FBI releases plans to monitor social networks

Num7

Administrator
Staff
Messages
12,452
The US Federal Bureau of Investigation has quietly released details of plans to continuously monitor the global output of Facebook, Twitter and other social networks, offering a rare glimpse into an activity that the FBI and other government agencies are reluctant to discuss publicly. The plans show that the bureau believes it can use information pulled from social media sites to better respond to crises, and maybe even to foresee them.

The information comes from a document released on 19 January looking for companies who might want to build a monitoring system for the FBI. It spells out what the bureau wants from such a system and invites potential contractors to reply by 10 February.

The bureau's wish list calls for the system to be able to automatically search "publicly available" material from Facebook, Twitter and other social media sites for keywords relating to terrorism, surveillance operations, online crime and other FBI missions. Agents would be alerted if the searches produce evidence of "breaking events, incidents, and emerging threats".
Agents will have the option of displaying the tweets and other material captured by the system on a map, to which they can add layers of other data, including the locations of US embassies and military installations, details of previous terrorist attacks and the output from local traffic cameras.

The document suggests that the bureau wants to use social media to target specific users or groups of users. It notes that agents need to "locate bad actors...and analyze their movements, vulnerabilities, limitations, and possible adverse actions". It also states that the bureau will use social media to create "pattern-of-life matrices" -- presumably logs of targets' daily routines -- that will aid law enforcement in planning operations.

The use of the term "publicly available" suggests that Facebook and Twitter may be able to exempt themselves from the monitoring by making their posts private. But the desire of the US government to watch everyone may still have an unwelcome impact, warns Jennifer Lynch at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a San Francisco-based advocacy group.

Lynch says that many people post to social media in the expectation that only their friends and followers are reading, which gives them "the sense of freedom to say what they want without worrying too much about recourse," says Lynch. "But these tools that mine open source data and presumably store it for a very long time, do away with that kind of privacy. I worry about the effect of that on free speech in the US".

The document also suggests that the FBI thinks it can use social media to peer into the future. It notes that agents need to use social media to "

redict likely developments in the situation or future actions taken by bad actors (by conducting, [sic] trend, pattern, association, and timeline analysis)".

The bureau declined to immediately comment on how this analysis might work, or on any other aspect of the document, but the idea of turning agents into digital soothsayers is plausible: researchers working at Facebook and in academia have shown that social media can be used to infer many things about an individual, including the existence of friendships that are not declared on social networking sites and the location of users who have not revealed where they are based.

http://www.newscientist.com/blogs/onepercent/2012/01/fbi-releases-plans-to-monitor.html

 
Messages
474
If the boys at the Hoover Bldg. :cautious: can't find something to do, like dealing with crime and terrorism here in the states, they will come up with "something" and justify to the end of time why it's important to do so. The above is an excellent example of the old saying. "ideal hands are the devil's workshop". If it wan't Facebook, for instance, they darn sure would find somethinfg that is a threat to the "safety":cautious: of the American public.
 

Crethox

Junior Member
Messages
110
Weren't they already doing that, monitoring people?
 

Messages
474
:ROFLMAO:OH you bet they are. Organized crime is a 24/7 things they are always watching, whether it's a threat to the society or not. Guess they are following in the footsteps of the early days of J.Edgar Hoover and the Bureau and they do not like to share.
 

Num7

Administrator
Staff
Messages
12,452
A lot of people are posting way too much stuff on social networks these days. It doesn't mean though the FBI should have access to all those information, but this information people post, is publicly available to everyone in the first place.

I think it's just one step towards better monitoring of the masses. You'll no longer be able to organize criminal events using the Facebook event feature. Too bad.
 

Crethox

Junior Member
Messages
110
I agree with the criminal part, but there are many more events that can be organized. Demonstrations, strikes or other forms of protests. Governments aren't always happy with those events and in the case of monitoring social media it's just a small step to even use it against these events. I don't think we shouldn't forget that there are always two sides of the same coin.
 
Messages
474
I, for one, favor a more "structured" process to gain info. as to what is going on in our country, by anyone, for any purpose. Not "spying", bad word, good concept, but do I trust the govrnment, no way, one , because I work for it and see things you don't see on Sunday morning "talk shows", but I am for more liberties for the common man, just more constructive supervision by the people elected or appointed to see that things get done "correctly'.
 

Num7

Administrator
Staff
Messages
12,452
People are basically using Facebook and social medias to interact. The FBI tries to gain access to those public interactions and search them, sort them, etc. Isn't that kind of the same thing as recording everything you say in the street at all times and scan them afterwards for keywords?

I think the FBI may be going a little far on that one, but the people are the first to make their Facebook wall public and therefore available to the FBI in the first place. That's why I can't say if it's right or not to look for such a tool to research across all the public Facebook messages, groups, etc.
 

Top