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Smile! The Feds want
your face on file.Patrick Riley, Fox News October 23rd, 2000
Big Brother never forgets a face. Or, at least, he won't if the State Department
implements cutting-edge facial-recognition technology to track anyone entering or leaving
the country.
Nowhere to hideDuncan Campbell,
The Guardian October 15th, 2000
Seven years ago an international coordinating group was set up by the FBI. It's goal
was to make telecommunications systems more "interception-friendly."
Cameras can read text
at 100 yardsSan Francisco Chronicle August 16th, 2000
New cameras are able to zoom in from than 100 yards away and read print on flyers,
even at night. These cameras that can also tape your conversation, even if you're
whispering. They have the capability of peering through the windows of private homes and
businesses.
ECHELON: A Spy's StoryErin Zimmerman and Dale Hurd, CBN April, 2000
In this top-secret world where talking about your job could earn you a prison
sentence, only one man has been willing to talk about his role in the global eavesdropping
network known as ECHELON.
Bugs the size of DustDuncan Graham-Rowe,
News Scientist August 1999
Cleanliness freaks have a new rationale for their pathological hatred of dust--it
could soon be spying on them. Packed full of sensors and transceivers, particles of
"smart dust" are communicating with one another.
EchelonJoseph Farah, WorldNetDaily Jan 1999
Other Articles
Cyber-spying made personalJames Walker,
ABC News October 23rd, 2000
In this brave new world of cyber-spying, very little is private and whatever you
write, even in your own home, may come back to haunt you.
Big Brother Listening to
NeighborhoodGary Fields, USA Today September 22nd, 2000
The Los Angeles County has hidden microphones in a 1-square-mile area as part of
an experiment. They pick up loud noises, such as gunshots and exploding fireworks.
Big Brother has Budapest coveredEszter Balázs, The Budapest Sun September 22nd, 2000
Budapest districts are planning to install public surveillance cameras all over town.
Big Boss is watching Denver
workersAssociated Press September 22nd, 2000
Over 2,000 Public Department vehicles will be fitted with GPS so the movements of the
city's employees can be monitored at all times.
Most firms spy on workersAPBnews.com July 26, 2000
Almost three-quarters of major U.S. companies snoop on their employees phone
calls, e-mail, web surfing habits and computer files.
Tracking device will keep an
eye on childrenJulia Hartley-Brewer, The Guardian July 26, 2000
Missing toddlers and truant teenagers could soon be things of the past with the
development of a revolutionary satellite tracking system to enable parents to keep an eye
on their children 24 hours a day.
UK pushes electronic
surveillanceKarlin Lillington,
Wired July 2, 2000
Britain is likely to become the first country in the world to make imprisonment a
possible consequence of refusing to surrender, or even losing, ones private
encryption keys.
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