Police Use Contact Tracing And Big Tech To Identify Protesters
Police Use Contact Tracing And
Big Tech To Identify Protesters
by Tyler Durden Thu, 06/04/2020 - 18:45
Via Mass Private I blog,
Countless
warnings about how law enforcement could use contact tracing apps to
monitor people have gone unheeded.
As BGR.com revealed, police are
using contact tracing to identify protesters’ affiliations.
A
Twitter feed titled “Minnesota Contact
Tracing” revealed how police are using contact tracing to
identify and arrest protesters. “Minnesota Public Safety Commissioner John
Harrington says they’ve begun contact tracing arrestees.”
Recently, 100 human rights groups warned that an
Apple/Google contact tracing app could be used as a cover to identify activists
and minorities.
An increase in state digital surveillance powers, such as
obtaining access to mobile phone location data, threatens privacy, freedom of
expression and freedom of association, in ways that could violate rights and
degrade trust in public authorities—undermining the effectiveness of any public
health response. Such measures also pose a risk of discrimination and may
disproportionately harm already marginalized communities.
So
despite all assurances to the contrary, it appears that 100 human rights groups
were right; law enforcement can and will use contact tracing to identify
protesters.
As NBC News noted, contact
tracers also use geofencing to help identify protesters.
Time exposed how the
military (National Guard) uses a classified system called “Secret Internet
Protocol Router” or SIPR to monitor protesters. (To learn about Perspecta
Inc.’s role click here & here.)
Big
Tech’s hands are dirty with federal money paying for new ways to monitor
Americans.
A recent Business Insider article describes
how police use Big Tech to monitor activists and protesters the moment they
walk out their door.
Law enforcement agencies have made full use of high-tech
surveillance tools as protests sweep the country following the death of George
Floyd. A predator drone operated by Customs and Border Patrol circled above
protesters in Minneapolis.
Buzzfeed
News warns,
law enforcement has a wide breadth of surveillance technologies
that could be used to monitor and target protesters — including controversial
facial recognition software Clearview AI, license plate readers, body cameras,
and video analysis tools.
Both of these articles reveal a frightening array of Big Tech
surveillance devices being used by police nationwide.
Minneapolis
police and the Minnesota Fusion Center are also using Clearview AI, BriefCam,
Ring doorbell cameras, Axon police body cameras, ShotSpotter and license plate
readers to create an intimate view of people’s lives.
BuzzFeed’s article
also revealed how police use Arxys “Milestone” software which uses video
detection and analytics to identify people.
The Minneapolis Police Department said in a surveillance white paper that
it uses Arxys [Milestone] software —
a video management tool that claims to offer “video motion detection” and
“video analytics” — to analyze CCTV footage.
While
both articles do a great job of revealing some of the ways law enforcement can
monitor anyone, it really did not go into detail about how invasive Big Tech’s
surveillance devices truly are.
Let’s say you use your smartphone for everything; texts, phone
calls, pictures, music, etc. — if you also use Alexa or a NEST thermostat or
any smart device in your home, these devices collect, store and transmit all
that personal data, which police can use to identify a person. Police can also
identify people who use a tablet or laptop, because like a phone they have an
IP and MAC address.
If you use any of these devices to make online purchases, police
can ask those companies to provide details of what you bought and when. Anytime
you use a credit/debit or customer rewards card, someone is compiling a
database of everything you purchased.
Let’s say you drive or take public transit, police can track
your vehicle and they can use facial recognition to identify where you work or
which bus or train stops you use.
If you drive or take an Uber or Lyft, chances are your personal
information is being recorded and used to build a massive database of your
comings and goings. From the moment you step outside of your home, your
neighbor’s Ring doorbell or Flock cameras have identified you, your family and
your vehicle.
And if they are any social distance snitches in your
neighborhood, they have recorded you and reported you to police via Ring
Neighbors or Nextdoor.
Thanks
to Big Tech, a person’s everyday life is no longer private. Now
everything we do is being recorded in real-time. Things like what and where you
eat, who your friends and family members are, who your family doctor is or
where you worship are all available to law enforcement.
Despite
what Big tech, politicians and law enforcement say, AI and smart devices are
being used to identify activists and protesters.
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