SciFiFisher wrote:Yes, but the fact that government(s) have been spying on people extensively has been pretty common knowledge since President Nixon (or longer if you count J. Edgar Hoover).
Not to mention the precedent. If they haven't complained for decades the precedent has been established. Now, they want to kick up a fuss? They are like "well, I didn't realize that all that spying might include ME!"
Well, yes and no.
Sure, all governments (and I'm sure that plenty of private organizations also do it internally, it's called AUDITING
) spy on whomever for whatever reason.
The thing is that up to relatively recent times (say 20-30 years), it was hard to do at a great scale, not only collecting the stuff, but actually analyzing it for whatever reason. Hell, lets take an example from the
FBI public info page (the
CIAand
NSA public info pages do not show this, so all one can do is speculate): more than half the personnel at the FBI is composed of analysts and support personnel. My point is that even these days you need a lot of people looking at all the info collected.
What has changed with the Internet and a lot of other enabling technologies is that the scale of survelliance has increased quite a bit.
So, sure: Nixon spied on whomever he didn't like and so did Hoover, but because of the workload it was most probably focused on a relatively small number of subjects. Nowadays it's possible to routinely keep track of a lot lot more. (Yes virginia, there's also plenty of more stuff to snoop on as well these days). This stuff is been known for a number of years to people in IT who actually bothered to do something more than manage users and do backups
Now, it seems that it just dawned on John Q. Public that this is normal.
Again, I'll summarize my position, It's understandable that that governments (not only the Big Bad Evil Imperiast Infidel Gringos'
) have to at some point do a lot of these things. However, at least once in a while it's necessary to remind them not to get too cavalier about it. As usual, it's hard to get the cold hard facts, many times not because the government is evil or stupid or a combination of both, but because it actually causes big operational problems on (presumably) legitimate surveillance operations, as Yosh has pointed out several times, and at least sometimes because: the surveillance organizations don't want to expose their intelligence (or worse) screw-ups.
Having said all that, I still don't like it one bit.