Sherry Chandler » Watch what you do, watch what you say

Watch what you do, watch what you say

from After Subpoenas, Internet Searches Give Some Pause

Kathryn Hanson, a former telecommunications engineer who lives in Oakland, Calif., was looking at BBC News online last week when she came across an item about a British politician who had resigned over a reported affair with a “rent boy.”

It was the first time Ms. Hanson had seen the term, so, in search of a definition, she typed it into Google. As Ms. Hanson scrolled through the results, she saw that several of the sites were available only to people over 18. She suddenly had a frightening thought. Would Google have to inform the government that she was looking for a rent boy - a young male prostitute?

Ms. Hanson, 45, immediately told her boyfriend what she had done. “I told him I’d Googled ‘rent boy,’ just in case I got whisked off to some Navy prison in the dead of night,” she said.

from War and Piece

Perhaps this is the whole point of the Bush administration invasion of Americans’ privacy through things like demanding Google, Yahoo, AOL, etc. turn over *all* search records, monitoring phone calls without warrants, etc. Not to root out illegal activity. … No, it’s to make ordinary Americans who are not breaking the law feel like they’re being watched, so they curtail their normal behavior, so they are less political, less inquisitive, less vocal, less active, so they feel less free. Typical feature of the surveillance state.

Possibly related posts:

    Mitch McConnell Watch
    WUKY Watch
    Another Open Source Battle
    An issue you should be aware of
    Google Poem Creator

Related posts brought to you by Yet Another Related Posts Plugin.

2 Comments

  • 1. Brooks Carver replies at 27th January 2006, 8:03 am :

    The parallels between today, here and now, and Germany in the 1930’s are uncanny. The unusual, the frightening, can soon become commonplace and normal.

  • 2. Katie Dawson replies at 1st November 2007, 5:21 pm :

    I agree–the Patriot act threatens the freedom of all Americans. The precedent has been set for a U.S citizen to be arrested as an enemy combatant by the detention of a person from Qatar, a U.S citizen, because America has been declared “the battlefield” by the Bush administration. Since the U.S government can now spy on our activities, how long before a U.S citizen will be arrested for “unpatriotic” activities, and be declared an an enemy combatant, for marching in an anti-war rally, or sending and E-mail against the Iraq (or coming Iran) war, or simply talking on the phone to a friend? It’s scary folks.

Leave a comment

XHTML: You can use these tags: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <blockquote cite=""> <code> <em> <strong>