I understand the privacy concerns. Buit it is also provocative that: '...Of the people with the 80 highest scores, five were among the Sept. 11 hijackers, Seisint's presentation said. Forty-five were identified as being or possibly being under existing investigations, while 30 others "were unknown to FBI." ... What about those 30? http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=562&e=6&u=/ap/20040520/ap_on_hi_te/terror_database
I imagine many feel that folks who have committed no crimes should not gain the attention and possible monitoring/questionning/arrest from authorities. I.e., the government should not be analyzing everything it can about you. Where would it stop? E.g., what if the Bush administration could identify all possible liberals?
But, if I understand this project properly, all it does is collate a bunch of information they already have from disparate sources. So, insofar as law-abiding citizens shouldn't be monitored, the Matrix thing isn't doing anything new. As for the HTF, which may or may not be happening, is it sufficient for a warrant? My understanding from the article is that they'd use the list it produced to identify people. They would then have to find some evidence of a crime to start an investigation. Or am I misunderstanding the system? So, to put it in some concrete terms, if I make this watch-list, what privacies of mine will they intrude upon? Can they get a search warrant simply on the basis of this list or do they have to rely on evidence from my public life?