General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: My Life in Circles: Why Metadata is Incredibly Intimate [View all]intaglio
(8,170 posts)That is what they were designed to do no matter who the target.
Churchill tried to put the genie back in the bottle but by then it was too late.
Analysing metadata makes no-one a suspect unless you decide to check such data on a limited population. Finding patterns in that data might indicate that some individual could be investigated further.
Parallel - a road that normally passes traffic freely locks up. This is observed by overhead cameras. Is it spying to send a police car to see why?
Another parallel - a car is observed by cameras with number plate recognition entering a toll road but not exiting; is it spying to check if that car has got home or crashed whilst unobserved?
A third - letters are observed by postal workers addressed to Hassan Iz-al-Din in the Lebanon; should the bulk observation of addressees on many envelopes negate the chance to inspect those particular packages further?
It is complicated but blanket whining that "the gub'mint is spying on me myself alone" is nonsense and is all too often all that the complaints on DU amount too.