randombit + policestate   19

Surveillance and morality: The Rambles and the panopticon | The Economist
In other words, when surveillance operators use the enforcement of morality as a pretext to aggrandise their own power, they may aim not to minimise transgression, but to provoke a cycle of transgression and repression.
surveillance  policestate  philosophy 
june 2010 by randombit
The panopticon economy
NSA and Microsoft had both been eyeing San Antonio for years because it has the cheapest electricity in Texas, and the state has its own power grid, making it less vulnerable to power outages on the national grid. [...] NSA wanted assurance Microsoft would be here, too, before making a final commitment, due to the advantages of “having their miners virtually next door to the mother lode of data centers.” The new NSA facility is just a few miles from Microsoft’s data center of the same size.
nsa  datamining  microsoft  surveillance  policestate  grimmeathookfuture 
august 2009 by randombit
New Scientist: Microwave weapon will rain pain from the sky - 23 July 2009
Change We Can Believe In: New funding for directed energy pain weapons projects to make them portable and add "sophisticated automated target-tracking"
military  technology  policestate 
july 2009 by randombit
Constant Conflict; PARAMETERS, US Army War College Quarterly - Summer 1997
The internet is to the techno-capable disaffected what the United Nations is to marginal states: it offers the illusion of empowerment and community
economics  policestate  internet  business  warfare  information  infowar 
december 2008 by randombit
British Kids Encouraged To Become "Climate Cops"
A leading British energy company blitzed the newspapers with full page colour advertisements this weekend which encourage children to sign up as "climate cops" and keep "climate crime case files" on their families, friends and neighbours.
grimmeathookfuture  policestate  climate 
july 2008 by randombit
Maryland troopers spied on activist groups
The activist was identified as Max Obuszewski. His "primary crime" was entered into the database as "terrorism - anti govern(ment)." His "secondary crime" was listed as "terrorism - anti-war protestors."
surveillance  policestate  politics  usa 
july 2008 by randombit
Why the new wiretapping law is a lot worse than you think. - By Patrick Radden Keefe - Slate Magazine
Senator Bond: "I'm not here to say that the government is always right. But when the government tells you to do something, I'm sure you would all agree … that is something you need to do."
usa  surveillance  policestate 
june 2008 by randombit
China's All-Seeing Eye : Rolling Stone
China is becoming more like us in very visible ways (Starbucks, Hooters, cellphones that are cooler than ours), and we are becoming more like China in less visible ones (torture, warrantless wiretapping, indefinite detention, though not nearly on the Chin
china  politics  surveillance  policestate  technology  grimmeathookfuture 
may 2008 by randombit
Land of the Free: Police Arrest Man without Any Probable Cause, Give Him Knock Out Drugs, Insert Camera into His Rectum, Force Him to Vomit, Take His Blood, X-Ray Him; No Drugs Found
A camera was inserted in his rectum, he was forced to vomit and his blood and urine were tested for drugs and alcohol. Scans of his digestive system were performed using X-ray machines ... The search, conducted without a search warrant, came up empty.
drugs  rights  abuse  policestate  via:cryptogon 
may 2008 by randombit
On Arrests, Demographics, and Marijuana - New York Times
A study released Tuesday reported that between 1998 and 2007, the police arrested 374,900 people whose most serious crime was the lowest-level misdemeanor marijuana offense.
nyc  policestate 
april 2008 by randombit

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