Except that the only information they can collect from TECHNICAL sources is junk information. When the government wants to spy on people to develop a profile on their behavior, their preferred method is either direct or vicarious surveillance: a government informant is either watching you or coercing people into telling him what you're up to.Newtype Alpha,
The government wants to collect this information for a simple reason. The more accurate information they have, the more accurate a profile they can construct of you. If I have a profile that's 100% accurate, I can predict everything you will do.
Even in this case, it's less about predicting what you're going to do and more about understanding what you believe and who you know and what type of behaviors you are likely to agree with.
I should say, depending on your family background, you would do well to issue a FOIA request for your parents' FBI file. If they were the type of people to draw Federal attention (like my mother was) they probably know more about her than you do.
They can develop all the algorithms they want, it doesn't change the fact that SIGNAL intelligence is one of the most limited forms of information gathering in the intelligence game. It can give you an idea of what to look for and who to investigate, but only from a limited sample size of potential suspects in the first place.And the government is developing all sorts of algorithms...
Put that another way: there are all kinds of efficient ways to wiretap a small town to figure out how many people in that town may be terrorists (assuming you know for a fact that at least ONE of them is). As the population of that town increases, the usefulness of a blanket wiretap rapidly decreases, and any algorithm you can use to sift through the thousands of miscellaneous conversations boils down to reducing the number of suspects, and then you're still forced to place thousands of people under surveillance anyway. If this town is actually a major city with a population of 3 million people, you can just plain forget it.
I've read enough about these programs to know what dismal failures they are destined to become.If you've read about IARPA/ARDA's ACQUAINT program you would know that.
And information gathered from the internet is neither knowledge, nor absolute knowledge. It's equivalent to cataloging the bumper stickers in a particular neighborhood to try and pinpoint the location of the local communist party.Knowledge is power; absolute knowledge is absolute power.