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The federal
government has joined with private industry to create an immense database
of data on US citizens from many sources. The government will then be able
to search the database, using "data mining" techniques. States are being
asked to submit all of their information about their citizens. Apparently,
the federal government wants to have access to all possible information
about its people.
Matrix
MATRIX (Multistate Anti-TeRrorism
Information eXchange) is the latest data mining program to emerge from the
government. This surveillance system combines information about
individuals from government databases and private-sector data
companies. It then makes those dossiers available for search by
government officials and combs through the millions of files in a search
for “anomalies” that may be indicative of terrorist or other criminal
activity.
Source: ACLU, March 8, 2005
MATRIX
reloaded? Utah rethinks issue
A state commission on Thursday began wrestling with
whether Utah should return to the controversial MATRIX consortium or
some other law enforcement information-sharing system — though members
realize that privacy and oversight concerns abound.
The Utah Technology Commission wants its staff to look into
several aspects of the issue, including whether Utah's Government
Records Access Management Act needs to be updated and whether
legislation is needed to make the commission or some other entity the
state's oversight agency.
Source: Deseret Morning News (online), June 18, 2004
U.S. Erodes High-Tech Privacy Protections
When Congress curtailed Pentagon research it
feared would ensnare innocent Americans in the terrorism fight, it also
allowed the Bush administration to eliminate two projects to protect
citizens' privacy from futuristic tools.
As a result, the government is quietly pressing
ahead with research into high-powered computer data-mining technology
without the two most advanced privacy protections developed for those
terror-fighting tools.
Source: MyWay.com, March 14, 2003
Matrix Expands to Wisconsin
Even as states retreat from participating in a controversial
interstate antiterrorism database that holds billions of records of
ordinary Americans' activities, Wisconsin has decided to join the
program.
The head of Wisconsin's division of criminal investigation,
James R. Warren, signed on to join the Multistate Anti-Terrorism
Information Exchange, or Matrix, on Feb. 11, said Tom Berlinger, a
spokesman for the Florida Department of Law Enforcement, which runs the
program.
Source: Wired News, March 9, 2004
U.S. Still Mining Terror Data
The government is still financing research to create powerful
tools that could mine millions of public and private records for
information about terrorists despite an uproar last year over fears it
might ensnare innocent Americans.
Congress prevented the Pentagon from developing the terrorist
tracking technology because of the outcry over privacy implications. But
some of those projects from retired Adm. John Poindexter's Total
Information Awareness effort were transferred to U.S. intelligence
offices, according to congressional, federal and research officials.
Source: Wired News, February 23, 2004
Privacy Hero of the Month: Utah Gov. Olene Walker
One state's database that isn't in the system is
Utah.
That's because the state's new governor, Olene Walker, has halted the
state's participation in the database after learning that former Gov.
Mike Leavitt signed the state up for it on the sly before taking his new
Beltway job as EPA Administrator. According to the
Deseret Morning News, Leavitt "never bothered to reveal details
of the program to Utah citizens or to state lawmakers." Leavitt had
thrown data on Utahns including Social Security numbers, dates of birth,
addresses, property records, motor vehicle information and credit
history into a database available to government agencies in eight states
and managed by a private company in Florida.
Source: nccprivacy.org, not dated but in February 2004
Matrix Plan Fuels Privacy Fears
Although privacy worries led several states to pull out of a
federally funded crime and terrorism database project, others are
actively considering joining and thereby sharing information on their
citizens, The Associated Press has learned.
Mark Zadra, chief investigator for Florida state police, which
runs the Matrix project, said organizers have given presentations to
more than 10 Northeastern and Midwestern states in recent weeks, arguing
at each stop that the database is an invaluable law enforcement tool.
Source: Wired News, February 2, 2004
Dossier program alarms Utahns
It sounds like a sci-fi thriller: a super computer
program that gathers dossiers on every single man, woman and child —
everything from birth and marriage and divorce history to hunting licenses
and car license plates. Even every address you have lived at down to the
color of your hair.
It sounds surreal, but former Gov. Mike Leavitt signed Utah's 2.4
million residents up for a pilot program — ironically called MATRIX — that
does just that. And he never bothered to reveal details of the program to
Utah citizens or to state lawmakers who, upon learning of the program on
Capitol Hill this week, are now worried the state could be involved in a
program that jeopardizes basic civil liberties.
Source: Deseret Morning News (online), January 29, 2004
What is Matrix
The American Civil Liberties Union today filed simultaneous state
“Freedom of Information Act” requests in Connecticut, Michigan, New
York, Ohio and Pennsylvania about those states’ participation in the new
“MATRIX” database surveillance system. It also released an
Issue
Brief explaining the problems with the program, which also operates
in Florida and Utah.
“Congress killed the Pentagon’s ‘Total Information Awareness’ data
mining program, but now the federal government is trying to build up a
state-run equivalent,” said Barry Steinhardt, Director of the ACLU’s
Technology and Liberty Program.
Source: ACLU, October 30, 2003
Why we should fear the Matrix
The Matrix is run by a private corporation -- Seisint Inc. of Boca
Raton, Florida, -- on behalf of a cooperative group of state
governments. However, it is, at least in part, federally funded -- and
may, in future, allow federal access. The program has received $4 million from the Justice Department. It
has been promised a further $8 million from the Department of Homeland
Security. In addition, news reports indicate that Matrix officials have
said they are considering giving access to the CIA.
Source: CNN (Law Center), October 30, 2003
Georgia runs from the MATRIX
The state of Georgia has pulled out of the U.S. Department of Justice
sponsored MATRIX information collection program, leaving data only on its
felons and sexual offenders behind in the Orwellian database.
Source: The Register (online), October 10, 2003
U.S. Backs Florida's New Counterterrorism Database
Police in Florida are creating a counterterrorism database
designed to give law enforcement agencies around the country a powerful
new tool to analyze billions of records about both criminals and
ordinary Americans.
Organizers said the system, dubbed Matrix, enables investigators
to find patterns and links among people and events faster than ever
before, combining police records with commercially available collections
of personal information about most American adults. It would let
authorities, for instance, instantly find the name and address of every
brown-haired owner of a red Ford pickup truck in a 20-mile radius of a
suspicious event.
Source: Washington Post (online), August 6, 2003
Comments Received by the Administrative Office of the United States Courts
in response to Request for Comment on Privacy and Public Access to
Electronic Case Files.
Each
comment has a number, date, and where provided, a geographical
identifier. In cases
where the comment was sent by an individual with no business or
professional affiliation noted,
the name of the commentor is not included. In cases where the comment
was sent by an
individual in a professional capacity or on behalf of a group or
organization, the name of the
commentor and/or the name of the group is included.
The Administrative Office of the United States Courts reserves the
right not to post a comment,
or any part thereof, which contains irrelevant or scurrilous material.
Footnotes and endnotes
attached to comments have been omitted.
Source: privacy.uscourts.gov, 11/08/2000 and later
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