LAURA KNIGHT-JADCZYK AND JOE QUINN
Since the 9/11 attacks, no book has provided a satisfactory answer as to WHY the attacks occurred and who was ultimately responsible for carrying them out - until now.
· Riding the Wave: The Truth and Lies About 2012 and Global Transformation by Laura Knight-Jadczyk
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So if they can just tack them on anytime they want to, does that mean we can take them off when we find one? That would be fair. And if a passing albatross happened to pick up a GPS, who'd care? LOL
The people who continue to argue against this law enforcement tactic completely miss the point -- police have been able to monitor your public movements legally since the beginning of law enforcement. The only thing that's changed is the method. Following a suspect by foot... following a suspect by car... following a suspect on a video monitor... following a suspect using a GPS device.... all the same, as long as they are done in public. People conveniently forget that a large chunk of privacy rights end when we're in public space. You don't have a "privacy bubble" around you at all times. If you don't believe me, drop your pants at your local McDonald's and wait for the police to arrive.
is moot because tracking of persons is easily accomplished with cell phones (See http://www.aclunc.org/issues/technology/blog/aclu_seeks_government_records_on_use_of_ cell_phones_as_tracking_devices.shtml). What's seldom mentioned is the fact that an electronic device sending and receiving information has to be uniquely identifiable at any and all locations at which it sends or receives information for the sake of fidelity in transmission, meaning the matching of device identification to possessor identification is the real issue. The GPS stuff is obviously part of the circus for would-be libertarians - in the original sense of the word - capable of being vectored towards inconsequential mumbo-jumbo -- chest-thumping and vociferously apoplectic pronunciations about "constitutional rights..." and the like (as though such reactions do something more than feed the addictive self-stimulus machine).
Even debate over the issue of public versus private space is moot, because it is aggregation of data that is really being sought (e.g. place visitation patterns, associations, habits of the like, etc.). It can be argued, perhaps, that when in public your movements are public, but is this true of your associations, which may or may not occur across a debatable public and private sphere of living? How, for instance, do you limit government knowledge of an association when it spans private and public spheres if governmental knowledge of the association occurred through observations of interaction between the associated within the generally agreed upon public space? Worry of GPS tracking seldom breaches this issues, but likely has consequences for a broadened understanding of public versus private life.
Also, it is likely that such acts (or meaningful discussion) of aggregate data acquisition and management - if they are happening with regard to secretive data linking device IDs to real persons (e.g. Google/Facebook and smart-phone/portable device interfacing, anyone?) - will never see the light of day in a system that engenders such secretiveness in the first place. And, if it does, you can be sure that (like this article) the issue is vectored. My argument sounds circular, but what I'm saying is the apparatus allowing for the use of technology in this fashion already exists irrespective the privacy/public debate (with regard to the rights of person or the broader "right" to maintain private relationships and associations outside a "public" space); therefore, technology used as a tracking, data aggregation tool in secretive fashion either will or will not be checked by regulatory bodies committed or not committed to certain civic views (libertarian, authoritarian or otherwise). But, if the society within which such regulatory bodies exist was fully committed to civic views begeting and sustaining autonomous privacy and right to unencumbered or unmonitored associations - in the first place - limiting technology because of the same, then we wouldn't find ourselves already where we find ourselves - i.e. with technology easily manipulated for tracking and data merging purposes. The self as self is a myth (in the the real sense of the word and as a "falsehood"); and, debating around it only contributes to further enslavement within this myth.
Those wanting anonymity in their movement and communication as a mythic self should take a lesson from illicit drug pusher the world over: "appropriate" vehicles frequently (or walk) and pay cash for disposable track-phones. Otherwise get a flight of pigeons for your communicative purposes and ride bicycles, although one of these (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radio-frequency_identification) - artfully and clandestinely placed - could accomplish the same, no?
They can already drag you out out of your house and nobody knows where you are. Why not track where you drive to? If you think they ain't gonna, you're already too late for the game...
Oh yeah, that also gives them the ability to tax your mileage.