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Snowden: “We Are Like Tagged Animals”
Daily Sheeple ^

Posted on 05/04/2016 5:03:38 AM PDT by HomerBohn

In a new piece out in The Intercept, whistleblower Edward Snowden has summed up what smart phones really are:

By preying on the modern necessity to stay connected, governments can reduce our dignity to something like that of tagged animals, the primary difference being that we paid for the tags and they’re in our pockets. It sounds like fantasist paranoia, but on the technical level it’s so trivial to implement that I cannot imagine a future in which it won’t be attempted. It will be limited to the war zones at first, in accordance with our customs, but surveillance technology has a tendency to follow us home…

But most people still don’t get it.

Inevitably that conceptual subversion finds its way home, along with the technology that enables officials to promote comfortable illusions about surgical killing and nonintrusive surveillance. Take, for instance, the Holy Grail of drone persistence, a capability that the United States has been pursuing forever. The goal is to deploy solar-powered drones that can loiter in the air for weeks without coming down. Once you can do that, and you put any typical signals collection device on the bottom of it to monitor, unblinkingly, the emanations of, for example, the different network addresses of every laptop, smartphone, and iPod, you know not just where a particular device is in what city, but you know what apartment each device lives in, where it goes at any particular time, and by what route. Once you know the devices, you know their owners. When you start doing this over several cities, you’re tracking the movements not just of individuals but of whole populations.

And he points out that, while all of this is going on, government employees sit, day in and day out, willfully participating in the Orwellian electronic enslavement of their fellow citizens:

One of the challenges of being a whistleblower is living with the knowledge that people continue to sit, just as you did, at those desks, in that unit, throughout the agency, who see what you saw and comply in silence, without resistance or complaint. They learn to live not just with untruths but with unnecessary untruths, dangerous untruths, corrosive untruths. It is a double tragedy: What begins as a survival strategy ends with the compromise of the human being it sought to preserve and the diminishing of the democracy meant to justify the sacrifice.

Every bit of computer technology we have today began as a weapon of war, from the computers themselves which were first used to tag people in concentration camps and to break the German and Japanese code during World War II, to the Internet designed by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA). To think the military created these devices without weaponizing them first is just silly. That people continue to believe the military-industrial complex has only our best interests at heart is stunning.

But most are too busy merging with their smartphones to care.

(Watch video at link)


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Crime/Corruption; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: surveillance; telecommunications
Is the only solution a revolution to combat the evil Congress we elected to represent us?

What do these robots do besides waddle up the 'hallowed' walls of Congress? D.C.=District of Corruption!

1 posted on 05/04/2016 5:03:38 AM PDT by HomerBohn
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To: HomerBohn

Yeah, especially in Russia


2 posted on 05/04/2016 5:07:23 AM PDT by nuconvert ( Khomeini promised change too // Hail, Chairman O)
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To: HomerBohn

That place, the ghouls that infest it, the fools that think they are above it, and minions that keep it running comprise the single greatest threat to freedom imaginable.

It isn’t a question IF a politician who goes there will be corrupted; it is only a question of WHEN.


3 posted on 05/04/2016 5:12:32 AM PDT by Gaffer
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To: HomerBohn

Federal budget (total) should be about $750B. They wouldn’t be able to cause much trouble then.


4 posted on 05/04/2016 5:19:05 AM PDT by ClearCase_guy (Democrats are mean-spirited racists who don't care about our children.)
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To: HomerBohn

The movie “ Blade Runner “ demonstrates our current existence.


5 posted on 05/04/2016 5:20:06 AM PDT by Tilted Irish Kilt ( British historian Arnold Toynbee - Civilisations die from suicide, not by murder.)
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To: HomerBohn

You don’t have to carry a smartphone with you. I use an iPod Touch, but could drop it if I thought that was being tagged. Get an anonymizer proxy service, and a wifi device is less trackable, and can be bought anonymously.

You do have to give up smartphone convenience.


6 posted on 05/04/2016 5:20:54 AM PDT by Dr. Sivana ("There is no limit to the amount of good you can do if you don't care who gets the credit."-R.Reagan)
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To: HomerBohn

Amazon, FaceBook and the like are busy tracking you, BIG TIME, too.


7 posted on 05/04/2016 5:23:24 AM PDT by Paladin2 (Live Free or Die.)
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To: HomerBohn
I have told my kids (and anyone who will listen) that when the SHTF, their first action should be to dismantle and destroy their cellphones.

I won't divulge the follow-on recommendations...

8 posted on 05/04/2016 5:57:49 AM PDT by Dubh_Ghlase
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To: HomerBohn

NEVER get a cell phone without a removable battery.


9 posted on 05/04/2016 5:59:49 AM PDT by PAR35
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To: HomerBohn

The legal concept of “privacy,” as we once knew it, is dead.


10 posted on 05/04/2016 6:07:57 AM PDT by henkster
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To: HomerBohn
Your newly purchased vehicle makes you a target, as you are digitally tracked based on ownership - coupled with your cellular phone (radio), the two signals linked to your SSN for purchase make you a positive ID for whatever the government wants, e.g., simple tracking to drone targeting. Now, based on your phone and vehicle usage, or where you happen to frequent, the signals from phones/vehicles can be used by law enforcement/government to know your associations and if you go to hookers, drug dealers, etc., it is history based on phone-to-phone locations, etc.

While it is unlawful to disable the vehicle antenna systems or bypass them, you can leave your phone home and get a pre-1999 vehicle to travel in.

11 posted on 05/04/2016 6:35:59 AM PDT by Jumper
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To: HomerBohn

When you want to stop being tracked for some reason, leave the phone at home.


12 posted on 05/04/2016 7:15:06 AM PDT by Uncle Miltie (All Hail!)
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To: Dr. Sivana

“Get an anonymizer proxy service”

That, a private email service, Linux on the Desktop and Private browsing and your good to go.

But the proxy service and private email are the most important. Its amazing how few people know this.

Cost is about 100+/year.

That is about as safe as you can get and still use the Internet.


13 posted on 05/04/2016 7:43:15 AM PDT by crusher2013 (Liberalism is Aristocracy masquerading as equality)
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To: crusher2013

If you are REALLY paranoid I would recommend having a plain vanilla account with a lightly used regular e-mail account running IE om Windows that is used on a spare machine that is used only for going to cnn.com, weather.com, etc. so you don’t go dark.


14 posted on 05/04/2016 7:48:06 AM PDT by Dr. Sivana ("There is no limit to the amount of good you can do if you don't care who gets the credit."-R.Reagan)
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To: Dr. Sivana

bttt


15 posted on 05/04/2016 7:51:04 AM PDT by Dante3
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To: Uncle Miltie

I prefer to leave it at home like an old fashioned telephone. People get mad at me if I don’t have it with me! It’s weird. I mostly consider it just another something to lose if I take it out, and that’s no good because I need it for my work.


16 posted on 05/04/2016 7:51:59 AM PDT by ichabod1 (Off the NWO)
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To: Jumper

While it is unlawful to disable the vehicle antenna systems or bypass them,

_________________

Do you have a link about this? I have never heard this.


17 posted on 05/04/2016 7:53:13 AM PDT by Chickensoup (Leftist totalitarian governments are the biggest killer of citizens in the world.)
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To: Uncle Miltie

there is a little thing that plugs into the cig lighter that stops all that.


18 posted on 05/04/2016 8:01:27 AM PDT by old gringo (a wise monkey never monkeys with another monkeys monkey.)
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To: Dr. Sivana
so you don’t go dark

Yup. We've all been surveilled for years now. Falling off the face of the Internet would be a giant flag in the "system".

19 posted on 05/04/2016 8:10:28 AM PDT by Ghost of SVR4 (So many are so hopelessly dependent on the government that they will fight to protect it.)
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To: HomerBohn

bkmk


20 posted on 05/05/2016 7:44:10 PM PDT by AllAmericanGirl44
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