FC: Privacy villain of the week: Federal camera, surveillance junkies

From: Declan McCullagh (declanat_private)
Date: Mon Jul 21 2003 - 22:07:53 PDT

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    Date: Fri, 18 Jul 2003 15:16:28 -0400
    To: infoat_private
    From: J Plummer <jplummerat_private>
    Subject: NCP: Privacy Villain - Federal camera operators
    
    Privacy Villain of the Week:
    Federal camera operators
    
    The federal government owns one-third of the land in the country and half 
    of the land west of the Mississippi. And as far as the Beltway bureaucrats 
    are concerned, we have "no reasonable expectation of privacy" on any of it. 
    To prove they're serious, they've begun to piece together a 
    near-all-encompassing surveillance dragnet in the Washington, DC area. And 
    according to a report recently issued by the General Accounting Office (TXT 
    - <http://www.gao.gov/atext/d03748.txt>, PDF - 
    <http://www.gao.gov/new.items/d03748.pdf>) the federal agencies have failed 
    to demonstrate their cameras do anything to stop evildoers and have been 
    lax in responding to Congressional oversight concerns about the cameras' 
    effect on privacy.
    
    The GAO report focused on the use of cameras by two agencies, the National 
    Park Service and the Metropolitan Police Department of the District of 
    Columbia (MPDC) and the United States Park Police. MPDC told GAO that their 
    cameras were geared to fight crime, particularly, but not solely, during 
    demonstrations and whenever the Homeland declares CODE ORANGE. MPDC has 14 
    cameras of their own, but can access real-time video from other DC agencies 
    including the public schools as well as "certain private entities." MPDC 
    has a written set of regulations that restrict camera operators from 
    focusing in on faces or print, but GAO also pointed out that there is no 
    clear training regimen for the camera operators to make sure these 
    restrictions are followed. MPDC has yet to develop any evidence that the 
    camera systems actually reduce crime.
    
    The United States Park Police also have cameras in and around the nation's 
    capital and they are far more secretive than MPDC about how, when and where 
    they are used. Park Police claim that their cameras are chiefly to fight 
    "terrorism" instead of "crime." The Park Police will not divulge where any 
    of their cameras are, and has not yet issued final regulations on their use 
    that were due a year ago. The Electronic Privacy Information Center, 
    however has recently obtained the draft version of these regulations 
    through a Freedom of Information Act request 
    <http://www.epic.org/privacy/surveillance/uspp-cctv_policy-070903.pdf>). 
    Those regulations call for the spycams to tape everything they see 
    "twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week" and leave open the door to use 
    of face-recognition software and the use of images from the cameras in 
    civil as well as criminal proceedings.
    
    This "no reasonable expectation of privacy" policy vis-à-vis government 
    surveillance on public lands is unfortunately not limited to the monuments 
    inside the District. Cameras and microphones can turn up in the oddest 
    places -- for instance, one man in Nevada recently had a six carloads of a 
    federal Joint Terrorism Task Force search his home after he pointed out 
    military sensors on public land to some reporters 
    <http://www.lasvegasmercury.com/2003/MERC-Jun-26-Thu-2003/21596133.html>. 
    The number of cameras keep increasing despite GAO's finding that neither 
    MPDC nor USPP can prove the cameras actually decrease crime. GAO also 
    points out the spycam operators in the UK haven't proven such either -- but 
    they're installing precrime software in the cameras there, so maybe that 
    will "help" <http://www.newscientist.com/news/news.jsp?id=ns99993918>. 
    Indeed, "no reasonable expectation" is the lowest common denominator when 
    it comes to privacy, especially when the information gathered could be 
    dumped into the Pentagon's TIA computers. The more land controlled by the 
    federal government -- from the middle of the forest to the municipal 
    airport -- the less choice citizens, consumers, tourists and travelers have 
    to make among competing privacy tradeoffs. That is a true tragedy of the 
    commons -- and breeding ground for privacy villains.
    
    
    
    By James Plummer
    
    The Privacy Villain of the Week and Privacy Hero of the Month are projects 
    of the National Consumer Coalition's Privacy Group. For more information on 
    the NCC Privacy Group, see www.nccprivacy.org or contact James Plummer at 
    202-467-5809 or via email .
    
    
    
    
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