Earlier this month, on the 15th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks, the lower tip of Manhattan was thronged with soldiers in uniform, firefighters marching with photos of lost friends pinned to their backpacks, and tourists bumbling around the new mall at the World Trade Center. Firetrucks and police cars ringed Zuccotti Park and white ribbons adorned the iron fence around the churchyard on Broadway. Trash cans were closed up, with signs announcing “temporary security lockdown.”
So it felt a bit risky to be climbing up a street pole on Wall Street to closely inspect a microwave radar sensor, or to be lingering under a police camera, pointing and gesturing at the wires and antenna connected to it. Yet it was also entirely appropriate to be doing just that, especially in the company of Ingrid Burrington, author of the new book “Networks of New York: An Illustrated Field Guide to Urban Internet Infrastructure,” which points out that many of the city’s communications and surveillance programs were conceived and funded in response to the attacks.
In her book, Burrington, a writer and artist, has sketched the pieces of the internet that are visible on and above the streets of the city, and has explained the business interests and politicking behind their installation. Her book is designed to make the internet tangible, and with that in mind, Burrington (who I first met when she worked on a software project for The Intercept) agreed to take me and a friend on a tour of what she found in the financial district.We began outside 55 Broadway, an office building a few blocks north of the famous bronze bull statue, and eyed a black NYPD-branded camera above the building’s entrance. I used to work in this building, when ProPublica had its offices there, and I remember awkward elevator rides with armed counterterrorism cops. The building is home to the city’s Domain Awareness System, which collects and analyzes information from police cameras, radars, license plate readers and more. The Domain Awareness System was built in partnership with Microsoft, which is selling the software to other cities, with New York getting a cut of the profits. According to Burrington, a number of the system’s cameras belong to private entities, including companies like Goldman Sachs and Pfizer, who have access to the facilities at 55 Broadway.
Burrington’s sketch of 75 Broad Street, which was once home to the International Telephone and Telegraph Company and now contains data centers.
Illustration: Ingrid Burrington
At each intersection, we looked for NYPD cameras and information-gathering devices owned by the Department of Transportation. Burrington pointed out green boxes sporting little domes; those are signal-control boxes that collect data from traffic cameras, EZ-Pass scanners, and microwave radar sensors, in order to track the movements of cars and regulate traffic lights accordingly. There are plenty of urban planning reasons for this data collection, but Burrington notes, “every camera that belongs to a city agency is essentially also an NYPD camera.”
A lot of internet infrastructure resides in buildings that once housed earlier modes of communication, and those building still bear the aesthetic of another era. Early 20th-century communications companies liked ornate decor, especially lightning bolts, in contrast to the bland or cutesy logos that today’s internet giants hide behind. We went to 75 Broad Street, once home to the International Telephone and Telegraph Corporation. Over its doorway is a colorful mosaic of an angel with a lightning bolt and two globes showing the Northern and Southern Hemispheres. Among other things, the building now houses a data storage center.
Verizon, meanwhile, occupies an Art Deco skyscraper on West Street that was once the New York Telephone Company. Before being shooed out by a guard, we got a glimpse of a lobby ceiling illustrated with imperialist motifs of communications across cultures of the world, like two African figures drumming.
Equipped with Burrington’s guide, you start to spot things. Above a restaurant, we noticed some rectangular cell towers that have been hand-painted to look like the brick wall behind them — the urban version of highway cell towers you may have seen masquerading as pine trees.
I asked Burrington what she hoped people would do with her guide. It is empowering to know what you’re looking at, but also overwhelming to consider the scale of the apparatus around you. Burrington described a public records battle she lost to get the locations of NYPD cameras; the city said the data could help criminals. In the process, Burrington realized that the data she was seeking wouldn’t account for unmarked cameras and privately owned cameras that could be turned over to police. To map the entire surveillance network of a city would require a huge effort and become quickly outdated.
Instead, her aim is “fostering curiosity,” she said. On a local level, organizing to get data for specific purposes could be politically useful; you could look at disparities in high-speed internet access, or you could look for evidence of over-policing. Or just ask simple questions like, “Who owns stuff, why does it end up where it ends up, and who does it benefit?”
“It’s good to know Microsoft is a corporation who has a large stake in New York City’s surveillance systems continuing, and expanding them to other cities,” Burrington said.
An NYPD camera at 55 Broadway, headquarters of the city’s Domain Awareness System.
Photo: Cora Currier for The Intercept
Then there’s Lockheed Martin, which is engaged in a lawsuit with the MTA over a much-delayed program to install surveillance cameras in the subway. “Valid privacy and civil liberties concerns aside,” Burrington says, “you also have these boondoggles, where the equipment is not even doing what it is supposed to.”
Burrington points out that infrastructure is often designed to be ignored. The field guide, with its cheerful drawings of manhole covers and cable markings, turns the infrastructure into something ordinary and familiar, not intimidating, and not some magical process by which videos and images appear in your phone.
“If it’s effective, it’s invisible,” she says. “But if it’s taken for granted, we lose the ability to make decisions about how it’s used.”
Top photo: Author Ingrid Burrington.
Fact 1: The government SPIES ON US…
Fact 2: … and we can’t know what is collected because it is SECRET…
Fact 3: … and all of it is funded by OUR TAXES!!!
There are no towers in that photo. If you do not know the difference between antennas and towers, you have no business covering surveillance technology.
Cora, thanks, great article. Thanks also to Wikileaks. Should we hack and disable all these street cameras…or are they doing only good, are they being used to spy on all taxpayers or strictly used ONLY to catch bad guys? Cora thinks its obvious that they re not limited to catching crooks. I agree. Q: When the cops make a false arrest or do something illegal or wrong, is the camera evidence searchable and publicly available to taxpayers, to prosecute the bad cops, or is it not searchable and available to citizens? Likewise, are the portable surveillance cameras taping cries that cops wear when eg they gun down black citizens 100% publicly available as they should be or are they not? RSVP
@charliethreeee Sep. 26 2016, 7:49 p.m. BRT
Honest question for all of you who are upset [by invasion of privacy and other abuses]:
What are your expectations?
As a long term target of Zersetzung torture (which I may have avoided if I had chosen to be as yellow as charliethreeee), the ‘rights’ I am particularly interested in seeing enforced by so called ‘law enforcement’ are these:
First Amendment
Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.
Fourth Amendment
The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.
I am also personally interested in the sixth, as I have been charged with no crime, yet have been subjected to years of extra-judicial stalking, harassment, and torture. (The patriot-coward does not explain itself to its target.)
Sixth Amendment
In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial, by an impartial jury of the State and district wherein the crime shall have been committed, which district shall have been previously ascertained by law, and to be informed of the nature and cause of the accusation; to be confronted with the witnesses against him; to have compulsory process for obtaining witnesses in his favor, and to have the Assistance of Counsel for his defence.
A major part of the problem is cowardice displayed by full-time commenter charliethreeee.
A part of the solution would be to identify and shun boneless patriots: those who do not value privacy, freedom of association, freedom of speech, equality under the law, and other personal freedoms and rights spelled out in the “Bill of Rights” — now a euphemism for used toilet paper.
I expect laws to be enforced. But I do understand this is an unreasonable expectation given the US is a totalitarian basket case, far too busy losing numerous wars, planning another against Russia, and murdering dissidents as quietly as it can, leaving itself little time for trivial matters.
Three decades ago, I might’ve been cynical. Now, I’m realistic.
I think the only reason governments (local, state, and federal)–and, to an equal extent, corporations–respected citizens’ rights in the past was because it was more difficult to violate those rights without drawing attention. However, now it’s easy for governments and corporations to clandestinely violate citizens’ rights. Moreover, the societal will to violate rights–manifested mostly in the irrational belief that nothing bad should happen to anybody, ever, and if it does, somebody should be held responsible–is very strong. As a result, governments and corporations routinely violate citizens’ rights of all kinds, and as technology advances, we will gradually lose all of our rights . . . ironically enough, in the names of all our highest ideals: peace, freedom, justice, love, and of course, civil rights.
I also remember well how Western MSM (especially gringo media) was constantly making fun of “the rest of the world” at large. How stupidly “‘(Un)American’ they/we all were” . Pretty much every headline of gringo media is like that to a certain extent.
Gringos use the adjective “American” as if they own it in kind of a self ridiculing way, when they say “(Un)American”, they mean how hopelessly stupid, freedom hating … everyone else was/is.
It would be an excellent corpora-based consciousness study to research the gradual, constant degradation of moral principles (of the functional illusions relating to them) in the U.S. from the times the media refused to be a mouth piece to the government while deciding to publish the Pentagon Papers to even being scared of publishing Snowden name on their papers and then suggesting for him not to be pardon after benefiting from his leaks.
It amazes me how easily people can radically change their minds, archetypes. Of course, that could only possibly happen because of that pro-Russia Putin, Russian hackers and Julian Assange. Only freedom haters would think of such things.
RCL
So, is this the official meme nowadays? There shouldn’t be any problems with it because “even the Swiss are doing it”? (let alone the ever slick and morally principled politicians deciding it?)
I thought that was something only freedom hating lowlifes such as the the stasi, Nazis and the Russian KGB would do …, right? …, or not?
I still remember very well the constant “look how the Chinese government erected a Chinese Wall and spies on their citizens”, “look how in East Germany, The Soviet Union, Cuba, … the government controls the media”, “how there are snitches watching over every social business … “, “how they have thought police” on the headlines of Western MSM not even 5 years ago. They, abruptly indeed, stopped. You’d wonder why.
Also, shouldn’t you be the one positively clarifying how “the cameras” are actually helping anything?
RCL
Lot’s of useful info for would be terrorists in this article, I’m sure they will appreciate it?
It’s not like she is revealing classified information. Everything is there for you to see, but most people ignore it. And that is her point.
Yeah right, don’t report on anything that our gov’t is doing. That’ll sure make our gov’t a lot more honest at what they’re doing to it’s citizens.
I might argue against a couple of points made by Barrington in the narrative here. I see someone who needs more manpower for the man-hours required to track what seems to be overwhelming her at this point. Is the point to merely make a subject study of being overpowered by 3% of technology policy makers or is it to put an end to the mass surveillance simpatico? It’s a good surface study, but mass surveillance needs a public audit. Like every time someone hands in an RFP grant application for mass surveillance, that’s a FOIA beat, a massive ongoing info-pr0n project. Someone signs off on it and someone cuts a check for it. That also means the vendors have to mind public policy, conduct a privacy impact assessment and produce a security gap analysis of everything they roll out. If they don’t they’re not going to be in compliance with federal government policies; which come with the technology.
Oliver Stone called it correctly when he said, …
“I read 1984 when I was a kid… by George Orwell … and it scared the shit out of me. I don’t want to be there; but, we ARE there.”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I3NPZEvJFmI
The Forbin Project is here … computer operators rule the world… Watch the movie and you will fall over backwards in your chair…
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pt_i-aW4s9A
Honest question for all of you who are upset:
What are your expectations? Do you think protesting is going to change this? If Bernie (and no Bernie would not) or Jill Stein proposed eliminating all of this, would all the politicians line up and agree?
Hell no. Y’all, even Switzerland just voted on more surveillance. Getting upset about the cameras is a waste of energy IMHO. If you think I am full of shiznit, fine, state how you think this problem can be corrected.
Step #1: Destroy your cellphone.
I never understood the leftist movement…. government is corrupt and intrusive…. the only solution is to grow government.
(The right is no better at reducing government.)
What happens when the Grid goes down?
Makes for depressing reading on a Monday morning.
Information on the locations and purposes of cameras, that are hitherto unknown, could be crowdsourced. This is done with speed cameras/radar traps/checkpoints in some countries, where their locations are updated by drivers.
And that is the reason they have the “vehicle scanner cameras” to track your every move not just on your mobile via stingrays plus the cameras mounted on top of “traffic lights” or hidden in the corners of many light post intercection plus the public lights that could also be turn as clandestine cameras and microphones. Who is still singing and the land of the free? looks and operates as worst than all the kosher totalitarian regimes combines.(do not forget the classic clandestine ice-cream truck along with the hiring of clandestine snitches to surveill you and harrass anyone clandestinely known in the law enforcement as “gang stalking” which is basically stalking on non-combative, non-threatening people. And they can’t eve catch the criminals even with video or is it because these are part of the same criminality with impunity while under the color of law. Disgusting is short.
“The Domain Awareness System was built in partnership with Microsoft, which is selling the software to other cities, with New York getting a cut of the profits. According to Burrington, a number of the system’s cameras belong to private entities, including companies like Goldman Sachs and Pfizer, who have access to the facilities at 55 Broadway.”
Wow.
In other news (not reported by The Intercept (yet?) but relevant), Swiss voted in a referendum to extend their Secret Service powers to computer hacking, “cyberspace monitoring” and other activities:
https://www.swissinfo.ch/eng/secret-service/42465282
Such a pity the likes of Burrington, Currier, or any US journalist do not possess the civil courage to investigate and report on the massive networks of two legged surveillance drones infesting all US cities. What is intentionally not being revealed would make those NSA PowerPoint presentations and gadget catalogs for Peeping Snowdens seem dull.
But only fools believe civil courage is an attribute of the American Character and this lucrative market goes untapped.
The incoming immigrants must be some pretty naive people to want to stick themselves in a hate filled scum bucket war-cage like the USA !
// __ Edward Snowden: Can a Refrigerator Function as a Faraday Cage?
youtube.com/watch?v=YFRi4BwQRNk
~
// __ Snowjob Snowden says put your phone in your fridge to stop the NSA/GCHQ wiretapping
youtube.com/watch?v=l73iidHpwb8
~
in the movie they changed it to:
// __ Microwave works as FARADAY CAGE
youtube.com/watch?v=zZLde7Sx8Ic
~
RCL
Sorry, I didn’t pay enough attention to the formatting of my previous post (which could be removed):
~
I comment here for general public’s consciousness and to defend truth.
I don’t like to comment on Cora Currier’s articles among other things because I have seen comments (not only mine) disappearing literally in front of my eyes. Yes, we all know thought control agents of our police state mess with us/our comments but it seems it is TI “ethically” doing their part “responsibly”, too.
Burrington seems to have been a little lazy in her research or writing. Had she erased “a city” and/or written “any” in her previous statement, it would have definitely been closer to reality.
Also, it is not just about “pipes”, technology. Gringos are in denial about having become a country of snitches worst than anything humankind has known. All private businesses, building superintendents, higher education departments, etc. are part of “nexus”. They must have snitching cells for the NYPD and those “fusion centers” which are part of that local citywide FBI kind of thing they have in NYC, “coordinate” with so-called “Shared Responsibility Committees” …
After effing growing up in an outright police state (Cuba) and hating it to my guts and then going to school in another one (East Germany) I find ironic and puzzling that “the land of ‘the’ ‘free’ and ‘the’ brave” has so easily become a police state.
I remember Chomsky, while explaining that the deal isn’t, has never really been about “terrorism”, pointing out how high ranking U.S. government officials all the way to the POTUS, have said that 9/11, compared to what “we” have been routinely doing and do to other countries is such a minor thing that it doesn’t make any sense to even talk about it.
Yesterday, girlfriend took me to the movies to watch the docudrama “Snowden”. At times, even knowing well that movie wasn’t made for technical people, it felt to me like a silly tragicomedy, e. g., the parts about Snowden outwardly speaking sign language with one of their buddies to conceal their comments, using a MicroSD Card (which in those times could maximally contain what?, 32Gb?) to transfer the data and hide it in a rubric cube, people at the NSA using Windows OS and how he gave the rubric cube to one of the officers scanning people in and out … Yes, kids will find that “cool”. Important aspect of that movie were also changed in order to about questioning embarrassment:
// __ Edward Snowden: Can a Refrigerator Function as a Faraday Cage?
youtube.com/watch?v=
~
// __ Snowjob Snowden says put your phone in your fridge to stop the NSA/GCHQ wiretapping
youtube.com/watch?v=
~
in the movie they changed it to:
// __ Microwave works as FARADAY CAGE
youtube.com/watch?v=
~
The best parts that movie had were his intimate relationship with girlfriend who wondered why would the government care about “her boobs” and how those morally deafferented morons working for the NSA think of themselves as God with the right to mess with everybody from their higher un reachable heights.
Question about the silly sign language part in that docudrama: I have noticed at times many of those street cameras in the same spot or pointing out to the same area from different spots. Facial recognition, tracking, identification and correlation they can easily do nowadays real time. Is technology able to read our lips and transcribe what we are talking about with other people?
* Who owns stuff?: the police state we live in
* Why does it end up where it ends up?: because in a police state they must monitor, stratify, correlate and be able to drill down and zeitgeist all kinds of data from the spectral wave analysis of your farts, where it happened, to the related face you ad the people aroung you put, to what you had eaten …
The Mayan culture had a God of The Word. Gringos are worshiping data to the point of believing computers should be granted “human rights” and in such preposterous b#llsh!t as the GAIA hypothesis (gringos say that they can prove that the Universe has a spirit that went “ouch!” on September 11)
* who does it benefit?: the corporate world, their politicians and the police state we live in
RCL
I comment here for general public’s consciousness and to defend truth.
I don’t like to comment on Cora Currier’s articles among other things because I have seen comments (not only mine) disappearing literally in front of my eyes. Yes, we all know thought control agents of our police state mess with us/our comments but it seems it is TI “ethically” doing their part “responsibly”, too.
“…we lose the ability to make decisions about how it’s used.” Too late. Control is not democratic; it is in certain hands. Given what we know, the plutocrats will not voluntarily relinquish the power they have. Owning 77% of the US wealth and taking home 52% of the US income is proof they own the country and their least concern is the 90% that comprise the “have nots.”
This is 1984+.
This is nothing, check out London, especially “the city” area. If you don’t understand that you are living in the “Brave new world”, you are beyond hope. When things get worse and they will get worse, 1984 will be brought out. Dystopia is just around the corner as a warming world competes through wars and migration for fewer resources. Syria is just an early minor example. Rich people will have better security and AC and will be able to drill deeper for water and push seawater through membranes using more fossil fueled power to do it but it will come to everyone, just later. Greed and breed; mother nature will have the last word, she always does.
And yet…STILL .. ‘terrorism’.
RIP Bill of Rights, we hardly knew ye
Thank you Cora for this article. It’s very well written and eye opening. This digital connected world that we take advantage of day-to-day also comes at a price. The ultimate surveillance device is our shiny beautiful smartphones we enjoy. I read in the last couple of year from a source I can no longer recall (flurry of smartphone news feed) that the U.S. Navy was working on the ability to inject a malicious application or code to common smartphones that would allow it to collect images from the targets front and rear cameras without their knowledge. Over time, the images could then be put together to build a detailed understanding of the targets environment, location and attempt to to identify others around the area.
Hello Cora,
You look young and you should be enjoying life. Why have you entered in to the dirty, murky world of surveillance at your age? You may be a child prodigy but still what you have brought yourself in to is a black hole or hotel california: you can check in any time but you can never leave. Anyway, all the best.
Arvind comes on as boomer Polonius. Throw in a Kansas quote too, the next time you condescend to impart some timeless wisdom to the younguns.
If I lived in New York, I’d certainly want this book. Maybe I’ll get it anyway so I can write one for Portland.
Nearly everywhere in Britain has a camera now. The original reason given was to help stop petty crime such as shoplifting and street violence, and helped create the “Hoodie” phenomenon with “the Youth” i.e. undesirable potential troublemakers, wearing hooded jackets to hide their faces. Britain seems to me now like some sort of sick experiment dreamed up by the Crazies down at the Control Office – Britain’s elite, its money people, its senior lawmakers, its right-wing think groups, its police chiefs, army people, and so on. I guess Belfast was the start of it all, learning how to surveil “enemies”, and as is normal there was just remit creep into the normal population, if that wasn’t the intention anyway. But now they record everything without any sort of complaint. Street crime really isn’t a problem and is no justification. They even have dreadful TV shows such as “Crimestoppers” that show how “effective” these cameras can be at catching all these criminals. We also have the TV show “Big Brother”, which sets about making the whole concept of having a camera on us a “desirable” thing, like we are not all chattel to be controlled, but instead are “celebrities” under a spotlight that occasionally elevates a fortunate one of us to stardom.
It is terribly sad and unfortunately lapped up by many of the morons that inhabit England’s green and pleasant lands.
But it totally fails to weigh up the long-term dangers of this technology when it is permanently installed and active 24-7 on an otherwise law-abiding populous. It is nice to get rapists off the streets, but there are other ways to do that – spying on everyone should not be one of them.
We have failed miserably to heed the wisest warnings of Eric Blair and given a green light to a group of strangers to perfect their technologies and hone their manipulative skills. And because our lives are so detached from these people as we struggle away in some stupidly specialised and pointless career engaging our efforts into working out some bollocks for one corporation to the next that changes year on year, we really have no idea what their final intentions may be.
My money’s on not good ones.
Their technology can track your movements using face recognition, mobile signals, bank accessing, credit card purchases, personal card swipes, and internet use. It can record and archive all such information and all digital communications and activities and if you are deemed “undesirable” in some way – engaged in undesirable activity, guilty by association or just some private vendetta by an individual or corporation on the inside, you are immediately compromised and in a very difficult position to act freely and privately.
Does anyone think that is a good thing? Because that is now the Mark of Decency – anyone that thinks that IS a good thing, is a Bad Guy. It is a hard and fast rule that is very useful – either you are aiming to stop that bullshit, or you ARE that bullshit and should be stopped. Endless unnecessary debate over the “niceties” and particulars is thus avoided. Simple!
It is amazing how your privacy rights has been completely traded away (stolen) by laws, orders and directives signed 8 year creeps like Bush and and Obama for “national security”. But we will all look back on these thefts as only the beginning as the government always endeavors to extend its reach and authority and power. Sorry to say I worked in government over 20 years but otherwise I would have remained skeptical.
Wall Streets Secret Spy Center
http://wallstreetonparade.com/60-minutes-takes-a-pass-on-wall-streets-secret-spy-center/
Excellent write up. Thank you for the post and link!
Interesting
Another reason never to go to NYC again.
what if god is watching us
just a stranger on a bus
in a trenchcoat
We’re all under the watchful eye of the government…
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5168026
Nice find great story.
Ms. Currier is too kind. The New York surveillance network is still rudimentary and in its infancy. But as all New Yorkers know, nothing poses as great a danger as other New Yorkers and keeping an eye (and an ear) on them is undoubtedly necessary.
I had hoped the NYPD would have chosen the Google Glass project as its surveillance platform. Microsoft represents an earlier, more primitive technology with a less sophisticated take on surveillance. They are probably using Telescreens from Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four as the model for their project. Orwell had many good ideas, but in the Twenty First Century we should be capable of doing a whole lot better. Still, you snuff out liberty by whatever means you can, so it is probably unfair of me to penalize the NYPD for style points.
Hopefully, Mr. Trump will be elected, and the next phase of the project – building a wall around New York – can be implemented.
Try the HoloLens, and you’ll quickly reassess your opinion of Microsoft’s handle on machine vision.
Perhaps the transition from reality to virtual reality will be smoother than I thought.
a city’s every corners filmed by camera. Where are the tapes of the Pentagon when it was supposedly hit by a plane?
Silly Rabbit, Surveillance is only used against the general population (pun intended) and never against any figure of authority and power like politicians, law enforcement, military or corporations.
Very quickly confiscated by the FBI. Even if they don’t show anything, why not release them?
But then again, people are told that an office fire can melt steel and collapse a modern skyscraper directly into its footprint, and they are OK with that “explanation.” If you question it, you must be a conspiracy nut.
Ever wonder why no one built castles with fireplaces on different floors sharing one chimney pipe? (Don’t get fooled by the outer brick/stone work, I’m talking about the pipes inside that)
I’ll give you a hint, it was because of the raging fires, burning hotter than forges, that happened when they tried to use both fireplaces.
All this because humans, having the God given right to food and habitat, are instead born into contention for life support which they are not even entitled to earn, but compete for, and the losers are forced to trespass.
The wallstreet ceo for that bank knows this, saying to his $12/hr employees “give me more or be fired and go hungry, lose your habitat, i dont care.”
And so the wallstreet thieves need to keep eyes upon those who may object to being their hostages in an operating environment where the right to deprive others is praised. Yet these thieves will tell you that the conflict is different.
It isn’t. Jesus, the terrorist of his day, turned the tables on them. And today, people only pretend to embrace him for fear of actually embracing him.
People’s phones and laptops are also key components of the New York (and global) mass surveillance networks – along with all those random internet-of-things devices, RFID-tagged items in your wallet, etc.
Some of these items are more useful than others (the Internet of Things really should be flushed down the toilet, though), such as phones and laptops – so people will keep using them (ideally with strong encryption). But make no mistake, mass surveillance has nothing to do with keeping people safe, since any trained spy or terrorist will “hide in plain sight”, i.e. they will have a cover story – and mass surveillance is useless for that. That means the real agenda has more to do with social / political control, and as the Lockheed Martin involvement shows, more lucrative government contracts for corporate interests.
We are entering an era of surveillance-based eugenics.
Indeed this is true. Just listen to some of the big companies bragging about the fraction of the population that meets one another on their dating sites. Meets one another based on what? Who decides which guy gets face time with a girl and who gets paired off with some high-end version of an Ashley Madison girlbot? The independent press has a kind of Snowden-blindness where they don’t even pay attention to surveillance opportunities unless a “former” NSA employee tells them there’s something to look at… and there’s an endless variety of things he’s never said boo about.