FC: Rand report: Facecams can thwart terrorism, install them now!

From: Declan McCullagh (declanat_private)
Date: Mon Aug 13 2001 - 08:48:22 PDT

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    [I've copied the author of the paper, a Rand analyst named John Woodward. 
    He is an attorney who lives in Virginia and was most recently a CIA 
    operations officer for 12 years, according to his bio, in addition to being 
    the CIA Staff Assistant to the Undersecretary of Defense for Policy at the 
    Pentagon. --Declan]
    
    ********
    
    From: "Thomas C. Greene" <tcgreeneat_private>
    To: <declanat_private>
    Subject: Rand urges face-scanning of the masses
    Date: Mon, 13 Aug 2001 06:14:30 -0700
    
    
    http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/6/20966.html
    
    Think tank urges face-scanning of the masses
    
    The famous Rand Organization http://www.rand.org, a putatively non-partisan
    think tank, has come out in favor of using face-scanning technology to
    violate the privacy of the innocent masses in search of -- you guessed it --
    terrorists and pedophiles, the two most detested fringe-groups on the
    planet.
    
    Following the regrettable inclinations of all modern governments, a recent
    Rand report http://www.rand.org/publications/IP/IP209/IP209.pdf
    reckons that the natural rights of the majority of ordinary, law-abiding
    citizens should be sacrificed for the sacred mission of identifying and
    prosecuting a mere handful of sexually perverted or homicidal lunatics.
    
    "Biometric facial recognition can provide significant benefits to society,"
    Rand says, and adds that "we should not let the fear of potential but
    inchoate threats to privacy, such as super surveillance, deter us from using
    facial recognition where it can produce positive benefits."
    
    Chief among these are the detection of terrorists and pedophiles, as we
    said. No matter that these sick individuals comprise a mere fraction of a
    fraction of normal human beings. No matter that detecting them requires the
    most outrageous government intrusions into the natural comings and goings of
    millions of innocent people.
    
    Rand's answer to serious questions of personal liberty is a few
    easily-skirted regulations which ought to allay all of our concerns.
    
    "By implementing reasonable safeguards [for government use of biometric face
    scanning], we can harness its power to maximize its benefits while
    minimizing the intrusion on individual privacy," the report chirps
    optimistically.
    
    Rand returns repeatedly to the controversial, and prosecutorially worthless,
    use of biometric face scanning at the 2001 Super Bowl
    http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/archive/16561.html.
    
    "While facial recognition did not lead to any arrests at the Super Bowl,
    there is evidence that using such a system can help deter crime. In Newham,
    England, the crime rate fell after police installed 300 surveillance cameras
    and incorporated facial recognition technology. While it is possible that
    the criminals only shifted their efforts to other locales, crime in Newham
    at least was deterred."
    
    That's rich. So it's 'possible' that local criminals moved elsewhere, is it?
    Anyone with an ounce of common sense knows it's certain that they did, which
    implies that no one will ever be safe until every dark corner of the planet
    is blanketed by high-tech cameras performing a sort of criminal triage on
    all of us.
    
    And after all, things could be worse. "The facial recognition system used at
    the Super Bowl was not physically invasive or intrusive for spectators. In
    fact, it was much less invasive than a metal detector at a public building
    or an inauguration parade checkpoint. In this sense, facial recognition
    helped to protect the privacy of individuals, who otherwise might have to
    endure more individualized police attention," Rand points out.
    
    Of course, no appeal to Fascism and Kafkaesque control would be complete
    without reference to the safety of innocent children. Rand does not let us
    down: "many parents would most likely feel safer knowing their children's
    elementary school had a facial recognition system to ensure that convicted
    child molesters were not granted access to school grounds."
    
    It's all very popular, but immensely dangerous, thinking. Preserving
    personal liberty requires that we all accept a bit of chaos, a bit of
    hooliganism, a bit of risk. Yes, you or I might possibly get our heads
    bashed in by brain-dead hooligans, or get blown up by terrorist bombers, and
    our little lambs might get exploited by sexual sickos if we don't keep a
    close eye on them. But probably not.
    
    Surely, the suffocating, risk-free environments our governments are trying
    so desperately to sell us to extend their powers of observation and control
    are far more grotesque and soul-destroying than anything a terrorist or a
    pedophile might ever hope to produce. ®
    
    
    
    
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