One of my conservative teachers actually surprised me (and the rest of the class) by supporting the NSA. His reasoning, which I actually agree with, was: "If you have nothing to hide, why are scared?"I can definitely understand why people want their privacy 100% secure, but I suppose I'm just a tad apathetic to the whole thing.
There are certainly areas where they over extend their purpose and intrude on the rights of citizens.
Quote from: Naoto on May 12, 2015, 12:01:38 PMThere are certainly areas where they over extend their purpose and intrude on the rights of citizens.Can you provide a single example?
Quote from: HurtfulTurkey on May 12, 2015, 12:01:51 PMQuote from: Naoto on May 12, 2015, 12:01:38 PMThere are certainly areas where they over extend their purpose and intrude on the rights of citizens.Can you provide a single example?Really? https://www.aclu.org/surveillance-under-usa-patriot-acthttp://www.scn.org/ccapa/pa-vs-const.htmlI mean take a read if you're not familiar I guess. I don't think you should be fine with any of that. It pretty blatantly violates the constitution. That much unchecked power will eventually be misused.
Quote from: Naoto on May 12, 2015, 12:09:56 PMQuote from: HurtfulTurkey on May 12, 2015, 12:01:51 PMQuote from: Naoto on May 12, 2015, 12:01:38 PMThere are certainly areas where they over extend their purpose and intrude on the rights of citizens.Can you provide a single example?Really? https://www.aclu.org/surveillance-under-usa-patriot-acthttp://www.scn.org/ccapa/pa-vs-const.htmlI mean take a read if you're not familiar I guess. I don't think you should be fine with any of that. It pretty blatantly violates the constitution. That much unchecked power will eventually be misused.I'm specifically referring to abuses by the NSA in its metadata collection, though a lot of the listed "abuses" in those links are easy to rebut.
Your tile says Patriot Act and NSA. I said the Patriot Act oversteps the rights of citzens. You asked me to show a single example. I showed quite a few. Those links also reference data collection. If its all easy to rebut then be my guest.
The way you illustrate the effectiveness of the NSA makes them appear inefficacious. Am I correct in assuming so?If that's the case, what's the point in having an NSA then? If they can't curtail terrorism by either constitutional or unconstitutional means, then I fail to see their relevance within intel operations.
Quote from: Voro 'Cinotai on May 12, 2015, 11:53:49 AMOne of my conservative teachers actually surprised me (and the rest of the class) by supporting the NSA. His reasoning, which I actually agree with, was: "If you have nothing to hide, why are scared?"I can definitely understand why people want their privacy 100% secure, but I suppose I'm just a tad apathetic to the whole thing.I think that's a very poor argument. It implies the NSA has far more power than they actually do. In reality, we don't need a justification for wanting privacy, so we enact regulations to ensure that it's protected at all times unless its violation is necessary to prosecute a crime
Quote from: HurtfulTurkey on May 12, 2015, 12:01:51 PMQuote from: Voro 'Cinotai on May 12, 2015, 11:53:49 AMOne of my conservative teachers actually surprised me (and the rest of the class) by supporting the NSA. His reasoning, which I actually agree with, was: "If you have nothing to hide, why are scared?"I can definitely understand why people want their privacy 100% secure, but I suppose I'm just a tad apathetic to the whole thing.I think that's a very poor argument. It implies the NSA has far more power than they actually do. In reality, we don't need a justification for wanting privacy, so we enact regulations to ensure that it's protected at all times unless its violation is necessary to prosecute a crimeBut then, wouldn't that argument make sense? If you're not doing any wrongdoing or making stupid posts like #ImGoingToKillObama, then you wouldn't even be on the NSA's radar.
It is appaling that we, as a people, have allowed the state to amass as much power as it has today. Frankly, I think we deserve all of the damage that is done.
Quote from: King pesto on May 12, 2015, 01:00:35 PMIt is appaling that we, as a people, have allowed the state to amass as much power as it has today. Frankly, I think we deserve all of the damage that is done.Gonna be honest, this makes me think you didn't really read my post, since it specifically discusses how it hasn't done damage, and is debilitated by regulation and stagnation.
There's two main issues I have with this. One is that because of how secretive it all is, there's a good chance that this will be abused. It's easy to say that the NSA will behave and follow the guidelines, but I sometimes strongly doubt that they will. Besides, the rules are easy enough to stretch, especially when there's no communication with the general public. You don't have to be a lawyer to see how "reasonable, articulable suspicion of a threat to national security" can be extended to cover measures way beyond the mere prevention of terrorism and the likes.
For example, merely having a bad relationship with a certain country (Iraq, Iran, Syria...) or groups can be considered a reasonable suspicion of a terrorist attack, being sufficient grounds to analyse a ton of potentially sensitive information. After all, when a specific act has finally been predicted, it'll often be too late to still stop it, meaning that preventive checks "just in case" would be perfectly acceptable. Same goes for what constitutes a threat to national security. A bombing? A plane being hijacked? Sure. But what about riots in a certain area? Protests that could potentially get out of hand? Any situation involving a public official? These policy guidelines leave a significant grey area, and any actions that do end up being taken will likely never be known by the general public.
Secondly, metadata is not as anonymous as you might think. Simply googling "metadata anonymous" will give you several studies by institutions like Stanford and MIT, showing how easy it is to identify a person and create personal data just by going off metadata. I'm not going to bother searching through my notes from last year, but my IT law and privacy classes came to pretty much the same conclusion.
"These are our guidelines."- Yeah, but they are very broad."Well, we will only interpret them very strictly, promise!- Which we have absolutely no way of verifying."Looks like you're just going to have trust us to sit on all this sensitive and private information and barely ever use it!"
"Don't worry people, we only collect your data without doing anything with it. Before doing that, we need a warrant! Relax, your privacy is safe. Oh, but let's conveniently ignore the fact that this court is shrouded in secrecy, doesn't have to answer to anyone, doesn't have to reveal records and doesn't even have to prove anything, all while it can potentially routinely hand out dozens of warrants every single day."
Either way, like I said before, I am not opposed to certain intelligence gathering. I am just extremely surprised by how you are seemingly downplaying all of this. Not to sound like a tinfoil hatter, but "just trust us, we promise we will play by the rules and not go around some relatively flimsy safeguards" isn't good enough.
a single person leaking what he knew
While I see the use of this kind surveillance
Quote from: Not Comms Officer on May 12, 2015, 04:31:07 PMQuote from: Voro 'Cinotai on May 12, 2015, 11:53:49 AMOne of my conservative teachers actually surprised me (and the rest of the class) by supporting the NSA. His reasoning, which I actually agree with, was: "If you have nothing to hide, why are scared?"I can definitely understand why people want their privacy 100% secure, but I suppose I'm just a tad apathetic to the whole thing.I agree with this completely as well.But so many Republican sources juxtapose that statement with Goebbels and are trying to say "HURRR THE DEMOCRATS ARE NAZIS LOOK THIS IS PROOF XPPP"The left was saying the same thing about the act when the Reps were in power.
Quote from: Voro 'Cinotai on May 12, 2015, 11:53:49 AMOne of my conservative teachers actually surprised me (and the rest of the class) by supporting the NSA. His reasoning, which I actually agree with, was: "If you have nothing to hide, why are scared?"I can definitely understand why people want their privacy 100% secure, but I suppose I'm just a tad apathetic to the whole thing.I agree with this completely as well.But so many Republican sources juxtapose that statement with Goebbels and are trying to say "HURRR THE DEMOCRATS ARE NAZIS LOOK THIS IS PROOF XPPP"
Quote from: Not Comms Officer on May 12, 2015, 04:44:39 PMQuote from: Arm The Mob on May 12, 2015, 04:41:25 PMQuote from: Not Comms Officer on May 12, 2015, 04:31:07 PMQuote from: Voro 'Cinotai on May 12, 2015, 11:53:49 AMOne of my conservative teachers actually surprised me (and the rest of the class) by supporting the NSA. His reasoning, which I actually agree with, was: "If you have nothing to hide, why are scared?"I can definitely understand why people want their privacy 100% secure, but I suppose I'm just a tad apathetic to the whole thing.I agree with this completely as well.But so many Republican sources juxtapose that statement with Goebbels and are trying to say "HURRR THE DEMOCRATS ARE NAZIS LOOK THIS IS PROOF XPPP"The left was saying the same thing about the act when the Reps were in power.(but there is no major left party in the US)Anyways, why am I not surprised this is the case...US politics are beyond retarded, end of story.It's basically a back-and-forth between two authoritarian parties accusing each other of being authoritarian.
Quote from: Arm The Mob on May 12, 2015, 04:41:25 PMQuote from: Not Comms Officer on May 12, 2015, 04:31:07 PMQuote from: Voro 'Cinotai on May 12, 2015, 11:53:49 AMOne of my conservative teachers actually surprised me (and the rest of the class) by supporting the NSA. His reasoning, which I actually agree with, was: "If you have nothing to hide, why are scared?"I can definitely understand why people want their privacy 100% secure, but I suppose I'm just a tad apathetic to the whole thing.I agree with this completely as well.But so many Republican sources juxtapose that statement with Goebbels and are trying to say "HURRR THE DEMOCRATS ARE NAZIS LOOK THIS IS PROOF XPPP"The left was saying the same thing about the act when the Reps were in power.(but there is no major left party in the US)Anyways, why am I not surprised this is the case...US politics are beyond retarded, end of story.