Big Brother is Watching

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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.
    Digital surveillance? You'll get used to it
Richard Meares, Reuters        October 23rd, 2000
    Electronic surveillance may eat away your privacy in the digital era, but you'll get used to it. You have no choice. At least according to the Government.
    Nowhere to hide
Duncan 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."
    The eyes that never sleep are watching
Osafumi Sato, Aera        September 22nd, 2000
    In Tokyo there are literally thousands of camera's monitoring the public's every move.
    MI5 "will be able to monitor all e-mail"
Agence France-Presse        August 27th, 2000
    The [British] intelligence service is building a new surveillance center to monitor all e-mails and Internet messages sent and received in Britain.
    Cameras can read text at 100 yards
San 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.
    On the web, no one is anonymous
Adam L. Penenberg, Forbes        June 2000
    Clinton favors computer snooping
Declan McCullagh, Wired        April 2000
    ECHELON: A Spy's Story
Erin 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.
    The end of privacy
Adam Penenberg, Forbes        April, 2000
    Getting DIRT on the bad guys
Tom Spring, PC World        April, 2000
    Caught on camera: Digital face recognition
Nick Schoon, New Scientist        December 1999
    Global spy network revealed
BBC        November 2, 1999
    Bugs the size of Dust
Duncan 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.
    Smile, you're on 300 candid cameras
Sunday Times        May, 1999
    Big Brother watches garbagemen from space
Reuters        Feb 1999
    Echelon
Joseph Farah, WorldNetDaily        Jan 1999
    Big Brother is Watching and Listening
The International Newsletter of Banking and Freedom By Patrick O'Connor        

Other Articles

 Aerosol can reveal envelopes' secrets
Robert Uhlig, Electronic Telegraph        3rd March, 2001
    An aerosol spray that makes unopened envelopes transparent so that the contents can be read has been invented.
 Spy in the sky fights the flab?
Helen Pearson, New Scientist        3rd March, 2001
    Swiss scientists have tested the ability of the GPS to track people and gauge how much exercise they're clocking up.
 Do you know where your kids are?
Steve Kettmann, Wired        3rd March, 2001
    To many parents, it may be a dream: A little gadget that can track where a child is at all times.
 The chips are up, kids
United Press International        3rd March, 2001
    Schools in Belgium have a new electronic schoolbook computer system with an integrated chip that can locate students at all times.
    Cyber-spying made personal
James 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.
    Germans can hire satellite tag to mind the children
Michael Leidig, Electronic Telegraph        October 15th, 2000
    Parents in Germany will soon be able to keep track of their children with satellite-linked equipment that works on the same basis as devices used to locate stolen cars.
    Satellites give nosy neighbors their big break
Nick Fielding and Michael Burke, The Sunday Times        October 15th, 2000
    For less than Ł100, people will be able to spy on their neighbors using cameras in the sky that beam live pictures to their internet screen.
    Big Brother Listening to Neighborhood
Gary 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 covered
Eszter Balázs, The Budapest Sun        September 22nd, 2000
    Budapest districts are planning to install public surveillance cameras all over town.
    Big Boss is watching Denver workers
Associated 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.
    Canada says no risk to privacy from giant database
Reuters        August 27th, 2000
    The Canadian government dismissed fears that private companies and others would be able to access a vast federal database containing up to 2,000 pieces of information on every Canadian citizen.
    Just between us (and the spies): Global Phone Tap
The Independent        August 16th, 2000
    The recent NSA patent officially confirms for the first time that the NSA has been working on ways of automatically analyzing human speech.
    Most firms spy on workers
APBnews.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.
    Granny missing? No worry with satellite tracking
Reuters        July 26, 2000
    Japanese companies have solved the problem of straying senior citizens—track them by satellite.
    Supermarkets check you out with heat sensors
2000 Beyond        July 26, 2000
    Next time you wander through your local supermarket, you won’t be too paranoid in thinking that the shelves are watching you.
    Tracking device will keep an eye on children
Julia 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 surveillance
Karlin 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, one’s private encryption keys.
    Beware the private cyber snoops
David Ignatius, The Washington Post        June 2000
    CIA's spy in the sky
Frank Vizard, Popular Science        June 2000
    AOL-Time Warner: What it will know about you
Andrea Petersen and Matthew Rose, Wall Street Journal        April 2000
    Cell phone crypto penetrated
Declan McCullagh, Wired        April 2000
    Skies spy on farms
Melbourne Herald Sun        April 2000
    Now Big Brother keeps eye on e-mail
The London Times        April 2000
    New surveillance system to recognize intent to commit crime
Reuters        April, 2000
    At NSA, mum's again the word
Jack Anderson and Douglas Cohn         December 1999
    Authority for Police to Hack
AP        December 1999
    Is Big Brother In Your Car?
CBS        October 28,1999
    PC Privacy Almost Impossible
Wired News         October 28, 1999
    Internet Wiretapping Considered
Wired News        October 14, 1999
    Big Brother keeps getting closer
Simon Davies, Los Angeles Times        August 1999
    In Turkey, phone users fear Big Brother may be listening
Los Angeles Times        July 1999
    Japan: More crime, less privacy
David Lazarus, Wired        July 1999
    Hand scanner to control Israel's borders
The Sunday Times        
    Is GPS tracking you?
ZDNN        
    European eavesdropper
Compiled from articles in The Irish Times and The Guardian        
    An increasing number of companies are spying on their staff
        
    Slide toward surveillance society
        
    Spy satellites to watch Florida
Yahoo!         Mar, 1999
    Attorney General Janet Reno considers broad DNA testing
USA Today        April 1999
    DNA identity program resisted by parents
CNN        
    New York City to take DNA samples along with fingerprints of anyone arrested
Associated Press        April 1999
    Intel ID plan raises privacy concerns
Rob Lemos, ZDNN        March, 1999
    US Antifraud ID scheme raises visions of Big Brother
Electronic Telegraph        Feb 20, 1999
    Alarming threat to workplace privacy
BBC        Feb 19, 1999
    Europe is listening
Wired        Feb 1999
    Watching Big Brother
BBC        Jan 1999
    Intel agrees to change Pentium III chips
Yahoo!         Jan 25, 1999
    Banks to adopt Know Your Customer
Wired News         
    Britain: Smart spy cameras on way
Electronic Telegraph         
    Gottcha on Camera
By Mark Boal, Village Voice        
    Dutch law goes beyond enabling wiretapping to make it a requirement
New York Times        
    Businesses turn to intelligence gathering
Reuters        
    Tracking of mobile phone users
Reuters        
    The extinction of privacy in the information age
Melbourne Age        
    Big Brother's watching
Geoff Metcalf        
    Big Corporate Brother: It Knows More About You Than You Think
Washington Post Service        
    While you watch cable TV, Big Brother watches you
Forbes        
    Tracking Employees
The Christian Science Monitor        
    Guinea pigs for world
South China Morning Post        
    Snail mail to die within a decade
By Madeleine Acey, Network Week        

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