State Surveillance

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A State Surveillance is a mass surveillance conducted by a governing body to monitor and gather information on its citizens or subjects.

  • Context:
  • Example(s):
    • Mass Surveillance Programs:
      • The NSA's PRISM and ECHELON programs in the United States, which collect vast amounts of data on citizens' communications and online activities.
      • The United Kingdom's Tempora program taps into fiber-optic cables to intercept and store internet data.
      • China's Golden Shield Project, also known as the "Great Firewall," which extensively monitors and filters internet traffic.
      • Russia's SORM system, which allows the government to monitor email, phone calls, and internet activity.
      • ...
    • Targeted Surveillance:
      • The FBI's COINTELPRO program in the United States monitored and harassed civil rights activists in the 1960s and 1970s.
      • The use of Pegasus spyware by various governments to target journalists, activists, and political opponents.
      • The targeting of Uyghur Muslims in China through surveillance technology and data collection.
      • ...
    • Biometric Surveillance:
      • Facial recognition systems are used by law enforcement in many countries to identify and track individuals in public spaces.
      • India's Aadhaar system collects biometric data (fingerprints and iris scans) from over a billion citizens.
      • The use of DNA databases by police in various countries to identify suspects and solve crimes.
      • ...
    • Predictive Policing and Algorithmic Surveillance:
      • The use of predictive policing algorithms in the United States that analyze surveillance data to predict and prevent potential crimes, which has been criticized for reinforcing racial biases.
      • China's social credit system uses surveillance data to assign scores to citizens based on their behavior and compliance with government regulations.
      • ...
    • Border and Immigration Surveillance:
      • Using drones, sensors, and biometric data collection to monitor borders in countries like the United States, Australia, and many European nations.
      • Surveillance and data collection on refugees and asylum seekers in various countries, such as Germany's use of ankle bracelets to track their movements.
      • ...
    • Corporate Surveillance in Collaboration with States:
      • The sharing of user data by telecommunications companies like AT&T and Verizon with the NSA in the United States.
      • The cooperation of tech giants like Google, Facebook, and Microsoft with government surveillance programs through data sharing and backdoor access.
      • ...
  • Counter-Example(s):
  • See: Surveillance, Local Government, Federal Government, Intelligence Agency, Judiciary, Totalitarianism, Terrorism, Social Unrest, Government Transparency, Police State, Civil Liberties, Right to Privacy.


References

2024