FC: ACLU says pull plug on Poindexter's Total Information Awareness

From: Declan McCullagh (declanat_private)
Date: Thu Jun 19 2003 - 21:23:12 PDT

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    Advisory Committee on Total Information Awareness
    Surveillance System Holds Rare Public Hearing
    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
    Thursday, June 19, 2003
    Contact: Gabe Rottman
    (202) 675-2312
    WASHINGTON - The American Civil Liberties Union today told a committee of 
    outside advisors on the Pentagon's Total Information Awareness surveillance 
    system that the program should be shut down and said that recent 
    alterations of the spy program's public profile, such as changing its name 
    to "Terrorism Information Awareness," are little more than cosmetic.
    "The Pentagon's recent push to tone down the Orwellian overtones of this 
    highly troubling program is nothing but spin," said Jay Stanley, 
    Communications Director for the ACLU Technology and Liberty Project, who 
    testified today.  "Don't be fooled - this program would dramatically 
    undercut our privacy and civil liberties.  We are confident that the 
    members of this committee will reach the same conclusion."
    Advocates ranging in political persuasion from the Eagle Forum and the 
    American Conservative Union to the ACLU have roundly criticized the system, 
    which is intended to allow federal agencies to divine terrorism before it 
    happens by mining the electronic records of Americans' credit card 
    purchases, medical, educational and financial transactions, travel 
    itineraries and other daily behavior.
    The advisory board in question was created by the Pentagon earlier this 
    year in response to growing concern among advocacy groups and the general 
    public that the Total Information Awareness system would sweep in innocent 
    Americans while failing to catch actual terrorists.
    Late last month, in order to comply with oversight legislation passed by 
    Sen. Ron Wyden (D-OR), the Pentagon released a report detailing the privacy 
    and civil liberties threats posed by the much-maligned system.  In its own 
    report, released several days before the Wyden amendment's deadline, the 
    ACLU spelled out the plethora of ongoing concerns about the program that 
    must be addressed by the Department of Defense before Congress can make an 
    informed decision about whether to let the system go forward.  Stanley 
    reiterated these today, asking:
    ·How can Americans remain free when their every transaction is subject to 
    government scrutiny?
    ·How the system will be effective in the face of what, by most accounts, 
    will be a crippling false-positive rate?
    ·How the bedrock American principle of "individualized suspicion" will be 
    maintained in the face of a system designed to guess about who might be a 
    suspect?
    ·How the TIA's mission might grow given the tendency for such programs to 
    expand once they are established?
    The ACLU's testimony can be found at:
    http://www.aclu.org/SafeandFree/SafeandFree.cfm?ID=12945&c=206
    
    
    
    
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