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The total information monster

Backspin By Mark Gibbs , Network World , 12/02/2002
Gibbs

In the Fox News story Pentagon to Track American Consumer Purchases it was reported the Pentagon said, "A massive database that the government will use to monitor every purchase made by every American citizen is a necessary tool in the war on terror."

The idea behind the government's proposed database is, according to Edward Aldridge, undersecretary of Acquisitions and Technology, to look for "patterns indicative of terrorist activity."

Aldridge said the government would be looking for "sudden and large cash withdrawals, one-way air or rail travel, rental car transactions and purchases of firearms, chemicals or agents that could be used to produce biological or chemical weapons."

Moreover, this database is to integrate that consumer data with visa and passport records, arrest records and reports of suspicious activity given to law enforcement or intelligence services.

It is hard to say how big such a system would be. The storage certainly would be up in the petabyte region and the processing power required would be staggering even to handle basic cross-referencing, let alone pattern analysis.

And who will be in charge of this behemoth? Well, President Reagan's former national security adviser, retired Rear Adm. John Poindexter, is developing the database under the Total Information Awareness (TIA) program.

Poindexter was a player in the Iran-Contra investigation. He was convicted in 1990 on five counts of lying to Congress, making false statements, destroying documents and obstructing inquiries.

Nov. 12 story in The Washington Post noted that "[Poindexter] was sentenced to six months in jail by a federal judge who called him 'the decision-making head' of a scheme to deceive Congress. The U.S. Court of Appeals overturned that conviction in 1991, saying Poindexter's rights had been violated through the use of testimony he had given to Congress after being granted immunity."

Even though the convictions were overturned, wouldn't you think someone charged with developing the most-sensitive public data warehouse ever would need to have a spotless past?

Apparently, Poindexter came up with this Dr. Strangelove-type scheme and managed to sell it to Aldridge and the Pentagon. It is some relief that Poindexter will only be in charge of development and not deployment.

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