nterview
You Are Being Watched, and There Is No Place to Hide
An interview with Robert O'Harrow
By John W. Whitehead
03/31/05
Increasingly, we live in a surveillance state where everything we do and our every transaction, business or otherwise, is watched, videotaped and analyzed. There is virtually nothing that the surveillance state, growing data systems and information companies do not know about the most intricate details of our lives.
With the slightest mistake, however, you can be branded for life. Take, for example, Matthew Frost of Tampa, Fla., a businessman and father of two who simply wanted to vote in the 2000 presidential election. When he attempted to cast a ballot, the election worker told him: “Sorry, sir, you have a felony. You can’t vote.” Although it was a mistake and Frost had never been convicted of a felony, he still was not allowed to vote. Frost was a victim of a botched attempt by government officials to use a private data contractor “to help purge the electoral votes of felons and other ineligible people,” writes Robert O’Harrow in his revealing book No Place to Hide: Behind the Scenes of Our Emerging Surveillance Society (2005). This was “a glaring demonstration of what can happen when the government and private data services team up to target individuals,” notes O’Harrow. “The use of computerized personal information can—and often does—spin out of control.”
The company behind Frost’s exclusion was ChoicePoint, a Georgia-based organization that acts as a database of personal information. Their website boasts of being “the nation’s leading provider of identification and credential verification services.” Commonly referred to as a commercial data-broker, ChoicePoint provides companies with information on potential employees, insurance companies with information regarding the risk of new clients, and law enforcement agencies and homeland security with information on suspects of crimes. For the federal government, which is barred by the 1974 Privacy Act from forming a database, commercial database brokers like ChoicePoint have become the government’s own private intelligence agency.
oldSpeak had a chance to sit down with Robert O’Harrrow, Jr., whose thought-provoking book casts a watchful eye over the emergence of a security-industrial complex, the result of the post-9/11 marriage of private data and technology companies and government anti-terror initiatives. A reporter on the financial desk of the Washington Post and a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize for a series of Post articles on privacy and technology, O’Harrow created a beat covering information technology, marketing and privacy, delivering stories that mix investigative, explanatory and accountability reporting. More information about No Place to Hide is available at www.noplacetohide.net.
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http://www.rutherford.org/oldspeak/articles/interview/oharrow.html