the American Civil Liberties Union will symbolize the encroachment of government spying on private citizens as part of the war against terrorism - and the ticktock is fast approaching midnight. ‘The extinction of privacy is a real possibility,’ said Barry Steinhardt, director of the ACLU’s Technology and Liberty Project. ‘We believe that privacy is not yet dead - it is a patient on life support.’ The online clock is patterned after the ‘Doomsday Clock,’ created by the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists in 1947 to warn against a nuclear holocaust. Midnight symbolized a total ‘1984’-style ‘surveillance society.’ ‘Every generation deserves its own clock,’ Mr. Steinhardt said in a teleconference yesterday announcing the project and a new report on mass surveillance by the government. He said that an explosive increase in new technology and data mining is fueling the trend and creating a false sense of security - from satellites to national-identity systems, the National Security Agency’s warrantless surveillance program, DNA data-banking and Web search engines that store every query, even satellites. ‘The false security of a surveillance society threatens to turn our country into a place where individuals are […]
Wednesday, September 19th, 2007
Clock to Tick Down U.S. Privacy
Author: AUDREY HUDSON
Source: Washington Times
Publication Date:
Link: Clock to Tick Down U.S. Privacy
Source: Washington Times
Publication Date:
Link: Clock to Tick Down U.S. Privacy
Stephan: Like many of you, I suspect, the image of the University of Florida student being tasered for... basically... being a jerk was very disturbing. Coming on top of the repeated stories of people being ejected from both Bush and, now, Clinton rallies for wearing T-shirts with quotes that seemed like a good idea at 2 .m. it begins to evoke images of Germany in the 30s. If free speech no longer extends to T-shirts and jerks, there is very little of it left.
The clock is to be found at: http://www.aclu.org/privacy/spying/surveillancesocietyclock.html