Saturday, May 17, 2014

Privacy World's May 2014 Newsletter Issue

Sent: Friday, May 16, 2014 8:32 PM
Subject: Privacy World's May 2014 Newsletter Issue 3May


> Privacy World - The WORLD'S SHREWDEST PRIVACY NEWSLETTER
> 
> 10 Examples Of How "Big Brother" Is Steadily Creeping Into Our Daily Live
> 
> Virtually everything that you do is being watched. Do you drive a
> car? Do you watch television? Do you use a cell phone? As you do
> any of those things, information about you is being recorded and
> tracked. We live at a time when personal privacy is dying. And it
> is not just governments that are doing this.
> 
> In fact, sometimes private companies are the biggest offenders. It
> turns out that gathering information about all of us is very, very
> profitable. And both government entities and private companies are
> going to continue to push the envelope when it comes to high tech
> surveillance until people start objecting to what they are trying
> to do. If we continue down the path that we are currently on, it is
> inevitable that we will end up living in an extremely restrictive
> "Big Brother" police state where basically everything that we do is
> very closely watched, monitored, tracked and controlled. And such a
> day may be much closer than you think. The following are 10 examples
> of how "Big Brother" is steadily creeping into our daily lives.
> 
> #1 Our cars are rapidly being transformed into high tech "Big
> Brother" surveillance devices. In fact, a push is being made to
> require all new vehicles to include very sophisticated black box
> recorders.
> 
> As if the government wasn't already able to track our movements
> on the nation's highways and byways by way of satellites, GPS
> devices, and real-time traffic cameras, government officials are
> now pushing to require that all new vehicles come installed with
> black box recorders and vehicle-to-vehicle (V2V) communications,
> ostensibly to help prevent crashes.
> 
> Yet strip away the glib Orwellian doublespeak, and what you will find
> is that these black boxes and V2V transmitters, which will not only
> track a variety of data, including speed, direction, location, the
> number of miles traveled, and seatbelt use, but will also transmit
> this data to other drivers, including the police, are little more
> than Trojan Horses, stealth attacks on our last shreds of privacy,
> sold to us as safety measures for the sake of the greater good,
> all the while poised to wreak havoc on our lives.
> 
> Black boxes and V2V transmitters are just the tip of the iceberg,
> though. The 2015 Corvette Stingray will be outfitted with a
> performance data recorder which "uses a camera mounted on the
> windshield and a global positioning receiver to record speed,
> gear selection and brake force," but also provides a recording of
> the driver's point of view as well as recording noises made inside
> the car. As journalist Jaclyn Trop reports for the New York Times,
> "Drivers can barely make a left turn, put on their seatbelts or
> push 80 miles an hour without their actions somehow, somewhere
> being tracked or recorded." Indeed, as Jim Farley, Vice President
> of Marketing and Sales for Ford Motor Company all but admitted,
> corporations and government officials already have a pretty good
> sense of where you are at all times: "We know everyone who breaks
> the law, we know when you're doing it. We have GPS in your car,
> so we know what you're doing."
> 
> #2 A new Michigan law will ban thousands of preppers and small
> farmers from owning farm animals. What are they going to do next? Ban
> us from growing our own food?
> 
> #3 Have you ever collected anything? If so, the FBI might swoop
> in and grab your collection someday even if you have not committed
> a crime. If you think that this sounds crazy, you should consider
> what happened to a man named Don Miller recently.
> 
> FBI agents Wednesday seized "thousands" of cultural artifacts,
> including American Indian items, from the private collection of a
> 91-year-old man who had acquired them over the past eight decades.
> 
> An FBI command vehicle and several tents were spotted at the property
> in rural Waldron, about 35 miles southeast of Indianapolis.
> 
> The FBI did not have any evidence that a crime had been committed
> prior to seizing the collection, and Mr. Miller has not been arrested
> or charged with any crime. The FBI says that it is going to catalog
> the collection "to determine whether some of the items might be
> illegal to possess privately".
> 
> The aim of the investigation is to determine what each artifact
> is, where it came from and how Miller obtained it, Jones said,
> to determine whether some of the items might be illegal to possess
> privately.
> 
> #4 A father of a 4-year-old girl has been told that he will no longer
> be allowed to send healthy homemade lunches with his daughter when
> she attends her pre-kindergarten program because they conflict with
> federal guidelines.
> 
> #5 Do you watch television? Well, if you have a newer television
> there is a very good chance that your television is watching you
> as wellâ¦
> 
> In November, the British tech blogger Doctorbeet discovered that
> his new LG Smart TV was snooping on him. Every time he changed
> the channel, his activity was logged and transmitted unencrypted
> to LG. Doctorbeet checked the TV's option screen and found that the
> setting "collection of watching info" was turned on by default. Being
> a techie, he turned it off, but it didn't matter. The information
> continued to flow to the company anyway.
> 
> #6 A plan that is being proposed in Fairfax County, Virginia would
> ban "frequent and large gatherings at neighborhood homes". This
> would include parties, scout gatherings and home Bible studies.
> 
> #7 At a public school in Florida, a 12-year-old boy has been banned
> from reading the Bible during "free reading time".
> 
> A Florida schoolteacher humiliated a 12-year-old boy in front of
> an entire class after she caught him reading the Bible during free
> reading time.
> 
> The teacher at Park Lakes Elementary School in Fort Lauderdale
> ordered Giovanni Rubeo to pick up the telephone on her desk and
> call his parents.
> 
> As the other students watched, the teacher left a terse message on
> the family's answering machine.
> 
> "I noticed that he has a book-a religious book-in the classroom,"
> she said on the recording. "He's not permitted to read those books
> in my classroom."
> 
> #8 In the USSA, a young child cannot even build a tree fort with
> his friends without the threat of being confronted by the police
> state. Just consider what happened to one little fifth-grade boy
> down in Georgia a few weeks ago.
> 
> A fifth-grader says he was terrified when a police officer pointed
> a gun at him and his friends while they built a tree fort.
> 
> Omari Grant, 11, said he and his friends often play in a wooded area
> behind his home and were building a fort when a neighbor in the next
> subdivision called police to complain about what the boys were doing.
> 
> But no one anticipated what Omari and his mother say happened next.
> 
> "I guess the release of tension was like, â~Mom, he had a gun in my
> face, Mommy. Mommy, he had a gun in my face,'" said Janice Baptiste,
> Omari's mother.
> 
> The officer reportedly used very filthy language as he pointed his
> gun at the boys, and he forced them to get out of the tree and lay
> down on the ground.
> 
> "I was thinking that I don't want to be shot today, so I just
> listened to what they said," Omari said.
> 
> Omari said the officer holding his gun also used foul language and
> made him and his friends lay down on the ground.
> 
> "I learned that they're supposed to help you not make you feel
> scared to even come outside," Omari said.
> 
> #9 People like to joke about "the eye in the sky", but it is
> no joke. Technology that was originally developed for "blanket
> surveillance" during the Iraq war is now returning home.
> 
> Persistent Surveillance Systems has developed a surveillance camera
> on steroids. When attached to small aircraft, the 192-megapixel
> cameras record the patterns of the planetary life they fly over for
> hours at a time. According to the Washington Post, this will give the
> police and other customers a "time machine" they can simply rewind
> when they need it. Placed strategically at the highest points of
> any town or city, these cameras could provide the sort of blanket
> surveillance that's hard to avoid. The inventor of the camera, a
> retired Air Force officer, helped create a similar system for the
> city of Fallujah, the site of two of the most violent battles of
> the U.S. occupation of Iraq. It's just one example of how wartime
> surveillance technologies are returning home for "civilian use."
> 
> #10 Have you ever purchased storable food? If so, you should know
> that it is now considered to be "suspicious activity" in some areas
> of the country. Just check out what is happening in New York
> state.
> 
> 1-866 SAFE NYS is part of Safeguard New York, an NY State
> counterterrorism program that uses promotional material to
> encourage citizens to report people for engaging in "suspicious
> activity, which makes them stand out from others".
> 
> An accompanying letter provided by the state trooper listed such
> "suspicious activity" as the purchase of MREs (Meals Ready to Eat),
> flashlights, weather proof ammunition, night vision equipment,
> match containers, or gas masks.
> 
> For even more examples like this, please see my previous article
> entitled "19 Signs That America Is Being Systematically Transformed
> Into A Giant Surveillance Grid".
> 
> Sadly, most Americans are totally oblivious to all of this.
> 
> Most Americans are so addicted to entertainment and to their
> electronic devices that they have no idea what is going on in the
> real world.
> 
> I came across the following video entitled "Look Up" -
> think that it does a great job of showing what our obsession with
> our electronic devices is doing to us. Watch it for yourself and
> see what you think.
> 
> The above article by Michael Snyder, End of the American Dream
> 
> Until our next issue stay cool and remain low profile!
> 
> Privacy World
> 
> PS - Require an easy to obtain and use debit card with a US$10,000
> cash withdrawal ability? Then email us and place 10K-ATM" in your
> subject heading.
> --
> Best regards,
> Privacy                          mailto:privacy@privacyworld.com

> 

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