URL: http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2010/10/pentagon-threat-prediction-scan-communications/
So, does anybody have a problem with this?
In an effort to prevent the next Fort Hood-style shooting before it happens, the Pentagon has launched a program to scan massive amounts of communications and detect anomalies in behavior that could predict "insider threats" to the military.
While the Pentagon's advanced research arm describes the project as being designed to detect threats to the military from within its own ranks, critics say such a system would inevitably invade the privacy of millions of people and could be the thin end of the wedge towards a "police state."
But DARPA's description (PDF) of the project doesn't address the issue of how a system to scan all communications within a certain area would square with constitutional rights and privacy laws.
As DARPA itself notes, a military base like Fort Hood, with 65,000 people on site, would be linked to some 4.7 billion instances of electronic communication among 14.9 million people ever year -- a very wide net to cast in search of potential crime.
"This is what a police state does -- everyone watching what everyone does and the police watching your every move," security technology writer Bruce Schneier told CNN.
So, does anybody have a problem with this?