Showing posts with label private. Show all posts
Showing posts with label private. Show all posts

Thursday, May 29, 2014

How does government and private citizen spying affect most of the American public?


     The American public has a right to have the U.S. Constitution rights, bills, and amendments to be unchanged and not modified and re-modified for the sake of creating a soviet style police state and neither does any private citizen or non-citizen have the right to use technology to spy on one another to fulfill any of their psychological needs that dissolve their fear and paranoia, since these criminally guilty persons or groups of persons have 24 hour access to audio, visual, location, cyber, personal, family, spousal, property, financial, medical, employment, and many other forms of meta-data profile (government employees only) or the data gathered by a private citizens from his or her technology either from his or her technology either purchased or developed by himself or herself. 

Sunday, April 27, 2014

Do we have to settle for the permenant establishment of a Soviet Surveillance Police State within the U.S.A.?

     Since when was the last time in U.S. history that the leaders that govern our great nation choose to resort to Soviet Union domestic spying techniques and the use of employing thousands of Federal Bureau of Investigation non-employee paid (private corporation) informants to conduct a massive survailance and counter-survailance effort on any and all of the American public, for the purpose of creating an all encompassing trail of cyberdata, metadata, physical data, continuous tracking data of all people via satellite surveillance, data about all elements from within the “private domain” of all individuals dwellings, homes, condominiums, apartments, and hotels, dorm-oratories, rental properties, time share rental properties, data about all activities that take place while individuals are at a vacation destination, tourist location, next door, down the street, at their parents house, sisters house, uncles house, information about bought and sold vehicles, complete description of all vehicles, taking pictures of U.S. citizens via (NSA engineering methods) using the camera on everyones smartphones, pc’s, macintosh computers, and tablets (without their written or verbal consent, thus constituting breaking the laws that are contained within the United States Constitution, deeming it illegal and punishable by law), however no court has ever had the courage enough to stand up for the exact written and clearly defined words that are contained  within our Constitution regarding these breeches of personal privacy, since the enactment of the Patriot Act 1 in the year 2002.  Instead we created an advisor board containing an official court called F.I.S.A., to be responsible for old an new legislation, enforcement, standards, ethics, and new amendments for the Patriot Act 1, Patriot Act 2, and now the newest amendments for Patriot Act 3, as the Patriot Act 3 is the current version of the Patriot Act that the U.S. uses in the current day of this year.  How can we live we ourselves and continue to break the laws and the moral fiber of the United States Constitution that was as Americans are supposed to hold so dear to us?

     And since the citizens of the U.S. will seem to never have a say in whether or not the majority of us want or do not want our personal liberties continuously thrown in the garbage can and our personal privacy tossed out of the window in the name of fear (that the leaders of the U.S. seem to have so much of), we have events that take place in recent years such as occupy Wall street, and similar protests like occupy Wall street in many other major U.S. cities, regular street protests taking place on a regular basis around the U.S. between one city or the next, where average normal successful Americans are protesting and voicing their opinions about the wrongs and criminal domestic spy surveillance government programs that have been taking place behind the backs of Americans for over a decade (affecting tens of millions of Americans who have been monitored by hacked emails, phone call conversations listened to, recorded and saved on NSA data servers in Deerfield, Utah, monitored via human intelligence, observed with digital satellite systems, on a scale so large that it almost unimaginable in its real size.  One known and recently disclosed spy surveillance program is known as “Echelon” leaked by NSA and Booz Allen Hamilton employee, Edward Snowden on June 6, 2013.

Tuesday, April 8, 2014

Metadata is used for the purposes of the National Security Agency to spy on the citizens of the United States of America

     "Metadata is what allows an actual enumerated understanding, a precise record of all the private activities in all of our lives. It shows our associations, our political affiliations and our actual activities," said Snowden, dressed in a jacket with no tie in front of a black background.
     The pair cautioned that government monitoring of "metadata" is more intrusive than directly listening to phone calls or reading emails and stressed the importance of a free press willing to scrutinise government activity.
     Metadata includes which telephone number calls which other numbers, when the calls were made and how long they lasted. Metadata does not include the content of the calls.
     Amnesty International is campaigning to end mass surveillance by the US government and calling for congressional action to further rein in the collection of information about telephone calls and other communications.
     Last year, Snowden, who had been working at a NSA facility as an employee of Booz Allen Hamilton, leaked a set of secret documents that revealed a vast US government system for monitoring phone and internet data.
     The leaks deeply embarrassed the Obama administration, which in January banned US eavesdropping on the leaders of friendly countries and allies and began reining in the sweeping collection of Americans' phone data in a series of limited reforms triggered by Snowden's revelations. Snowden faces arrest if he sets foot on US soil.
     President Barack Obama said last month he plans to ask Congress to end the bulk collection and storage of phone records by the NSA but allow the government to access metadata when needed. Snowden and Greenwald said that such data is in fact more revealing than outright government spying on phone conversations and emails.