LIFE WITH BIG BROTHER
'Electronic Police State' report cites U.S.
Ultimate Big Brother 'basics are in place'
Posted: May 10, 2009
By Bob Unruh
© 2009 WorldNetDaily
In what may be the first assessment of its kind, a private company that offers a
range of privacy products for computers and other technology is ranking the
United States No. 6 in the world for having the most aggressive procedures for
monitoring residents electronically.
The report, called The Electronic Police State, assesses the status of
governmental surveillance in 52 nations around the globe for 2008.
The document was released Cryptohippie, Inc., which was set up in 2007 through
the acquisition of several little-known but highly regarded providers of privacy
technologies.
Not surprisingly, China and North Korea ranked No. 1 and No. 2, with Belarus and
Russia following up. But the United Kingdom ranked fifth followed by the United
States.
"Most of us are aware that our governments monitor nearly every form of
electronic communication. We are also aware of private companies doing the same.
This strikes most of us as slightly troubling, but very few of us say or do much
about it. There are two primary reasons for this," the report said.
"We really don't see how it is going to hurt us. Mass surveillance is certainly
a new, odd, and perhaps an ominous thing, but we just don't see a complete
picture or a smoking gun," the report continued. Also, "We are constantly
surrounded with messages that say, 'Only crazy people complain about the
government.'"
The report mapped the world, showing the most advanced electronic police states
in red, orange reflecting strongly developing electronic police states and
yellow showing nations that are developing, but lagging:

Red nations have the most advanced electronic police state capabilites
Company spokesman Paul Rosenberg told WND the biggest obstacle, however, is that
the image of a "police state" dredges up visions of Nazi Germany's thugs
breaking down doors in the middle of the night and hauling people off to
blacked-out trains or Stalin's USSR rounding up "offenders" for imprisonment.
"That's how things worked during your grandfather's war – that is not how things
work now," the report said. "An electronic police state is quiet, even unseen.
All of its legal actions are supported by abundant evidence. It looks pristine,"
the report said.
To create the rankings, which also included Singapore, Israel, France and
Germany in the top 10, his organization searched its worldwide sources for
information, checked against a number of other published reports, and assigned a
value of 1 to 5 to 17 different factors:
Daily documents: How much is required day-to-day for residents to present
state-issued identity documents or registration.
Border issues: What is demanded for a border entry.
Financial tracking: The state's ability to search and record financial
transactions.
Gag orders: The penalties for revealing to someone else the state is searching
their records.
Anti-crypto laws: Bans on cryptography.
Constitutional protections: Either a lack of protections or someone overriding
them.
Data storage: The state's ability to record and keep what it uncovers.
Data search: The processes to search through data.
ISP data retention: The demand for ISPs to save customers' records.
Telephone data retention: States' requirements for communications companies to
record and save records.
Cell phone records: The saving and using of cell phone users' records.
Medical records: Demands from states that medical records retain information.
Enforcement: The state's ability to use force (SWAT teams) to seize someone.
Habeus corpus: Either an absence of such rights or someone overriding them.
Police-Intel barrier: the absence of a barrier between police and intelligence
organizations.
Covert hacking: State operatives meddling in data on private computers covertly.
Loose warrants: Warrants that are being issued without careful review of police
claims by a truly independent judge.
The listings of China, North Korea, Belarus and Russia, all known for their
repression of freedom, weren't surprising. Nor was the listing of the United
Kingdom with its recent programs to copy and store virtually every telephone
call, e-mail and text message within its borders.
But Rosenberg said there's more going on in the United States than many believe
want to believe.
The nation's "basic system of gathering evidence and sorting it later is really
dangerous," he said. "It's permanent. It's not going to go away."
It goes so far that a person's alcohol consumption actually could be tracked by
government agents, if they chose, through credit card documentation, he told WND.
"In an Electronic Police State, every surveillance camera recording, every
e-mail you send, every Internet site you surf, every post you make, every check
you write, every credit card swipe, every cell phone ping… are all criminal
evidence, and they are held in searchable databases, for a long, long time," the
report said.
"Whoever holds this evidence can make you look very, very bad whenever they care
enough to do so. You can be prosecuted whenever they feel like it – the evidence
is already in their database," the report continued. "Perhaps you trust that
your ruler will only use his evidence archives to hurt bad people. Will you also
trust his successor? Do you also trust all of his subordinates, every government
worker and every policeman?
"If some leader behaves badly, will you really stand up to oppose him or her?
Would you still do it if he had all the e-mails you sent when you were
depressed? Or if she has records of every porn site you've ever surfed? Or if he
knows every phone call you've ever made? Or if she knows everyone you've ever
sent money to?" the report asks.
"This system hasn't yet reached its full shape, but all of the basics are in
place and it is not far from complete in some places," the report said.
Rosenberg told WND the organization also sought input on the status of
electronic surveillance around the world from organizations including the the
Electronic Privacy Information Center, Reporters Without Borders, Freedom House,
the Ludwig von Mises Institute and The Heritage Foundation.