Contents Pages by Subject

Privacy Rights

Subject Photo
Article Image

Wired

(because they can) Second, privacy will take center stage, as Congress confronts the problem of authorizing and controlling mass surveillance by government agents, while making little change in the rules that permit targeted surveillance of individua

Article Image

Vnunet

Adoption of RFID tags did not meet projections last year, but baggage tracking, fashion and smartcards will to drive growth this year. RFID analyst IDTechEx says sale of one billion tags in 2006 was below forecasts but more than 1.7 billion tags

Article Image

Business Intelligence Lowdown

How much would you sell your private data to a company for? Would you take $100 to let someone see every site your have visited over the past year, how about $1,000? Today, many major companies spend millions collecting

Entered By:
Article Image

Washington Post

The Bush administration has employed extraordinary secrecy in defending the NSA’s highly classified domestic surveillance program from civil lawsuits. Plaintiffs and judges’ clerks cannot see its secret filings. Judges have to make appointments to re

Article Image

by Aziz Huq (Tom Paine)

At first it was hailed as a victory for civil liberties. But last week’s announcement that warrantless domestic surveillance by the National Security Agency has come to an end means less than it first appears.

Article Image

theregister.co.uk

A Dutchman dressed as the unpredictable master criminal The Joker from Batman managed to get himself a national ID card, despite supposedly stringent new rules which outlaw grins, funny faces, and head coverings from passport pics.

Article Image

zwire.com

Stone said the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency and the FBI are conducting a joint investigation into Earnshaw's medical practice. As part of the discovery stage of the investigation, FBI officials are electronically scanning thousands of records in

Article Image

Washington Post

The Treasury Department reported to Congress that a data-collection program to give counterterrorism analysts routine access to as many as 500 million cross-border financial transactions a year could not be implemented until 2010. The department had

Article Image

Zdnet News

Nick Clegg MP, the Liberal Democrat Shadow Home Secretary, said that the official study on trials of iris-recognition equipment at airports had highlighted major failures in the technology. Clegg warned this is the further evidence

Article Image

Washington Post

The military's expanded use of the records authority was first reported yesterday on the Web site of the New York Times, which said that military officials had made more than 500 such requests since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. Quoting unnamed mi

Article Image

NY Times

Deep into an updated Army manual, the deletion of 10 words has left some national security experts wondering whether government lawyers are again asserting the executive branch’s right to wiretap Americans without a court warrant. The manual, desc

Article Image

Salon

Interviews with law professors, postal officials, congressional aides and civil liberties advocates produced the consensus that the government already possessed this limited letter-opening power under the 1978 Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act.

Article Image

NY Times

The Pentagon has been using a little-known power to obtain banking and credit records of hundreds of Americans and others suspected of terrorism or espionage inside the US, part of an aggressive expansion by the military into domestic intelligence ga

Article Image

reuters.com

Melodie Baker said she is afraid the data collected by the drones "would be used the wrong way." County Commission Wayne Butts said, "They may be taking pictures of a plant or two, but where does it stop? Do we have to grab our pitchfo

Article Image

PC World

Any system that encrypts your entire hard drive is overkill for most PC users. I prefer encrypted safes, which are files that contain encrypted folders and files. To the outside world, a safe looks like a big file filled with gobbledygook.

Article Image

Sanders Research Assoc.

The Department of Homeland Security has a special office that monitors the “privacy implications” of its plans. A more honest name would be “The Office of Public Pacification,” as it repeatedly assures the reader that their “privacy” is secure.

Article Image

BusinessWeek

Phoenix flyers will soon be the first travelers digitally stripped naked by a Transportation Security Agency X-Ray machine that uses a technology called "backscatter." The device, known by the unfortunate name of Rapiscan Secure 1000, bounc

Article Image

AP

Homeland Security Department sent a letter apologizing to a Muslim woman who was detained at the Tampa airport and strip searched at a county jail. Safana Jawa was detained because of a suspected tie to a suspicious person. Held for 2 days before bei

Article Image

Washington Post

The Justice Department is building a massive database that allows state and local police officers around the country to search millions of case files from the FBI, Drug Enforcement Administration and other federal law enforcement agencies, according

AzureStandard