Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News Editorials & Other Articles General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

ancianita

(40,398 posts)
Fri May 2, 2025, 08:12 PM 14 hrs ago

How The Government Is Quietly Repurposing Everyone's Data For Surveillance

https://www.techdirt.com/2025/05/02/how-the-government-is-quietly-repurposing-everyones-data-for-surveillance/

"... A whistleblower at the National Labor Relations Board reported an unusual spike in potentially sensitive data flowing out of the agency’s network in early March 2025 when staffers from the Department of Government Efficiency, which goes by DOGE, were granted access to the agency’s databases. On April 7, the Department of Homeland Security gained access to Internal Revenue Service tax data...

Palantir, a private data firm and prominent federal contractor, supplies investigative platforms to agencies such as
Immigration and Customs Enforcement,
the Department of Defense,
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and
the Internal Revenue Service.
These platforms aggregate data from various sources – driver’s license photos, social services, financial information, educational data – and present it in centralized dashboards designed for predictive policing and algorithmic profiling... that challenge existing norms of privacy and consent.

... The role of AI
Artificial intelligence has further accelerated this shift.Predictive algorithms now scan vast amounts of data to generate risk scores, detect anomalies and flag potential threats.These systems ingest data from school enrollment records, housing applications, utility usage and even social media, all made available through contracts with data brokers and tech companies. Because these systems rely on machine learning, their inner workings are often proprietary, unexplainable and beyond meaningful public accountability...

Digital profiling
Participation in civic life, applying for a loan, seeking disaster relief and requesting student aid now contribute to a person’s digital footprint. Government entities could later interpret that data in ways that allow them to deny access to assistance. Data collected under the banner of care could be mined for evidence to justify placing someone under surveillance. And with growing dependence on private contractors, the boundaries between public governance and corporate surveillance continue to erode.
Artificial intelligence, facial recognition systems and predictive profiling systems lack oversight. They also disproportionately affect low-income individuals, immigrants and people of color, who are more frequently flagged as risks.
Initially built for benefits verification or crisis response, these data systems now feed into broader surveillance networks. The implications are profound. What began as a system targeting noncitizens and fraud suspects could easily be generalized to everyone in the country.

Eyes on everyone
This is not merely a question of data privacy. It is a broader transformation in the logic of governance. Systems once designed for administration have become tools for tracking and predicting ... oversight is sparse and accountability is minimal.
AI allows for the interpretation of behavioral patterns at scale without direct interrogation or verification. Inferences replace facts. Correlations replace testimony.
The risk extends to everyone. While these technologies are often first deployed at the margins of society – against migrants, welfare recipients or those deemed “high risk” – there’s little to limit their scope. As the infrastructure expands, so does its reach into the lives of all citizens.
With every form submitted, interaction logged and device used, a digital profile deepens, often out of sight.
The infrastructure for pervasive surveillance is in place. What remains uncertain is how far it will be allowed to go."
7 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
How The Government Is Quietly Repurposing Everyone's Data For Surveillance (Original Post) ancianita 14 hrs ago OP
Terrifying, snot 14 hrs ago #1
Just leaving your own digital footprint from your mobile devices will mean you'll have a dossier. ancianita 14 hrs ago #2
No recourse if the data is WRONG... ultralite001 13 hrs ago #3
Exactly. It's why, even tho' I got 10 years of ALL my Facebook posts and data logs since inauguration day, ancianita 13 hrs ago #4
This is part of the discussion... littlemissmartypants 11 hrs ago #6
O. M. G. !!! !!! !!! calimary 12 hrs ago #5
Republicans would have to get off their asses and do something LymphocyteLover 2 hrs ago #7

snot

(11,030 posts)
1. Terrifying,
Fri May 2, 2025, 08:29 PM
14 hrs ago

and hard not to wish that everyone who said "nothing to fear if you've got nothing to hide" suffers the consequences.

ancianita

(40,398 posts)
2. Just leaving your own digital footprint from your mobile devices will mean you'll have a dossier.
Fri May 2, 2025, 09:03 PM
14 hrs ago

If we've got billions we can fight it out in court. If not we're screwed and maybe deportable. Long term? Dossiers --- compiled by AI in the millions and millions -- on all Democrats are a quiet, nice way to decimate a political party and rig a presidential election.

ultralite001

(1,579 posts)
3. No recourse if the data is WRONG...
Fri May 2, 2025, 09:35 PM
13 hrs ago

Similar names... Typos... Flat out fakes...

Consider how difficult it is to dispute an incorrect credit report... + even then, the credit reporting agency may still get
their facts wrong...

Who is the ultimate arbiter of factual data??? The data brokers or the individual???

Data migration is no simple task... + data aggregated for purposes other than that for which it was originally purposed is
problematic...

AI is not the answer...

Trust no one... Keep your personal records close + backups stored somewhere safe.

ancianita

(40,398 posts)
4. Exactly. It's why, even tho' I got 10 years of ALL my Facebook posts and data logs since inauguration day,
Fri May 2, 2025, 09:48 PM
13 hrs ago

Meta still has it and will likely sell it. At least I have a no-AI iPhone and don't do OS upgrades (without my Apple guys' honest critiques first) and don't do electronic spending or banking. We know we're screwed but we don't have to make it fun or profitable for the dictator's legion of fiends.



littlemissmartypants

(27,414 posts)
6. This is part of the discussion...
Fri May 2, 2025, 11:19 PM
11 hrs ago

That was stimulated when EHR's were first introduced. It's even more complicated now.

❤️

LymphocyteLover

(7,896 posts)
7. Republicans would have to get off their asses and do something
Sat May 3, 2025, 08:40 AM
2 hrs ago

ironically, this sort of thing is what conservatives were always worried about with big government

Latest Discussions»Editorials & Other Articles»How The Government Is Qui...