This story appeared on Network World at
http://www.networkworld.com/columnists/2008/052008-bradner.html
Bleak
prospects for privacy
Maybe Sun CEO Scott McNealy was right when he said "You
have zero privacy anyway . . . get over it"
'Net Insider By Scott Bradner ,
Network World , 05/20/2008
While
Web surfing the other day I ran across a London Times story that described two
shopping malls in England that individually track everyone who walks into their
environs (as long as they have a cell phone turned on).
This
seems to me to be about the ideal example of modern society -- a society in
which someone who thinks that some privacy might be nice is starting to be seen as
quaint and more than a bit out of touch.
Many
people wag their fingers at ChinaÕs pervasive surveillance of its citizens
(see, for example, "ChinaÕs All-Seeing Eye" or ÒChinese Internet censorship: An inside look),
but that is hardly the only example of governments watching their people.
Governments the world over are moving toward a future not only in which Mr.
Charrington in his junk shop will be the norm -- but also one where Mr. Charrington
will not have to guess what you have been up to.
Even
where there is supposed to be a basic rule that government has to have a real
reason before it can find out your every move (for example, the Fourth
Amendment in the United States), people who work for government want badly to
ignore it (see, for example "NSA Must Examine All Internet Traffic to Prevent
Cyber Nine-Eleven, Top Spy Says"
and "Report: GovernmentÕs Cyber Security Plan Is
Riddled With New Spying Programs"). Then there is the
desire of some ostensibly well-meaning folk to figure out how to control the
entire electronic world (see "Air Force Aims for ÔFull ControlÕ of ÔAny and AllÕ
Computers") without realizing that if they can do so it
will only be proof to the bad guys that it can be done. It would not be long
before the bad guys found the same security holes and the government computers would
befall the same fate.
ItÕs
not only governments. As IÕve written before, Google -- or your own favorite
search engine company -- already knows far more about you than even you do (see
"Telling Google and others to do less evil").
Just last week there were stories about ISPs starting to use Web surfing
monitors to better provide ads they might be interested in delivering to their
customers -- ads that are more likely to get customers to buy something they likely
did not need (see ÒU.S. Reps. Markey, Barton Question Charter About
Web TrackingÓ).
The
two companies producing the technology to do this that are showing up in news
articles are NeubAd and Phorm.
I wrote about NeubAd a while back. Both of these
companies claim to not save anything that can identify specific users, but
minor tweaks to their software would fit right into the future that National
Security Agency Director Michael McConnell would like to see. They both also
appear to use cookie-based opt-out mechanisms that do not work at all for
people who are in a habit of regularly removing cookies.
Maybe
we do not, or will not, have any privacy. But that does not mean that the world
will actually be safer -- it will just be a lot colder (in spite of global
warming)
For
those who do not recall Mr. Charrington, try Google (and add a little to the
search engine companyÕs recording of your life).
Disclaimer:
The above rant did not make me feel any better nor did Harvard join in it (or
even know about it).