A chilling by-product of the over-reaction to 9/11 in
The
"It is a world in which individuals are presumed guilty, detained and not told the charges against them, denied the right to face their accusers, denied the right to know the evidence against them and the criteria by which they are being judged, and given no recourse and no one to advocate for them."
Eight years later after the passage of the Patriot Act it is not clear if this enormously expensive project has caught many real terrorists. We know the government databases have mostly ensnarled innocent people at international borders and left behind permanent psychological and physical scars.
The most famous example is IT specialist and Canadian citizen Maher Arar who upon returning home from visiting his wife's relatives in
Unfortunately, Arar has never personally recovered from his ordeal. He cannot get a job in IT consulting in
Much of the personal information in the post 9/11 databases has not been confirmed and updated, comments, says Peter Manning,
Currently, the giant databases in the
So, people with particular kinds of names -- usually Arabic sounding -- will continue to experience delays and possible incarceration while crossing international borders, Manning remarked.
One good thing he says is that the databases are incompatible with the municipal police computer systems, which limits their damage to the national and international level.
"The only way that it might work as it has always in the past is if someone from the Toronto Police Department knows somebody in the New York Police department. And the New York Police Department knows somebody in Homeland Security and says, 'can you get me some information.'"
Also, data mining continues to be an underdeveloped technology, That is, explains Manning, it is often difficult to do accurate searches of patterns and trends from the accumulated data in the giant data bases.
The problem, he says, is that in software, it is hard to match different objects, such as for example, as an airline ticket or a health record.
But ordinary citizen should not be complacent. Take a look at the 2010 Vancouver Olympics where a billion dollar plus security budget has managed to facilitate communication and data sharing via compatible technologies among national, local Vancouver city police and security and intelligence forces within Canada, as well as with neighboring US law enforcement authorities across the border.
"We also have risk assessment here in
The target is not terrorists who have fallen off the list of threats, but "protesters," says Vonn.
The Canadian media has reported on how potential critics of the Olympic Games among political activists, artists and journalists are being targeted under the new security blanket enveloping
Also recently affected was Amy Goodman, the award winning host of the Democracy Now radio show in the
Goodman revealed that Canadian border officials were worried about what she might write about in terms of the Vancouver Olympics When she revealed her ignorance about the upcoming sports event, they refused to believe her.
Goodman also mentioned to the CBC that her car was searched and the officials demanded to look at her notes and her computer. Eventually, she was permitted to enter and stay in
"I am deeply concerned that as a journalist I would be flagged and that the concern - the major concern - was the content of my speech," she told reporters. The CBSA refused to comment on Goodman's statements.
Manning says that Canadian police have software technology that has solved some of the incompatibility technology challenges experienced by their
"Canadian police have been much more advanced with respect to these formalized modes of sharing data than American police," he noted. [More on that in a follow-up]
"Everyone has their favorite way of using the internet. Many of us search to find what we want, click in to a specific website, read what’s available and click out. That’s not necessarily a bad thing because it’s efficient. We learn to tune out things we don’t need and go straight for what’s essential.
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Everyone has their favorite way of using the internet. Many of us search to find what we want, click in to a specific website, read what’s available and click out. That’s not necessarily a bad thing because it’s efficient. We learn to tune out things we don’t need and go straight for what’s essential.......
Part time work
After last post on marketing without search engines, I decided to follow up with a strategy you can use to get quality free traffic. One of the easiest ways to get visitors to your web site is to spend money. Nothing is more effortless then paying for traffic. But if you can’t afford it or don’t want to pay, there’s an equally simple but free way to get traffic: ad swaps.
www.onlineuniversalwork.com