Singapore’s Tech-utopia Dream Is Turning into a Surveillance State Nightmare
In the “smart nation,” robot dogs enforce social distancing and an app can claim to neutralize racism. The reality is very different.
In the “smart nation,” robot dogs enforce social distancing and an app can claim to neutralize racism. The reality is very different.
Peter Guest Rest of World Nov 2021 30min Permalink
Is Palantir’s crystal ball just smoke and mirrors?
Sharon Weinberger New York Sep 2020 30min Permalink
Every year eleven million people attend Magh Mela, a Hindu festival on the banks of the Ganges. The temporary infrastructure to support them includes hospitals and power stations, plus a massive surveillance apparatus.
Monica Jha Rest of World Jun 2020 Permalink
“After receiving a trove of documents from the whistleblower, I found myself under surveillance and investigation by the U.S. government.”
Barton Gellman The Atlantic May 2020 25min Permalink
Whenever the black dress came out, Jessica Weisman’s mother knew she was “going after the Jewish people again.”
Dan Slater Gen Nov 2019 25min Permalink
When a longtime resident started stealing her neighbors’ Amazon packages, she entered a vortex of smart cameras, Nextdoor rants, and cellphone surveillance.
Lauren Smiley The Atlantic Nov 2019 35min Permalink
On Shoshana Zuboff’s The Age of Surveillance Capitalism.
By reengineering the economy and society to their own benefit, Google and Facebook are perverting capitalism in a way that undermines personal freedom and corrodes democracy.
Nicholas Carr Los Angeles Review of Books Jan 2019 15min Permalink
A daughter investigates her father’s belief that the government is subjecting him and thousands more to to mind control.
Jean Guerrero Wired Oct 2018 25min Permalink
TSA is tracking regular travelers like terrorists in a secret surveillance program.
Jana Winter The Boston Globe Jul 2018 30min Permalink
“All human relations are a matter of record, ready to be revealed by a clever algorithm. Everyone is a spidergram now.”
Peter Waldman, Lizette Chapman, Jordan Robertson Businessweek Apr 2018 20min Permalink
Uncovering Baltimore’s secret aerial surveillance program.
Monte Reel Businessweek Aug 2016 20min Permalink
Surveillance as daily life along the Texas border.
Sasha von Oldershausen Texas Monthly Aug 2016 10min Permalink
Since 9/11, the United States has spent $1 trillion on national security. An investigation into whether it has worked.
Steven Brill The Atlantic Aug 2016 1h10min Permalink
Your local police department probably has a $400,00 device that listens in on cellphones. Soon your neighbor will be able to buy the same thing for $1,500.
Robert Kolker Businessweek Mar 2016 15min Permalink
After Daniel Rigmaiden was arrested for a multi-million dollar fraud, he didn’t argue that he was innocent. He wasn’t. But he couldn’t understand how he had been caught. Rigmaiden had covered his tracks meticulously — the only way the cops could’ve found him, he realized, was through some secret tracking device that they had never disclosed to the public.
Russell Brandom The Verge Jan 2016 20min Permalink
Secrets, dangers, and murder in a German police state.
"Andreas didn’t know what to say. What he wanted was for her to come and live in the basement of the rectory with him. He could protect her, home-school her, practice English with her, train her as a counsellor for at-risk youth, and be her friend, the way King Lear imagined being friends with Cordelia, following the news of the court from a distance, laughing at who was in, who was out. Maybe in time they’d be a couple, the couple in the basement, leading their own private life."
Jonathan Franzen New Yorker Jun 2015 1h5min Permalink
What happens when humans get superpowers.
Benjamin Wallace-Wells New York Oct 2014 25min Permalink
A Profile Auditor goes sniffing after anomalies in the consumption habits and personal data of an unsuspecting hotel clerk.
"Through the Demosphere we fly, we men of the Database Maintenance Division, and although the Demosphere belongs to General Communications Inc., it is the schmos of the world who make it - every time a schmo surfs to a different channel, the Demosphere notes that he is bored with program A and more interested, at the moment, in program B. When a schmo's paycheck is delivered over the I-way, the number on the bottom line is plotted in his Profile, and if that schmo got it by telecommuting we know about that too - the length of his coffee breaks and the size of his bladder are an open book to us. When a schmo buys something on the I-way it goes into his Profile, and if it happens to be something that he recently saw advertised there, we call that interesting, and when he uses the I-way to phone his friends and family, we Profile Auditors can navigate his social web out to a gazillion fractal iterations, the friends of his friends of his friends of his friends, what they buy and what they watch and if there's a correlation."
Neal Stephenson Wired Oct 1994 25min Permalink
On Singapore’s attempt to create a more harmonious society using mass surveillance and data analysis.
Shane Harris Foreign Policy Jul 2014 20min Permalink
Dick Cheney and the political history of warrantless surveillance.
Mark Danner New York Review of Books Apr 2014 15min Permalink
How and why the goverment pulled Silicon Valley into the war on terror.
Steven Levy Wired Jan 2014 25min Permalink
Inside the N.S.A.’s mission to spy on just about everyone.
Scott Shane New York Times Nov 2013 20min Permalink
In which a narrator reflects, obsessively, about performance, surveillance, and secrecy.
"In art there is one condition that takes precedent over all others: to do things well. Which means I’ve got to be a good actor in a good drama: if I don’t do it well, there will be no effect, the show will fall into nothingness."
César Aira Recommended Reading Jul 2013 15min Permalink
A profile of documentary filmmaker Laura Poitras, who last January received “a curious e-mail from an anonymous stranger requesting her public encryption key.”
Peter Maass New York Times Magazine Aug 2013 30min Permalink