Ever get the feeling you’re being watched?
J. Craig Anderson, Tribune
It’s not just paranoia. You are being watched. The period following
Sept. 11, 2001, has been a technological Renaissance Era for agencies
and companies that monitor, track and record the activities of everyday
people.
By comparison, the legal system charged with regulating these new
surveillance systems is still in the Dark Ages, critics say, with
technology outpacing lawmakers every step of the way.
Low-cost digital video cameras, Internet monitoring software and myriad
consumer tracking systems that convert behavior into data have raised
new questions about how far a society should be allowed to go in
scrutinizing its members.
In short, when innocuous surveillance becomes ubiquitous, does that
make it insidious?
Police organizations stress the benefit of increased surveillance in
solving crimes, but others say the loss of privacy to law-abiding
citizens has been too great.
“Do we want to live in a place where every move, every action, every
thought, perhaps, is monitored and regulated?” said Torin Monahan, an
Arizona State University professor researching the effects of
surveillance on communities. “Do we want to live in a society that is
totally devoid of trust?”
THE SURVEILLANCE AGE
Take a walk along any downtown street with your eyes fixed on the light
poles and rooftops overhead.
You will invariably see a cadre of cameras trained on publicly
accessible areas such as roadways, sidewalks and parking lots.
In downtown Tempe, the Tribune spotted 68 such cameras, all plainly
visible from street level. In a comparably sized section of Old Town
Scottsdale, there were 23.
In general, the larger and more dense a city’s downtown area, the more
cameras passers-by will find, researchers say.
The New York Civil Liberties Union recently completed a camera-mapping
project in New York City and found that between 1998 and 2005, the
number of street-level, outdoor surveillance cameras had jumped from
769 to 4,468.
The group’s concern, as expressed in a report it released in December,
is the effect those cameras have on expectations of privacy.
“Have you ever attended a political event? Sought treatment from a
psychiatrist? Had a drink at a gay bar? Visited a fertility clinic? Met
a friend for a private conversation?” says the report, written by Loren
Siegel, Robert Perry and Margaret Hunt Gram. “Might you have felt
differently about engaging in such activities had you known that you
could be videotaped in the act — and that there would be no rules
governing the distribution of what had been recorded?”
Similar reports in other major cities indicate a growing concern among
civil rights organizations that public surveillance has gone too far,
and regulators not far enough.
“People often say, ‘If you have nothing to hide, what are you worried
about?’ ” Monahan said. “But just because you have something to hide
does not mean you are a criminal.”
Monahan, who teaches a class on the impact of surveillance and is
hosting an international gathering of researchers at ASU this week to
discuss the issue, said the visibility of cameras often shifts the
focus away from more widespread forms of electronic surveillance most
people don’t see.
So-called “post-optic surveillance” includes global positioning system
locators found in many cars and cell phones, radio frequency
identification tags used in retail security and other systems, and even
discount cards used by major grocery chains that track and record
buying habits.
“We focus on the cameras because they’re so obvious, but it’s drawing
our attention away from these other systems,” Monahan said.
LAWMAKERS OPPOSE LIMITS
In Arizona, efforts to limit government surveillance on the masses
through legislation have met with resistance, said Sen. Pamela Gorman,
R-Anthem.
Gorman argued Thursday for a bill she sponsored that would have forced
law enforcement agencies to purge vehicle and driver information
collected during an automobile theft investigation in the event that
police determined no crime had occurred.
The bill, SB1636, was soundly defeated, with opposition votes coming
from both Democrats and Republicans.
“If you live in a police state, who even cares if your car is stolen?”
Gorman said in an interview after the bill failed.
Gorman said she was shocked that many of her Republican colleagues
favored allowing police to amass personal data unrelated to a criminal
investigation.
“The Republican Party is supposed to be the party of small government,
unobtrusive government,” she said.
Marc Rotenberg, executive director of the Electronic Privacy
Information Center in Washington, D.C., said government officials at
all levels have been reluctant to limit the scope of their surveillance
activities.
“I think politicians have always tried to exploit public fear, but we
have to make rational decisions,” said Rotenberg, whose nonprofit
organization seeks to limit government surveillance. “It should not
have to be a trade-off between personal freedoms and national
security.”
But there’s an indisputable fact that cannot be overlooked, said Lt.
Paul Chagolla of the Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office: Surveillance has
been crucial to placing criminals behind bars.
“Government surveillance footage is for a purpose — to capture a crime
as it unfolds,” Chagolla said. “The cameras don’t lie.”
But despite their value to prosecutors, Monahan said studies show that
most surveillance systems are not monitored in real time and therefore
are only useful after the fact.
“Cameras tend not to have a preventive effect on crime,” he said.
CRIME AND DATA
George Orwell was close when he imagined a future saturated with
surveillance, but his assumptions about the motivation for monitoring
were far less accurate.
In reality, it is overwhelmingly private interests that have employed
cameras, sensors and trackers to protect assets or to streamline the
methods of acquiring more.
The problem, Monahan said, is that such information has a tendency to
fall into the wrong hands, and companies have been far more skillful at
gathering data than they have been at protecting it.
“When it’s commercial surveillance, we don’t see it as oppressive,
generally speaking,” he said, “but the downside is the stockpiling of
these huge databases that are not regulated very well.”
Even the government has, at times, failed to protect its sensitive
data.
In May 2006, the theft of computer data inside the home of a Department
of Veterans Affairs employee resulted in the largest unauthorized
release of Social Security numbers in United States history. The
electronic files contained names, birth dates and Social Security
numbers of about 26.5 million military service members and veterans.
When it comes to video surveillance, however, the overwhelming majority
of footage is generated by private companies for purposes of private
security. The video only makes its way to law enforcement agencies if
it ends up being used as evidence in a crime, Chagolla said, and even
then there are rules dictating how — or if — it will be released to the
public.
“Obviously you would not want to release video footage of a person
being victimized, a sexual assault or homicide,” he said.
But the rules get murkier when footage contains someone engaged in
legal but potentially embarrassing behavior.
“That’s where the privacy issue comes into play,” he said. “When I’m
not sure, I’ll ask for direction — I’ll ask people in the media that I
respect.”
Public records laws require that police disseminate such footage upon
request unless there is a compelling reason not to do so, Chagolla
said, but those reasons are not specified.
“The public records law is written in black and white, but it’s not
black and white,” he said.
Critics such as Monahan, Rotenberg and Gorman believe those laws should
be more specific, and that government needs to act fast before the
gradual proliferation of surveillance systems catches too many
law-abiding citizens in embarrassing acts.
“We’re not going to wake up one morning and find that there are cameras
on every corner,” Gorman said. “Big Brother is going to creep up on us
one peep at a time.”
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