The Corporate Surveillance State: How the Thought Police Use Your
Cell Phone To Track Your Every Move
by John W. Whitehead
Recently
by John W. Whitehead: The
Overcriminalization of America: Are We All Criminals Now?
Advanced
technology now provides government agents and police officers with
the ability to track our every move. The surveillance state is our
new society. It is here, and it is spying on you, your family and
your friends every day. Worse yet, those in control are using lifes
little conveniences, namely cell phones, to do much of the spying.
And worst of all, the corporations who produce these little conveniences
are happy to hand your personal information over to the police so
long as their profit margins increase. To put it simply, the corporate-surveillance
state is in full effect, and there is nowhere to hide.
Using the data
transferred from, received by, and stored in your cell phone, police
are now able to track your every move. Your texts, web browsing,
and geographic location are all up for grabs. Using stingray
devices, often housed in mobile surveillance vans, federal agents
track the cell phones of unsuspecting people. By triangulating the
source of a cell phone signal, agents are able to track down the
whereabouts of the person holding it. These surveillance sweeps
target all cell phone signals, not just those of criminal suspects.
Examples of extralegal police surveillance in the years since 9/11
are numerous, from the NSAs warrantless wiretapping program
to the NYPDs spy network that targeted Muslims in the New
York area.
Unfortunately,
the now widespread tactic of spying on people via their cell phones
resides in a legal grey area, which has allowed police agencies
to take drastic steps to record the daily activity of all Americans.
Whereas cell phone tracking once fell only in the purview of federal
agents, local police departments, big and small, are beginning to
engage in cell phone tracking with little to no oversight. Small
police agencies are shelling out upwards of $244,000 to get the
technology necessary to track cell phones. And as you might expect,
most police departments have attempted to keep knowledge of their
cell phone tracking programs secret, fearing (as they should) a
public backlash.
Federal courts
are divided on the issue, some saying that a warrant is necessary
before executing a cell phone search. However, the United States
Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit recently ruled that tracking
the location of a cell phone without a warrant is legal and, thus,
not a violation of the Fourth Amendment. This lack of concern for
the Fourth Amendment which requires reasonable suspicion that
youre up to something illegal before the police conduct surveillance
on you is widely shared among the federal and state courts.
In fact, courts issue tens of thousands of cell tracking orders
a year, allowing police agencies to accurately pinpoint peoples
locations within meters. Unless theyre charged with a crime,
most people remain unaware that their cell data has been tracked.
Although government
agencies are increasingly acquiring the technology to track cell
phones themselves, most rely on cell phone companies to provide
them with the user data. In July 2012, it was revealed that cell
phone carriers had responded to an astonishing 1.3 million requests
from police agencies for personal information taken from peoples
cell phones. One of the larger carriers, AT&T, responds to roughly
700 requests a day, 230 of which are so-called emergencies,
exempting them from standard court orders. This number has tripled
since 2007. Sprint received the most requests, averaging 1,500 per
day. The number of requests is almost certainly higher than 1.3
million, and the number of people affected much higher, because
a single request often involves targeting multiple people.
On the rare
occasion that a telecom corporation resists a police effort to spy
on a particular cell phone customer, there are methods by which
companies are coerced to comply with the data requests. Telecoms
are frequently harassed by the FBI with National Security Letters
(NSL), which are demands for user information without warrant or
judicial oversight. These include a gag order, which prevents the
recipient from discussing the demand with others, including the
media. Roughly 300,000 of these NSLs have been sent out since 2000,
implying a massive spying effort on the part of the federal government.
One telecom is currently in a battle with the federal government
over an NSL demanding user data. The telecom refused to abide by
the NSL, and in response the federal government has sued the telecom,
insisting that their refusal jeopardizes national security. The
end logic of this is that our private data is actually not private.
The federal government claims that knowing our personal information
is critical to preserving national security, and thus neither telecoms
nor users may resist the sharing of that information.
Of course,
corporations are just as interested in tracking peoples daily
activities as the government. Cell phone companies and the software
companies that create applications for their devices track your
personal information so that they can market their services to you.
Unfortunately, this leads to mass aggregation of user data which
is then used by government agents to spy on and track all cell phone
users.
Unfortunately,
with intelligence gathering and surveillance doing booming business,
and corporations rolling out technologies capable of filtering through
vast reams of data, tapping into underseas communication cables,
and blocking websites for entire countries, life as we know it will
only get worse. As journalist Pratap Chatterjee has noted, [T]hese
tools have the potential to make computer cables as dangerous as
police batons. Telecoms hold on to user data, including text
messages and Internet browsing history, for months to years at a
time. This, of course, has some ominous implications. For example,
British researchers have created an algorithm that accurately predicts
someones future whereabouts at a certain time based upon where
she and her friends have been in the past.
So where does
this leave us? As George Orwell warned, you have to live with the
assumption that everything you do, say and see is being tracked
by those who run the corporate surveillance state.
August
23, 2012
Constitutional
attorney and author John W. Whitehead [send
him mail] is founder and president of The
Rutherford Institute. He is the author of The
Change Manifesto (Sourcebooks).
Copyright
© 2012 The Rutherford Institute
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