Feds Open 'Total' Tech Spy System
By Eliot Borin
http://www.wired.com/news/print
MEMORY HOLE - FAIR USE
ARTICLE can no longer be found on
http://www.wired.com website:
Had Winston Churchill been alive in the months subsequent to
Sept. 11 he might well have described
On Wednesday, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency
(DARPA) will begin awarding contracts for the design and implementation of a
Total Information Awareness (TIA) system.
It's a system which, it hopes, will ferret out terrorists'
information signatures -- clues available before an attack, but usually not
correctly interpreted until afterwards -- and decode them prior to an assault.
It's a task, the Information Awareness Office (IAO) says, that is beyond
"our current intelligent infrastructure and other government agencies."
TIA program directors make it clear they also believe the
task to be beyond current technology, noting that they are primarily interested
in revolutionary advances in science, technology or systems and
"development of collaboration, automation and cognitive aids technologies
that allow humans and machines to think together about complicated and complex
problems."
So insistent are they on building a better mousetrap -- or,
more accurately, a brand new terrorist trap -- that they have officially warned
potential contractors that not a dime will be invested in "research that
primarily results in evolutionary improvements to existing technology."
According to the IAO's blueprint, TIA's five-year goal is
the "total reinvention of technologies for storing and accessing
information ... although database size will no longer be measured in the
traditional sense, the amounts of data that will need to be stored and accessed
will be unprecedented, measured in petabytes."
It is precisely the thought of petabytes of raw data being
under the control of an agency with limited public accountability that troubles
civil liberties activists like Lee Tien, senior staff attorney of the
Electronic Frontier Foundation.
"We should resist the expansion of any 'data-veillance'
program that doesn't have adequate safeguards and accountability," Tien
says. "This program sounds like a counterpart of the movement toward
requiring a national ID card. People like to think of that as an identification
system, but it's actually a tracking system.
"The Total Information Awareness program, with its
ability to provide persistent storage of everything from credit card, to
employment, to medical, to
"What I don't want to see is a system that's the worst
of both worlds, unable to predict acts of terrorism in a timely manner because
of the sheer mass of mostly irrelevant information clogging its channels, but
perfectly attuned for intimate spying on regular citizens and activists like
Martin Luther King."
Even in these early days, Tien's concerns have some
resonance. Among the topics DARPA spokespersons would not discuss in connection
with this article were the program's budget, whether the technology was being
developed for deployment by an existing intelligence department or a new
"super spy" agency, and which program elements the contracts being
issued this month cover.
"This DARPA project sounds a lot like Spielberg's
Minority Report premise of 'PreCrime,'" said security consultant and
author Richard Forno, referring to the fictional law enforcement office that
arrests folks before they commit a crime.
"I mean, I'm a geek, but my two degrees are in
international relations. Does that mean if all of a sudden I start buying books
on terrorism, bio-war or current affairs, I'm going to be labeled a potential
bad guy?"